Prince Harry has lost his bid for a second legal challenge against the Home Office over his security arrangements when in the UK.
The Duke of Sussex was seeking the go-ahead from the High Court to secure a judicial review over a decision that he should not be allowed to pay privately for his protective security.
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The Home Office – which is responsible for policing, immigration and security – decided in February 2020 that the prince would cease receiving personal police security while in Britain, even if he were to cover the cost himself.
The High Court, which last year already agreed he should be allowed to challenge an original decision to end the protection, ruled he could not also seek a judicial review over whether to let him pay for the specialist police officers himself.
At a hearing earlier this month, a judge was asked by Harry’s legal team to allow the duke to bring a case over decisions taken by the Home Office and the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec) – which falls under the remit of the department – in December 2021 and February 2022.
The Home Office, opposing Harry’s claim, said Ravec considered it was “not appropriate” for wealthy people to “buy” protective security, which might include armed officers, when it had decided that “the public interest does not warrant” someone receiving such protection on a publicly funded basis.
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Lawyers for the Met Police, an interested party in the case, said Ravec had been “reasonable” in finding “it is wrong for a policing body to place officers in harm’s way upon payment of a fee by a private individual”.
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The ruling comes less than a week after Harry’s spokesperson said he, together with wife Meghan Markle and her mother, Doria Ragland, were involved in a “near catastrophic” car chase with paparazzi after attending an awards ceremony in New York.
However differing accounts of the alleged event have emerged, amid suggestions the Sussexes account is “overblown”.
Picture agency Backgrid denied the couple’s demands to hand over photographs and footage of the “chase” – reportedly telling Harry he cannot issue commands “as perhaps Kings can do”.
The ruling on Tuesday also comes amid an ongoing High Court trial involving the duke, in which he is bringing a contested claim against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) over allegations of unlawful information gathering.
He is also awaiting rulings over whether similar cases against Daily Mail publisher Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), and News Group Newspapers (NGN) – which publishes The Sun – can go ahead.
A judgment is also expected in the duke’s libel claim against ANL over an article on his case against the Home Office.