In the latest development in Harry's war against the tabloid press, his lawyers argued that he had experienced a lifetime of "overwhelming intrusion" from Murdoch-owned newspapers with one example cited relating to a story written when he was nine.
The accusations came a day after Harry's lawyer's directly implicated Rupert Murdoch in the legal battle, claiming that the 93-year-old billionaire oversaw a "culture of impunity" at News Group Newspapers, the publisher of the Sun and the now defunct News of the World.
In written submissions to the high court yesterday, Harry's lawyers alleged that the publisher had demonstrated a "willingness to engage systemically in unlawful and unethical behaviour... on an industrial scale" when it came to the duke. This included the "interception of landline calls, the interception of calls from cordless phones and analogue mobile calls, and the interception of landline voicemails", they said.
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