Last month, Markle was granted summary judgment in relation to her privacy claim, meaning she won that part of the case without having to go to trial, as well as most of her copyright claim. She claimed the five articles published in February 2019 involved a misuse of her private information, breached her copyright, and breached the Data Protection Act. The duchess, 39, sued ANL over a series of articles which reproduced parts of a “heartfelt” letter to Mr Markle, 76, in August 2018. In a ruling on 5 March, lord justice Warby also granted Markle a declaration that ANL “misused her private information and infringed her copyright”. Read all about itĪssociated Newspapers Limited (ANL) – the publisher of the Mail On Sunday and MailOnline – has also been ordered to print a notice on page three of the paper stating it “infringed her copyright” by publishing parts of the letter sent to Thomas Markle. ![]() ![]() The Mail On Sunday must publish a front-page statement about Meghan Markle’s victory in her copyright claim against the newspaper over the publication of a “personal and private” letter to her estranged father, the High Court has ruled.
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