• Victoria Meghan Markle receives public apology from The Daily Mail and financial compensation after winning the court battle

  • Professionals Who is the lawyer who has achieved the victory of Meghan Markle and who previously defended Elton John and Adele

  • Trials This is how the two years of judicial battle against the Duchess of Sussex have been: from the letter she wrote to her father to her triumph

The Mail on Sunday

will pay

Meghan Markle

a million pounds

(1.2 million euros)

for

"invasion of privacy"

following the publication in 2018 of a private letter in which he personally asked his father, Thomas, to

leave

of attacking her husband, Prince Harry,

in the media .


Meghan Markle has celebrated her "moral victory" in front of the British tabloid, assuring that her legal battle against Associated Newspapers - editor of the

Mail

- has been

"by principle and not by money".

The compensation will be donated to charitable organizations.


The Duchess of Sussex declared that it was a

triumph over "the deceptions, intimidations and attacks"

of British tabloid culture, which she accused of "causing pain" and seeking profit at all costs with "their lies" .


Harry himself has decided to

fight a side battle

with Rupert Murdoch's publications and has accused the tabloids of treating his wife with the same

"insidious treatment" that his mother, Lady Di, received in his day.


Legal experts warn, however, that

this is only a partial victory

for Meghan, which could have been offset by a markedly higher amount

had the case gone to trial.

The Mail on Sunday

has agreed not only to pay the million pounds for "damages" and "invasion of privacy", but to

pay the legal costs of the case

and also to pay an unspecified amount for copyright infringement.


In previous arguments, the tabloid argued that Meghan wrote that letter

knowing that it would ultimately be published, in response to an article published by

People

magazine

.

However, a British judge ruled in early December that the content of

the letter was "personal and not in the public interest",

and that Meghan had "a reasonable expectation" that it would not be published.


The five-page letter

was written months after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's wedding, missing 78-year-old Thomas Markle, citing medical problems.

Meghan was ultimately tucked in by

her mother, Doria.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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