This Tuesday, Prince Harry appeared in a London court in a lawsuit he and other celebrities filed against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), publisher of the Mirror newspaper and the Sunday People magazine among others.

Harry arrived at court 15 of the High Court in London, and his lawyer David Sherborne asked to be addressed as “His Royal Highness” and then “Prince Harry” during his appearance.

MGN representative Andrew Green said they apologized for using a private investigator to look into the prince’s private life and said it would not happen again.

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For his part, the Duke of Sussex has admitted that at least 50 articles from the tabloid newspaper “caused him agony”, with 32 to be exact being the subject of the case, according to the review CNN.

The group’s defense asked him if he had read the articles at the time, to which he replied that he was not sure.

“If you don’t remember reading the article at the time, how do you say this article upset you?”

While Harry added that he had “experienced hostility from the press since I was born.”

One of the most controversial statements was one that accused several journalists and editors of having bloody hands because of the anguish they caused him and “perhaps death unconsciously” referring to his mother, Princess Diana.

It was added that some of the information in the articles could not be obtained legally.

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The Duke of Sussex returned to London after his father’s coronation ceremony on May 6, which he attended without his wife Meghan Markle.

Harry and other celebrities are accusing MGN of illegally collecting data on them, including hacking their phones.

This was the first statement by a British royal since Edward VII, who made it at a libel trial in 1890, before he became monarch.

The prince, who rocked the British monarchy when he and Meghan announced they were leaving the institution more than three years ago, has other open lawsuits against the media in his country.