Summary
Prince Harry is being cross-examined at the High Court, as part of his case against the publisher of the Daily Mirror
He claims reporters started listening to his answerphone messages while he was a teenager at Eton school
And he alleges tabloid stories about him could only have been uncovered by phone hacking
But the Mirror's lawyer says legitimate sources were behind many of the stories - and others were already in the public domain
In a written witness statement, Prince Harry accuses former Mirror editor Piers Morgan of "horrific personal attacks"
He says the alleged attacks are "presumably in retaliation and in the hope that I will back down"
Towards the end of his statement, Harry also claims the press - and the UK government - are at "rock bottom"
You can watch BBC analysis, plus shots from outside court, by pressing play above
Live Reporting
Edited by Dulcie Lee
Join us for more tomorrowpublished at 18:16 BST 6 June 2023
Dulcie Lee
Live reporterWe're bringing your live coverage to a close - but we've still got plenty for you:
- Catch up with the day in our main storyhere
- Read the key extracts from the prince's witness statementhere
- Sign up for insider views on this and more with our BBC's Royal Watch newsletterhere
Updates were brought to you by Imogen James and Jasmine Andersson, with Jemma Crew, Dominic Casciani, Tom Symonds and Sean Coughlan reporting from court.
The page was edited by Owen Amos and me.
Prince Harry is due back in court tomorrow morning - see you then.
What happened today?published at 18:09 BST 6 June 2023
As the media pack up their cameras and head home, let's recap what we learned on Prince Harry's first day being cross-examined in court:
- Prince Harry accused Mirror Group Newspapers of hacking his voicemails when he was a teenager, saying it made him feel he "couldn't trust anybody"
- He said he has "experienced hostility from the press" since he was born
- Prince Harry said editors and journalists from the newspaper group were responsible for“causing pain and upset”and “inadvertently death”
- He said he developed"acute paranoia"of being under surveillance
- The Mirror group's lawyer said he had sympathy for the duke, but denied journalists' actions were "all unlawful"
Read our full storyhere.
Five key points from Harry’s witness statementpublished at 17:12 BST 6 June 2023
Prince Harry's 49-page witness statement was published just as he began giving evidence in court this morning.
We've spent the day poring through it - here are some of the key bits:
- He accusesPiers Morganof intimidation, sayingas a consequence of bringing this claim, he and his wife have been subject to “horrificpersonal attacks”
- Knowing journalists from Mirror Group Newspapers were listening to hisvoicemails created a “huge amount ofparanoia”, he says
- The prince alleges that the tabloid press cast membersof the Royal Family into specific roles, with him being cast as a"thicko", "cheat" and "underage drinker"
- Prince Harry says rumoursJames Hewittwas hisbiological father were “hurtful, mean and cruel”
- He says the press and UK government are at “rock bottom”, and accuses the media of getting into bed with the government.
Read our article in fullhere.
What's going on in courtpublished at 15:50 BST 6 June 2023
Image source,Julia QuenzlerCourt has resumed after a short break, and the lawyer for Mirror Group Newspapers, Andrew Green KC, is stillcross-examiningPrince Harry.
Green - described by one of his former clients as"a beast in court"- is a specialist in commercial law and has been cross-examining the prince since 10:30 this morning.
Prince Harry submitted awitness statementfor the trial, based on 33 articles which he claims included unlawful information gathering by the publisher, including phone hacking.
Green has been basing his cross-examination off of these articles, going through each one in turn.











