British royals sue French magazine over topless pics

Agence France-Presse

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Britain's Prince William and his wife Catherine on Friday, September 14, launched a lawsuit against French magazine Closer for breaching their right to privacy by printing topless pictures of her

ON DISPLAY. Copies of the celebrity magazine Closer, which published topless pictures of Prince William's wife Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, taken while the pair were on holiday in France on September 5, are displayed at a newsstand in Paris on September 14, 2012. Announcing a world exclusive, Closer magazine invited readers on its website to pick up he new edition to enjoy "the photos that the world can't wait to see; the Duchess of Cambridge topless on a guesthouse terrace". AFP PHOTO / THOMAS SAMSON

LONDON, United Kingdom (UPDATED) – Britain’s Prince William and his wife Catherine on Friday, September 14, launched a lawsuit against French magazine Closer for printing topless pictures of her, the royal family said.

“St James’s Palace confirms that legal proceedings for breach of privacy have been commenced today in France by The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge against the publishers of Closer Magazine France,” a spokeswoman said.

The grainy pictures of the couple on holiday in the south of France show Catherine, 30, wearing just the bottoms of a black and white bikini and having suncream rubbed onto her by William by the side of a swimming pool.

The royal couple were said by aides to be furious and hugely saddened over a “grotesque” invasion of their privacy, which evoked painful memories of press harassment of William’s late mother Diana.

The legal suit was lodged with a court in Nanterre in the Paris suburbs, near to where the glossy magazine has its headquarters, according to sources close to the case.

Closer’s editor Laurence Pieau has defended the publication of the photos, saying they were “not in the least shocking” and that she was looking to sell them to other media outlets around the world.

Under French law, the magazine will almost certainly be found guilty of breaching the couple’s privacy but it is unlikely to receive anything more than a fine.

Anyone in France has a right to privacy and can seek legal redress over the publication of images taken and published without their permission.

Theoretically, the publisher of the magazine or the editor could be given a one-year prison term, but there is no precedent for that and most similar cases result in publications being fined symbolic amounts well below the maximum of 45,000 euros.

The limited nature of the financial sanctions mean magazines like Closer, which sells 400,000 copies a week, can afford to ignore the law. – Agence France-Presse

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