LONDON, June 28 (Reuters) - Prince Harry was a "prime target" for the tabloid press and must have been a victim of phone-hacking, his lawyer told London's High Court on Wednesday as the trial in the British royal's lawsuit against a newspaper publisher nears its end.
MGN, owned by Reach (RCH.L), is fighting the lawsuit and says there is no evidence for the accusations.
The claimants' lawyer, David Sherborne, told the court on Wednesday that the case against MGN was "inferential", stressing that phone-hacking and other unlawful information gathering was a covert practice.
But, he added, the court could find that Harry was a victim of phone-hacking because of the prevalence of the practice at MGN newspapers and the level of press interest in the prince.
"The newspapers regarded him as a prime target, perhaps one of the most prime targets, in the sense of royal stories drive newspaper sales," Sherborne said.
Persons:
Prince Harry, David Sherborne, MGN, Harry, Sherborne, Andrew Green, Rupert Murdoch's, voicemails, Piers Morgan, Morgan, Duke of Sussex, Green, Sam Tobin, Alex Richardson
Organizations:
London's, Group, Daily, Sunday, MGN, Reach, Buckingham, Thomson
Locations:
British