Prince Harry’s legal battle with the UK Home Office over his security when in the UK, has come to an end.
The Duke of Sussex launched a judicial review in the High Court almost two years ago after his right to armed security was cut off by the Home Office when he quit royal duties.
Harry was unhappy at the
decision that he should not be allowed to even pay privately for armed
security just like the average UK citizen and went to court . Earlier
this month, a judge was asked by his lawyers to allow him to bring a
case over the decisions.
But the High Court on Tuesday May 23
ruled that the Duke could not also seek a judicial review over whether
to let him pay for the specialist police officers out of his own pocket.
The
Home Office said the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty
and Public Figures (Ravec) considered it was ‘not appropriate’ for
wealthy people to ‘buy’ protective security, which might include armed
officers, when it had decided that ‘the public interest does not
warrant’ someone receiving such protection on a publicly-funded basis.
Lawyers
for the Met Police said Ravec had been ‘reasonable’ in finding ‘it is
wrong for a policing body to place officers in harm’s way upon payment
of a fee by a private individual’.
Justice Chamberlain also refused Harry permission to bring the second challenge, rejecting on a number of grounds.
The
court was told at the earlier hearing that his latest legal challenge
was related to an earlier claim he brought against the Home Office after
he was told he would no longer be given the ‘same degree’ of personal
protective security when visiting the UK.
A full hearing in that challenge, which also focuses on Ravec’s decision-making, is yet to be held.
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