Judge says suspicion is not proofpublished at 14:55 BST
Tom Symonds
Correspondent
In his full judgment Mr Justice Nicklin examines each claimed breach of privacy, and often noted that there was suspicion about how information was obtained by the journalists.
In one article, the Daily Mail's royal editor wrote in 2013 that Prince Harry faced a lonely New Year’s Eve without his girlfriend Cressida Bonas.
It was claimed a freelance journalist was asked to "blag" travel details for Ms Bonas.
Prince Harry says in a witness statement this was "creepy" and he did not know how the newspaper could have obtained the information about the couple's separate whereabouts.
Mr Justice Nicklin says: "I accept that he found the article intrusive and was genuinely concerned by how journalists appeared to know private information concerning his relationships. But suspicion, even understandable suspicion, is not proof."










