Meghan Markle To Receive £1 From Newspaper Over Privacy Invasion — But That's Not All

The publishers of the Mail On Sunday will pay a settlement of $1 to the bride-to-be after she was found to have invaded her privacy by publishing a letter she sent to her father.
Prince Harry and his fiancée, the actress, will be in Northern Ireland on March 23, 2018, for a visit to the Titanic.

The images are from the same company.

Last month, the U.K.'s court of appeal ruled in favor of the woman, who claimed that Associated Newspapers violated her privacy and conducted copyright violations by reproducing her letter.

The Guardian reported Wednesday that The Mail will pay a sum of money for invasion of privacy.
The Associated Newspapers will receive a large amount of money from the profits they made from the letter they printed to Thomas, according to a Markle spokesman.
The funds from the claim will be donated to charity.

According to The Guardian, Associated Newspapers have to cover a portion of the legal fees of a person.
Forbes reached out to the Mail On Sunday.
She said she treated the lawsuit as an important measure of right versus wrong. She said in a statement at the time that the tabloid industry made people to be cruel and profits from the lies it created.
Taylor Swift won $1 in a trial against a Colorado radio DJ who groped her. The attorney for Swift said during the trial that the low number was symbolic and showed that no means no, and that women will determine what is acceptable to them. Swift donated to causes that help victims of sexual assault.

The key background.

The Mail On Sunday published a series of stories quoting a letter that was sent to her dad from her. The Associated Newspapers were sued for invasion of privacy. The London High Court ruled in favor of the woman. Prince Harry was awarded damages by Associated Newspapers last year after he sued the Mail on Sunday for libel for saying he had not been in touch with the military after stepping down as a senior member of the royal family. The duke sued the Sun, News of the World and The Daily Mirror for hacking his phone, a legal battle that is still ongoing.
The U.K. publication apologized for the actions of the prince.
The case of the letter to her father was the first of its kind.

The public apology was given by the person who won the lawsuit.
The Daily Mail publisher was sued by a privacy case.