English        
 Follow Me on Pinterest Google Plus Ditto RSS Mail to us Mail to us
Wednesday, May 22, 2013 
Search

French mags’ lawyer blames Kate Middleton over topless pics fiasco

Last Updated: Tuesday, September 18, 2012, 13:15
Comments 1
 
French mags’ lawyer blames Kate Middleton over topless pics fiasco London: The lawyer for the French mag that first published the topless photos of Kate, has blamed the royal couple for the furore that followed.

Delphine Pando sparked outrage when she claimed the couple’s furious reaction to their privacy breach at a remote chateau drew further press interest which gave the story global appeal.

She said that topless pictures are no longer shocking in today’s society, and insisted the holiday hideaway was in a public place easily viewed from a nearby road.

But angry lawyers for the royals said the couple’s privacy had been “violated” and claimed that the Duchess of Cambridge was being treated purely as a commodity for commercial gain.

“She’s a young woman, not an object,” the Mirror quoted the royal couple’s French barrister Aurelien Hamelle as telling the Nanterre court.

He also said that the scenes captured were intimate and personal and had “no place on the front page of a magazine.”

And he insisted the couple could not have known they were being photographed as it would only have been possible to see them with a long lens.

Their legal team has tried to halt the sale and distribution of the topless pictures by French Closer magazine, demanding they hand over the digital originals – with a fine of 10,000 euros for each day they refused.

They have also made a criminal complaint to prosecutors about the snaps.

ANI

First Published: Tuesday, September 18, 2012, 12:24
Post Comment  | moderator Alert Moderator
Your comment(s) on this article
   That's right, just blame the victim! I'm sick of the same old argument being rolled out. Everyone is entitled to privacy, even celebrities, royals and ordinary folk who find themselves in the public spotlight or those whose frenemies post unkind images embarrassing them on social media. How do we tell kids not to sext when the newspapers are out there doing it, under the thin guise of public interest (I would argue there is none in this case - just trading on voyeurism) Enough is enough. We should stand up to the bullying tactics of these sleazy editors and paparazzi and let them only take and print legitimate pictures of famous people (and ordinary folk too) rather than stalking about, like creepy peeping Toms, profiting from the misery of the targets. I hope Kate and Wills are successful and the full weight of the law is applied! - Kate from Australia - Melbourne
Toolbox
 Print this pages  E-Mail s Bookmark and Share
More Stories


Copyright © Zee News Limited. All rights reserved