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Sadie Frost ‘disgusted’ by Daily Mail journalists ‘targeting her parents’, court hears

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Sadie Frost ‘disgusted’ by Daily Mail journalists ‘targeting her parents’, court hears

Sadie Frost has said it is “disgusting” that her parents were targeted by Daily Mail journalists, with her unwell father contacted in the hospital and her mother doorstepped at her home.

The actor apologised for becoming emotional as she said the trial “takes you back to such a horrible time”.

She became tearful in the witness stand as she recalled a 2002 incident reported in the press about her then two-year-old daughter finding an ecstasy tablet at a venue in Soho.

“I wasn’t with any friends, I was isolated, holed up at home, distressed and trying to be a good mum,” she says.

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The article included a quote she says must have come from a phone conversation, and emotionally told the court: “This has been on my poor girl Iris’s life forever… it’s just so humiliating… it just made me so ill.”

Ms Frost is currently being asked about 11 articles published about her, which she claims were sourced through unlawful information gathering by Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL). The 60-year-old actor joins Prince Harry, Sir Elton John and his husband David Furnish, campaigner Baroness Doreen Lawrence, politician Sir Simon Hughes, and actor Liz Hurley in bringing legal action against ANL over voicemail hacking and blagging private records.

At the time, she was going through a divorce from fellow actor Jude Law, and told the court that she knew certain articles came from conversations that were “hacked from my voicemails, and I know that 100 per cent”.

“One thing about voicemails is you have to choose your words quite carefully,” she said.

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Frost has accused the publisher of accessing her medical records

Frost has accused the publisher of accessing her medical records (Yui Mok/PA)

“I would be very precise about what I was saying. That’s how I knew a lot of the articles were about my voicemails to Jude [Law].”

She added that it had impacted her relationship to Mr Law, who questioned if she was the source of the leaks. “To have the man you love think you’re leaking stories is awful,” she said.

She added: “Our relationship was ruined for many years and it was very difficult to coparent during this time,” she said.

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The 60-year-old actor joins Prince Harry, Sir Elton John and his husband David Furnish, campaigner Baroness Doreen Lawrence, politician Sir Simon Hughes, and actor Liz Hurley in bringing legal action against Associated Newspapers Limited over allegations of unlawful information gathering.

Last week, David Sherborne, who represents the claimants, said that Mail on Sunday journalist Katie Nicholl wrote a draft article containing details about Ms Frost that “not even her sisters or mother knew about”.

He said that in late 2003, Ms Frost had an unplanned ectopic pregnancy with her then boyfriend Jackson Scott, for which she had to have an operation at a private hospital.

Only Mr Scott and “maybe her closest friends” knew about the pregnancy, Mr Sherborne said.

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He added: “All of this is recorded by Ms Nicholl in the draft article.”

The barrister continued: “How did they know she was treated unless they had access to her voicemail or medical records?”

In a witness statement for the trial, Ms Frost said: “I was going through a divorce which was difficult enough without a story like this coming out.”

Both Ms Hurley and the Duke of Sussex became emotional in the witness stand when giving evidence last week of the impact the alleged intrusion has had one their lives.

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Ms Frost has become emotional at several moments during the course of her evidence

Ms Frost has become emotional at several moments during the course of her evidence (PA)

Harry spent around two hours answering questions from ANL’s lawyer on Wednesday in a series of frosty exchanges, before he was asked how the proceedings had made him feel by his barrister Mr Sherborne.

The duke said: “It’s fundamentally wrong to put us through this again when all we wanted was an apology and accountability.

“It’s a horrible experience.”

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Sounding emotional and appearing to be on the verge of tears, he continued: “They continue to come after me, they have made my wife’s life an absolute misery, my Lord.”

In court, the duke said the case against ANL felt like a “recurring traumatic experience” and a “repeat of the past”, adding: “I have never believed that my life is open season to be commercialised by these people.”

He later said the “claim that I don’t have any rights to any privacy is disgusting”.

ANL has strongly denied wrongdoing and is defending the claims.

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The trial before Mr Justice Nicklin is due to conclude at the end of March with a judgment in writing at a later date.

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