Why Meghan Markle's dad might testify against her
Thomas Markle should be called to the bar as a key witness in the lawsuit brought by Meghan Markle against a newspaper which had revealed the exchanges by text between her father and her about her marriage to Prince Harry. Destructive testimony?
Will Thomas Markle make waves again? Meghan Markle's father should be called to testify in court, the Daily Mail newspaper reveals. The reason is that he is expected to come to the bar of the Supreme Court in London as a key witness in the lawsuit brought by Meghan Markle against a British newspaper, after the broadcast of the texts sent between the Duchess of Sussex and the former director of the photograph, in the run-up to Meghan and Harry's wedding. As a reminder, Thomas Markle did not attend the ceremony which was held on May 19, 2018 at Windsor Castle, near London.
Thomas Markle would have provided lawyers with messages never disclosed in the past, the content of which was revealed Monday, January 13 during the hearing. The document reportedly contained an exchange in which Thomas Markle explained to his daughter that he could not cross the Atlantic to get to her wedding due to emergency heart surgery. What push Prince Harry to contact him. The Duke of Sussex has reportedly accused Thomas Markle of injuring his own daughter, but has not heard from him about his state of health, which allegedly injured the latter. "I didn't do anything to hurt you Meghan. I'm sorry that my heart attack ... is a problem for you," Thomas Markle reportedly wrote on May 17, 2018, according to the Daily Mail. At the time, the man told the media: "I hate the idea of missing one of the greatest moments in history and not being able to take my daughter to the altar."
"You left me worried and confused"
In a letter written in August 2018 and disclosed to the media, her daughter reportedly lamented the absence of her father by her side for her marriage to Prince Harry, in which only her mother Doria Ragland was present, writing: "You have not answered any of my calls ... You left me worried, confused, shocked and blinded as my wedding approached. "
The Daily Mail pleads the dissemination of the contents of Thomas Markle's private letter to the general public as a way "to show the world that this is not a 'plea' of love as his friends claimed".