Kate and William have won a landmark legal case to block further publication of ‘highly intimate’ topless photographs of the Duchess of Cambridge.
The Royal couple's lawyers have successfully secured an injunction from a French court preventing the images being spread across the globe by the owners of Closer - the first to publish the naked pictures.
The ruling in Paris this morning means:
Closer France must not print any more copies of its controversial issue and take the topless pictures off its website
The photos cannot be published in any other magazines or papers in France
The photographs cannot be sold by them to anyone else in the world
Closer would get a 10,000 euro daily fine each time they sell them on or publish them
Within 24 hours the offending pictures must be handed over to the Palace
Legal fees of 2,000 euros handed to the Duke and Duchess
At the start of the unprecedented court case in Paris, barrister Aurelien Hammelle evoked memories of Princess Diana’s ordeal at the hands of paparazzi as he said a photographer had violated Kate’s privacy, adding she is a ‘young woman, not an object’.