While preparing the mobilization reform bill for its second reading, Ukraine’s parliamentary Defense Committee has struck some of the more contentious provisions proposed by the government, ruling Servant of the People party MP Iryna Friz said in a Facebook post on Feb. 28.
Judge Reveals Why Meghan Markle Won Her Tabloid Copyright Case
On 5/12/21 at 11:40 AM EDT
Mail on Sunday in a judgement earlier on Wednesay.
The Duchess of Sussex sued the newspaper for printing a letter she sent her father criticizing him for speaking to the media.
Thomas Markle leaked the five-page handwritten note accusing him of breaking her heart. When extensive extracts were published, a long running courtroom saga unfolded.
Meghan was handed victory on privacy earlier this year but several aspects of her copyright claim were held over for another hearing.
Last week a judge indicated she would win those too but his full reasons were saved for a written judgement released by the High Court, in London, today.
Meghan Markle Wins Last Copyright Claim Against UK Tabloid, Sole Author Of Letter To Father
KEY POINTS
Meghan Markle has won the last of her copyright claim over the publication of a letter to her estranged father
Associated Newspapers earlier suggested that she may not have been the sole copyright owner of the letter
Former communications secretary Jason Knauf denied co-writing the private letter the duchess sent to Thomas Markle
Meghan Markle has won the final round in her copyright claim against the publisher of the U.K. tabloids Mail on Sunday and Mail Online over the publication of a letter she sent to her father in August 2018.
While Meghan won much of her claim without needing a trial, the judge said the issue of who owned copyright to the letter still needed to be decided because of the possible involvement of senior aides
Meghan Markle has applied to end her marathon lawsuit against a U.K. tabloid—after getting the backing of a former aide who once accused her of bullying her staff.