ENTERTAINMENT
Prince Harry ‘accused of lying’ in ‘Spare’ to curb US visa legal troubles
Prince Harry is currently facing some distressing legal troubles concerning his US visa after his explosive memoir, Spare, hit the shelves last year in January.
The Heritage Foundation is demanding that the Duke of Sussex’s US visa application be revisited, because Harry admitted to drug use in his memoir.
However, US Federal lawyers argued that the memoir is not solid “proof” that Harry took drugs, implying that the duke may have lied on the book to boost sales.
John Bardo, a lawyer for the Biden administration, told the court that “the book isn’t sworn testimony or proof.”
“Just saying something in a book doesn’t necessarily make it true,” he added. “Prince Harry is one foreign national out of many who enter the US legally.”
In the counter argument, Samuel Dewey, for the Heritage Foundation, argued, “Spare is a valid admission, the Duke has confirmed its accuracy.”
In the memoir, the father of two recounted personal anecdotes that involved recreational drug use, which ae now a basis of the lawsuit filed against him.
The suit attempts to prove that the “DHS is giving special treatment to high-profile celebrities, and this is probably the most high-profile celebrity out there who’s been in the United States,” per Dewey.
It remains to be seen if Prince Harry’s US visa would be safe under the circumstances.
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Drew Barrymore reveals valuable lesson she learned from acting career
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Britney Spears’ cover sparks outrage from original artist
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Louis Tomlinson, Zara McDermott’s romance takes serious turn
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Jennifer Aniston’s dating difficulties revealed
-
NEWS1 day ago
Billie Eilish reveals secret to her ‘newfound’ vocal freedom
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Lindsay Lohan lands first lead TV role in new series ‘Count My Lies’
-
ENTERTAINMENT1 day ago
Jessica Alba speaks out for astronauts after Blue Origin backlash
-
NEWS1 day ago
Ahmed Suale murder trial: Court orders Police to file bill of indictment