Prince Harry has been told the Metropolitan Police are not “private bodyguards for the wealthy”.
The Duke of Sussex has appealed against the Home Secretary’s decision to refuse the royal’s request for police protection, and government and police officers have said specialist protection officers should only “put themselves in harm’s way” in the public interest.
Harry wants to pay the Met police for protecting him as a non-working royal after being told he wouldn’t get the “same degree” of personal security when he visits the UK.
At a preliminary hearing on Tuesday, May 16 - which will determine whether or not a full trial will follow - the prince’s lawyers argued that private individuals can pay for special policing services under the Police Act 1996.
But lawyers for the Home Secretary said: “There is no legal authority for the proposition that the concept of special police service encompasses the use of police officers as private bodyguards for the wealthy.”