French court to rule on topless Kate Middleton pictures

Copies of French celebrity magazine Closer, which published topless pictures of Prince William's wife Kate Middleton, at a newsstand in Paris on Sept 14, 2012. PHOTO: AFP

PARIS (AFP) - A French court will rule on Tuesday (Sept 5) on whether a French celebrity magazine should pay 1.5 million euros (S$2.4 million) in damages sought by Prince William and his wife Kate Middleton for topless photos published of the duchess in 2012.

The grainy snaps of her sunbathing in a bikini bottom were taken while she was on holiday in September 2012 in the south of France with her husband, the second-in-line to the British throne.

The couple were snapped with a long lens while they were relaxing by a pool at a chateau belonging to Viscount Linley, a nephew of Queen Elizabeth.

The pictures triggered a furious reaction from the royal family in Britain, where several newspapers had rejected an offer to buy the pictures.

Closer, a glossy gossip magazine, was the first to splash them on its cover, and they were later reproduced in several other European publications, including Chi in Italy and Ireland's Daily Star.

The royals - who announced on Monday that they are expecting a third child - filed a criminal complaint for invasion of privacy and obtained an injunction preventing further use of the images.

In a letter read out in court, Prince William said the case reminded him of the paparazzi hounding of his mother, the late princess Diana, who was killed in a car crash in Paris 20 years ago.

Four people have been charged over the pictures, including two Paris-based agency photographers. They face a maximum of one year in prison and a personal fine of 45,000 euros, while the court can also award damages.

The prosecution called for "very heavy" fines for the editor of Closer in France and the head of the Mondadori group, which owns the magazine.

The royals joined the case as civil plaintiffs.

During the trial, Closer's lawyers argued that the pictures were in the public interest and conveyed a "positive image" of the royals.

The court will also rule on a complaint against the Marseille-based La Provence newspaper, which printed a picture of the Duchess of Cambridge in a two-piece bathing costume at the same chateau a week before the Closer photos.

For that picture, the prosecution has called for the paper's publisher and the photographer to be given suspended fines, while the royal couple are seeking 50,000 euros in damages.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.