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February 27, 2012updated 10 Oct 2012 6:00pm

Charlotte Church wins £600,000 phone-hack payout

By PA Mediapoint

Singer Charlotte Church and her parents settled her phone-hacking damages action for £600,000 at the High Court, it has emerged.

Last week, lawyers for the 25-year-old and her parents, James and Maria, confirmed that terms had been agreed with News of the World publisher News Group Newspapers (NGN).

Miss Church was present at the London court for the reading of a statement resolving her claim that 33 articles in the now defunct Sunday newspaper were the product of hacking into her family's voicemails.

The settlement includes £300,000 in legal costs and a public apology.

Church said she was "sickened and disgusted" by what she had discovered during her legal action against News International.

In a statement outside the Royal Courts of Justice, the singer said money "could never mend" the damage that was done to her and her family but she planned to put the payout she was awarded towards protecting herself and her children from further invasions of their privacy.

She said: "Today is an important day for me and my family. I brought this legal claim with my parents, as many others have done, because we wanted to find out the truth about what this newspaper group had done in the pursuit of stories about our family.

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"What I have discovered as the litigation has gone on has sickened and disgusted me. Nothing was deemed off limits by those who pursued me and my family, just to make money for a multinational News Corporation."

'They are not truly sorry, only sorry they got caught'

 

Church said her parents had suffered as much as she had in their treatment by the company.

"Whatever I have had to go through, they have suffered as well. They have been harassed, put under surveillance, and my mother was bullied into revealing her own private medical condition for no other reason than they were my parents.

"Someone in a newspaper thought that was OK. How can that be, in any right-thinking society?"

She said she was "happy" with the result in one sense, but added that she had discovered that, despite an apology, "these people were prepared to go to any lengths to prevent me exposing their behaviour", including forcing her mother to relive the "enormous personal distress" she had been caused in 2005.

"It seems they have learned nothing, and I would have learned nothing more from an actual trial since it was clear that no-one from News International was prepared to take the stand to explain their actions," she said.

"In my opinion, they are not truly sorry, only sorry they got caught."

Church said she is now planning to focus on helping the criminal investigation and Lord Justice Leveson's inquiry, as well as others who are seeking to bring to justice those responsible for this appalling behaviour.

She added: "I would also like to make it clear that we were never in this for the money. Money could never mend the damage that was done.

"I intend to dedicate my portion of the settlement to protecting myself and my children from further invasions of our privacy."

 

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