Prince Harry nude photo leaker

London: A friend of Prince Harry who was on his infamous Las Vegas party trip said Saturday the person who leaked naked photos of the British royal was “despicable” and had abused Harry’s hospitality.

Film-maker Arthur Landon, 30, described by The Daily Telegraph as one of  Britain’s richest young men, told the newspaper that the incident “put a real  dampener” on the trip to the US gambling resort.
The pictures of Harry, third in line to the throne, surfaced on US  celebrity news website TMZ, but were then published worldwide — although not  initially by British media.
Rupert Murdoch’s British tabloid The Sun broke ranks on Friday, publishing  the photos and saying it was “ludicrous” that British newspapers should not  print images that had already been seen by hundreds of millions online.
In one photo taken in his suite, Harry, 27, can be seen cupping his  genitals while standing in front of what appears to be a naked woman. In the  other he is naked and bear-hugging a woman from behind.
“It is really despicable that someone would accept Prince Harry’s  hospitality and then take these pictures,” Landon told The Daily Telegraph.
“It has put a real dampener on everybody who was on that holiday.
“Some people have been hinting that it was one of his friends who took the  pictures. But that is absolutely not true. None of his friends would ever do  that. We are really careful.
“I wasn’t in that hotel room so I don’t know if one of those girls took the  pictures, although I was there on the holiday.
“A lot of people have been left really disgusted to think that someone  would have gone into Harry’s hotel room, taken those pictures and then released  them to the world.” The situation could worsen for Harry as yet more pictures are said to exist  of the army attack helicopter pilot.
Prominent British publicist Max Clifford told BBC television that he had  turned down two different American women who had telephoned his organisation.
“They’ve already done it and I’ve said no,” he said, adding that he felt  the pictures amounted to an invasion of privacy.
“I’ve had two people at the party approach me, would I represent them and  would I sell their photos.”    More than 850 complaints have been made to Britain’s press watchdog about  the pictures published in The Sun.
The Press Complaints Commission said they all came from members of the  public and none had come from St James’s Palace or any other representatives of  the royal.
Nearly all of the complaints are about invasion of privacy and are to be  investigated in due course. -- AFP


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