Department of Homeland Security Submits Prince Harry’s Visa Documents To Court For Review
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The Department of Homeland Security has finally handed Prince Harry’s visa documents to the court after they initially requested for two weeks extension.
Prince Harry’s immigration status is currently in contention due to the illicit drugs he admitted to taking in his memoir “Spare.”
Prince Harry’s Visa Documents In Review By the Court
Heritage Foundation, a conservative think-tank, started the campaign to make the 39-year-old Duke’s immigration papers public.
According to the foundation’s director Nile Gardiner, making the documents public will allow the public to judge whether the Prince was given a special treatment in relocating to the States, especially since he admitted to taking different types of illicit drugs.
In his memoir, Harry detailed taking cannabis, cocaine, magic mushrooms and ayahuasca, even after welcoming his children and relocating to the States.
A court filing, as reported in Newsweek, read: “Defendant the U.S. Department of Homeland Security respectfully informs the court that it has complied with the court’s March 7, 2024, order by submitting declarations with attachments for ex parte in camera [in private] review.”
The filing explained that the document was submitted via an encrypted link.
At first, the Department of Homeland Security argued that it would be a breach of privacy to release Harry’s immigration papers and resisted it. However, a court ruling compelled them to hand them over.
They argued in a past filing: “Courts consistently hold that a person’s visa or immigration status is private, personal information exempt from disclosure.
“Specifically, the records would reveal the types of documents that Prince Harry used to travel to the United States, his admission status, and any immigration, or non-immigration, benefits that he may have sought.”
They also claimed at the time that Harry could have written about doing drugs to sell books and not necessarily because it was true.
However, Gardiner argued that “Harry seems to have received special treatment: the DHS looked the other way if the prince answered truthfully, or it looked the other way if the prince lied on his visa application. Either action would be wrong.”
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