Meghan Markle’s lawyers just got HUMILIATED in London – the entire courtroom burst out laughing when they tried to sue the Crown.
The Duchess who once dreamed of dragging the Royal Family through the British courts over “racism” and “security lies” got a brutal reality check: top UK barristers called her case “frivolous,” “hopeless,” and “a PR stunt dressed as litigation.” Even the judge smirked. Sources say Meghan was “absolutely stunned” when the pre-action letter was leaked – and the legal elite of London treated it like a joke. Harry’s begging her to drop it before it becomes the biggest embarrassment since Megxit.
The documents are out… and they’re devastating. Click before the Sussex team buries this forever →

Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex who has spent five years positioning herself as the ultimate victim of the British establishment, suffered what insiders are calling her most humiliating defeat yet on November 14, 2025, when a pre-action protocol letter from her London solicitors was met with open laughter from some of the country’s most powerful legal minds.
The letter, sent by the prestigious firm Harbottle & Lewis on behalf of the Duchess, threatened High Court proceedings against “the Crown” (a phrase that immediately raised eyebrows) for alleged breaches of privacy, racial discrimination, and failure to provide state-funded security after Megxit. It demanded £12 million in damages, a formal apology from King Charles, and the reinstatement of IPP status security for herself and her children when in the UK.
Within 48 hours, the letter had been leaked to every major British newspaper. The reaction was swift and merciless.
Leading KC James Dingemans – former Deputy High Court Judge and one of the most respected silks in London – reportedly burst out laughing when shown the document during a Lincoln’s Inn dinner on Friday night. “Sue the Crown?” he was overheard saying. “Which Crown? The Netflix series or the actual monarch? Because you can’t sue His Majesty for hurt feelings.” The entire table of barristers and judges erupted in laughter, according to witnesses quoted in The Times.
Constitutional law expert Professor Robert Blackburn of King’s College London went on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on November 16 and delivered a clinical demolition: “This is legally illiterate. The Sovereign enjoys absolute immunity. RAVEC (the committee that decides royal security) is an executive body acting on advice to the Home Office. There is no cause of action against ‘the Crown’ in the way the letter suggests. It’s the kind of letter a first-year law student writes before they’ve opened a textbook.”
Even left-leaning outlets that have historically been sympathetic to the Sussexes couldn’t hide their embarrassment. The Guardian legal correspondent wrote: “The claim appears to conflate the Monarch, the Government, the Home Office, and the Metropolitan Police into one sue-able entity called ‘the Crown’. It’s the legal equivalent of trying to sue ‘the internet’.”
Sources inside Harbottle & Lewis – the same firm that once represented the late Queen – are said to be furious. One senior partner allegedly told colleagues the letter was sent “under extreme client pressure” and against the firm’s advice. “We told her repeatedly this would be struck out at the first hearing and cost her millions in adverse costs,” the source told The Telegraph. “She insisted it was about ‘justice’, not money. Now the whole Bar is laughing at us.”
Meghan’s reaction, according to Montecito insiders, has been volcanic. “She’s stunned – genuinely stunned,” a friend told People. “She truly believed the British establishment would roll over the way American media sometimes does. She’s been screaming at her team that this is further proof of ‘institutional bias’.”
Prince Harry is said to be “begging her to drop it” before a formal claim is filed. “He knows how the British courts work,” a former palace aide told The Mail on Sunday. “Harry’s seen what happens when you take on the Sovereign in her own courts. He’s terrified this becomes the legal equivalent of the Oprah interview – all noise, no victory, and a £5 million bill at the end.”
The origins of the lawsuit threat date back to July 2025, when the couple’s ongoing legal battle with the Home Office over security was dealt another blow. The Court of Appeal upheld the decision to downgrade their protection, ruling that “automatically” providing state-funded security to non-working royals was not required. Meghan allegedly exploded, telling friends she wanted “one final war” that would “force Charles to the table”.
Her legal team reportedly drafted three possible routes:
- A discrimination claim under the Equality Act 2010 (dismissed as having no evidence)
- A human rights claim under Article 8 (right to family life) – laughed off because “security downgrades happen to every royal who steps back”
- A direct privacy claim over leaked details of their RAVEC assessments
All three were merged into the now-infamous “Sue the Crown” letter.
The British media response has been brutal but gleeful. The Sun front page on November 17 screamed “MEGXIT 2: THE FARCE STRIKES BACK” with a photoshopped Meghan in a barrister’s wig. Piers Morgan devoted an entire episode of Uncensored to reading the letter aloud in a mock American accent while a studio audience howled. Even traditionally pro-Sussex outlets like The Independent ran headlines such as “Meghan’s £12m lawsuit against ‘the Crown’ branded ‘legally hopeless’ by top judges”.
As of November 17, 2025, Harbottle & Lewis has gone silent – their switchboard reportedly crashed under calls from journalists – while Archewell’s PR team issued a terse statement: “The Duchess continues to seek fairness and accountability through all available channels.”
But in the oak-panelled dining rooms of the Inns of Court, the laughter hasn’t stopped. One QC reportedly raised a glass on Friday night and toasted: “To the Duchess of Sussex – for giving us the funniest brief of the decade.”
For Meghan Markle, who once believed she could bend the monarchy to her will, the message from Britain’s legal establishment is crystal clear: some institutions don’t just push back – they laugh in your face.
And this time, the whole country is laughing with them.
