LONDON — Prince Harry was treated unfairly when he was stripped of his British security detail, his attorney told appeals court judges Tuesday as he sought to win back his government-funded protection.
Harry, whose rare appearance in court indicated the case's importance to him, lost his police bodyguards in February 2020 after he stepped down from his role as a working member of the royal family and moved to the U.S.
A High Court judge ruled last year that a government panel's decision to provide ''bespoke'' security for the Duke of Sussex on an as-needed basis was not unlawful, irrational or unjustified.
But attorney Shaheed Fatima argued that a group that evaluated Harry's security needs failed to follow its own process and perform a risk management assessment.
''The appellant does not accept that bespoke means better,'' Fatima said. ''In fact, in his submission, it means that he has been singled out for different, unjustified and inferior treatment.''
A lawyer for the government said Harry's argument in the lower court was accurately found to have been misconceived and based on an ''inappropriate, formalist interpretation'' of the government's security review.
''The appeal is fairly to be characterized in the same way," attorney James Eadie said. "It involves a continued failure to see the wood for the trees, advancing propositions available only by reading small parts of the evidence, and now the judgment, out of context and ignoring the totality of the picture.''
The hearing before three Court of Appeal justices is due to end Wednesday and a written decision is expected later. While the hearing was livestreamed, much of the second day will be conducted behind closed doors to discuss sensitive security details.