Rowling loses London court battle

Published August 8, 2007

LONDON: Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling on Tuesday lost a court fight in London to ban publication of a photograph of her young son. Rowling, whose seventh and final Potter book was released worldwide last month to a frenzy of excitement and record sales, had argued at the High Court that her son David's right to privacy was invaded by the picture.

The photograph, showing Rowling and her husband Neil Murray with the child in a buggy, was taken by a picture agency photographer using a long-range lens in a street in her home city of Edinburgh in 2004.

The boy, now aged four, was 20 months old at the time.

Rowling and Murray took action in the child's name against the agency, Big Pictures (UK) and Express Newspapers, seeking damages and an injunction banning further publication of the shot or any others of the boy.

But the court ruled that the law would not allow Rowling to carve out a press-free zone for her children and struck out proceedings against the photo agency. Express Newspapers had separately settled the claim.

Rowling and her husband were ordered to pay the photo agency 40,000 pounds ($81,000) interim costs pending the outcome of an appeal.—AFP

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