The Department of Homeland Security informed federal judges on Thursday that it would be made public with several compilations from Prince Harry's immigration records.
Washington, DC, federal judge Carl Nichols ordered the federal government earlier this month to devise an edited version of the Duke of Sussex immigration files for his review, hoping to release the record. .
DHS on Thursday reveals whether Harry used the drug when he applied, as part of an ongoing fight by the Conservative Heritage Foundation, according to documents filed in DC Federal Court. For that reason, documents filed in DC Federal Court said they agreed. visa.
The filing said DHS agreed to take over “items 1-3” of the royal records that are subject to editing, but disagree with the release of “item 4.”
The document did not further elaborate on the information contained in the item. However, at a hearing earlier this month, Nichols indicated that the royal visa application itself would not be published in a batch of current records in question.
“I'm going to take this in stages,” Nichols said at a hearing on Feb. 5, wanting to ensure that he violated the US privacy law protecting the duke. Instead, the judge said he was considering releasing a statement made by a DHS official who reviewed Harry's records.
DHS will need to come up with a version of the edited record to file for judge approval until March 6th.
The Heritage Foundation filed a lawsuit against Harry's visa records in 2023 after writing in her memoir “Spare” that she used cocaine, cannabis and psychedelic mushrooms.
The think tank wanted to know if Duke had disclosed information on the application's part, inquired about previous drug use, and if he was granted a waiver to reside in the United States despite the disclosure.


