McCartney's royal battle
2006-08-09 10:25
London - Paul and Heather Mills McCartney
have raised the stakes in their increasingly acrimonious divorce
battle, hiring the same two lawyers who represented Prince
Charles and Princess Diana when they split in 1996.
Mills, who married the former Beatle in 2002 and has a
daughter, Beatrice, with him, has named Anthony Julius of
leading law firm Mishcon de Reya to fight her side. Julius
represented Diana in the divorce case.
"Yes. It was decided today," said Mills' spokesperson Phil Hall
on Tuesday, when asked to confirm Julius' appointment.
It has already been widely reported that McCartney had hired
Fiona Shackleton, who acted for Prince Charles against Diana, to
argue his case.
Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in 1981, but the
marriage collapsed amid mutual accusations of adultery. They
separated in 1992 and finally divorced in 1996.
When the McCartneys announced their separation in May, they
promised it would be amicable.
But Hall confirmed on Tuesday that McCartney had frozen
their joint bank account and sent a "legal letter" to his wife
recently to complain after three bottles of cleaning fluid were
taken from his Sussex home to clean Mills' nearby office.
McCartney's spokesperson was not available for comment.
'Unreasonable behaviour'
McCartney, 64, cited Mills' "unreasonable behaviour" in
divorce papers, and Mills, who is 38, responded by vowing to
file counter-claims in Britain and the United States.
"She is hugely disappointed that matters of such a
confidential nature should be aired in public and feels it is
inappropriate to speak about such delicate matters when a child
is involved," her spokesperson said in a statement last month.
Lawyers believe McCartney could lose up to one quarter of
his wealth, estimated at £825m, as a
result of a divorce, partly because he did not sign a
pre-nuptial agreement.
The couple met in 1999 at a charity event a year after the
death from breast cancer of McCartney's first wife Linda.
Mills has been the target of lurid allegations in British
tabloids since separating from McCartney, but he has strongly
denied she married him for his money, saying in May there was
"not an ounce of truth in this".
Earlier on Tuesday, Hall said Mills had laughed off being
locked out of McCartney's London home.
On Monday, police were called to the residence when Mills'
security guard climbed over the wall of his premises to let her
in. The locks on the gates had been changed.
"One of the security people inside called the police," Hall
said. "They turned up and she went off for a drive around the
block with the kid."
Mills had arrived at the home with daughter Beatrice.
"She was laughing about it," Hall said, when asked about
newspaper reports that Mills was angry at being locked out.