Embattled royals Harry and Meghan have been left reeling after brazen intruders broke into their lavish Californian mansion while they had been relaxing at home with their teenagers - not once, however twice in 12 days.
According to The Sun, Santa Barbara police had been alerted to the first protection breach at the AUD20 million Montecito mansion at 5.44pm on May 19.
The break-in passed off to coincide with the couple’s fourth wedding ceremony anniversary, which they had been celebrating at domestic with Archie, 3, and one-year-old Lilibet when the alarms have been triggered.
ust over a week later on May 31 the safety system was once again tripped and police lower back to the household home at 3.21pm to investigate.
Harry and Meghan have been scheduled to fly out to Britain just hours after the incident to attend the Queen’s highly-anticipated Platinum Jubilee celebrations.



The two terrifying breaches are the ultra-modern in a string of intrusions, with police data revealing six safety alert calls to the US mansion in the previous 14 months.
However, possibly the most concerning incident dates back to Christmas Eve 2020, when a man printed to be Nickolas Brook, 37, was allegedly caught trespassing at the Sussex’s mansion.
He used to be launched with the aid of police with a warning, only to be arrested and charged with one be counted of misdemeanour trespassing after he again to the property on Boxing Day.
News of the safety scares come amid revelations a London decide has granted Prince Harry permission to take the British authorities to court over his security preparations in the United Kingdom.
The defected royals lost publicly funded UK police safety when they stepped down as senior working royals and moved to the United States in 2020.
The prince desires to for my part pay for police security when he visits Britain, and is challenging the government’s refusal to permit it, claiming he does no longer feel protected in the UK after his taxpayer-funded bodyguards have been removed.



Judge Jonathan Swift on Friday ruled the case may want to go to a full listening to at the High Court in London.
While he refused some elements of the challenge, he stated some grounds “give upward push to an controversial case” that deserved a hearing.
“A conclusion at the permission stage that a case is controversial is some distance from a conclusion that the case will succeed at final hearing,” Judge Swift said.
According to The Sun, royal expert and Harry’s biographer Angela Levin suggested: “Maybe Harry must listen more on the protection in California instead than making complaints about his safety in Britain.”
“After two intruder signals in 12 days, really he have to be making the protection of his family in the US his priority.”

Tags: Queen, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince Louis, Prince William and Kate Middleton, Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Meghan, Lilibet


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