Look: Americans want Prince Harry go

Look: Americans want Prince Harry go

The Americans want the Duke of Sussex to return to Great Britain, said the head of a leading Washington thinking factory.

Kevin Roberts, President of the Heritage Foundation, supports the legal steps of the Think tank to investigate the Duke's US visual application after admitting drug use in his memoirs.

When asked whether the Duke should be deported after these revelations, Mr. Roberts told The Telegraph: "We don't like that he is in America, and we would love it if he returns to you or somewhere."

"I think we Americans see Prince Harry as much as President Biden see. You can have him back."

The Heritage Foundation, the largest conservative thinking factory in the United States, has requested the release of the Duke's American visa application.

The US government has so far refused to publish it, even though he had asked for the information to be issued, but a dish will decide whether the officers should be forced to make its immigration documents accessible to the public.

You rely on your case on the US immigration laws that state that every foreigner "is found that he is misused drugs" is classified as "inadmissible", although immigration officers can deviate from this rule.

The Duke admitted in his autobiography - and in television interviews that they applied at the beginning of the year - to have consumed cocaine, cannabis and magic mushrooms in the past.

He also admitted to having taken magic mushroom chocolate in Los Angeles in 2016 at a party in the house of Courteney Cox, the actress from the Friends series - illegal in the USA.

In an interview with Variety in February, the "Friends" star confirmed that Prince Harry had stayed in her house, but denied to "pass on psychedelic drugs.

"He stayed here for a few days - probably two or three," said Cox and added: "I don't say that there were mushrooms!" I definitely didn't make it out.

True application

Sources close to the Duke have previously pointed out that he was truthful in his visa application, which indicates that he disclosed his earlier drug use.

Mr. Roberts told The Telegraph that only "two to three percent" of the US population "love nonsense that Harry and Meghan spread" and that the British generally do not have to worry that the Americans are on their side ".

he added that the Americans "admire the stability of the British form of government, which of course also includes the royal family".

In previous court files, the Heritage Foundation and Mike Howell against the US Ministry of Homeland, the thought factory argues that the duke's application for the Duke's visa is "immense public interest".

Mr. Roberts' comments came less than a week after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex claimed that they were involved in a "almost catastrophic chase" between Paparazzi photographers in New York.

The couple had just left a award ceremony in New York, accompanied by Meghan's mother Doria Ragland last Tuesday, when they said they were exposed to a two -hour "relentless persecution" by a "gang" of at least six paparazzi in blackened dresses. from vehicles.

The report that the Sussexes published last week did not matter as they expected, since New York authorities and other witnesses raised questions about their version of the events, in particular on the alleged degree of intensity.

The city authorities played down the severity of the incident and said, although the photographers had “challenging” the journey of the Sussexes, there were “no reported clashes, lectures, injuries or arrests”.

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Source: The Telegraph

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