The U.S. government has released documents related to Prince Harry’s 2020 visa application, but large portions were heavily redacted, citing privacy concerns. The release follows a legal battle initiated by The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, which sought the records under the Freedom of Information Act.
The foundation argued that the public has a right to know whether the Duke of Sussex disclosed his past drug use, which he admitted in his memoir Spare. However, U.S. immigration officials defended their decision to withhold details, emphasizing that there was no evidence of special treatment.
"Plaintiffs allege that the records should be disclosed to prevent public mistrust or determine if the Duke received preferential treatment. This speculation does not indicate any government misconduct," stated Jarrod Panter from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
More than 80 pages of court filings and transcripts were made public, but significant sections were blacked out. The Heritage Foundation has yet to provide proof that public interest outweighs Harry’s right to privacy, officials said.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle moved to the U.S. in 2020 after stepping back from royal duties in the UK. In Spare, published in 2023, Harry openly discussed his past drug use, including cocaine and marijuana.
Representatives for both Prince Harry and The Heritage Foundation have not commented on the newly released documents. The legal battle highlights ongoing debates over transparency, privacy, and whether high-profile individuals receive preferential treatment in U.S. immigration processes.
This development fuels speculation but leaves key questions unanswered, keeping public interest in Harry’s immigration status alive.


Panama Supreme Court Voids CK Hutchison Port Concessions, Raising Geopolitical and Trade Concerns
Trump Administration Sued Over Suspension of Critical Hudson River Tunnel Funding
Supreme Court Signals Skepticism Toward Hawaii Handgun Carry Law
Newly Released DOJ Epstein Files Expose High-Profile Connections Across Politics and Business
Uber Ordered to Pay $8.5 Million in Bellwether Sexual Assault Lawsuit
Meta Faces Lawsuit Over Alleged Approval of AI Chatbots Allowing Sexual Interactions With Minors
Jerome Powell Attends Supreme Court Hearing on Trump Effort to Fire Fed Governor, Calling It Historic
UAE Plans Temporary Housing Complex for Displaced Palestinians in Southern Gaza
Brazil Supreme Court Orders Asset Freeze of Nelson Tanure Amid Banco Master Investigation
U.S.–Iran Nuclear Talks Scheduled in Oman as Diplomatic Efforts Resume
Melania Trump Pushes Diplomacy to Return Ukrainian Children from Russia
Missouri Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Starbucks’ Diversity and Inclusion Policies
NATO to Discuss Strengthening Greenland Security Amid Arctic Tensions
Trump Allegedly Sought Airport, Penn Station Renaming in Exchange for Hudson River Tunnel Funding
Trump Endorses Japan’s Sanae Takaichi Ahead of Crucial Election Amid Market and China Tensions
U.S. Condemns South Africa’s Expulsion of Israeli Diplomat Amid Rising Diplomatic Tensions
Court Allows Expert Testimony Linking Johnson & Johnson Talc Products to Ovarian Cancer 



