Prince William was choppered into Britain’s top-secret spy agency under a cloak of extreme secrecy, in a bid to protect his family as whispers intensify that William and several other younger royals have had their personal email and social media accounts hacked.
Woman’s Day can reveal private text messages and extremely intimate pictures of his currently heavily pregnant wife Duchess Catherine are being shopped around to London’s tabloid media.
“Private pictures have been offered to at least two leading newspapers that show Kate in what appears to be her bedroom and on a private balcony,” a newspaper journalist tells us.
“But the real embarrassment comes from a whole stream of private text messages that were also for sale.”
The UK’s Mail On Sunday reports William chartered the royal helicopter to fly directly from Kensington Palace to the maximum security Government Communications Headquarters in Gloucestershire, which acts as a “listening station” tracking electronic traffic.
We understand the royals are desperate to prevent a catastrophic hacking situation similar to the now-infamous Sony scandal earlier last year which saw countless private emails and nude photos of celebrities leaked.
“William and Kate are both very concerned about cyber security because they have seen Hollywood superstars humiliated this past year. They know there are sophisticated teams of hackers around the world who are both ruthless and completely without morals,” says a source close to the couple, who are expecting their second child in April.
“The idea of private pictures or messages being made public is horrifying.
“In particular, there are some emails and texts from both William and Kate containing their unfiltered opinions of Prince Andrew after he was linked with an under-age sex scandal.”
While Kensington Palace refuses to comment publicly on whom William met with during his $16,000 round trip to GCHQ on March 19, the Mail On Sunday reports, “It’s believed the Prince met the new head of GCHQ, Robert Hannigan, and also saw the agency’s code breakers at work, monitoring the internet and communications traffic to pick up terrorist threats”.
Read more about the Palace’s desperate attempt to avert a security threat only in Woman’s Day, on sale 30TH March.