St James's Palace has confirmed it contacted the Press Complaints Commission over the possible use of naked photos of Prince Harry.
The palace had heard a number of UK newspapers were considering using them, a spokesman said. Not one has done so.It believed publication of the photos - taken in a Las Vegas hotel room - would constitute an invasion of privacy.
One ex-editor says the decision not to use the photos shows the Leveson Inquiry has "neutered" UK newspapers.
The pictures of Prince Harry, 27, and a young woman naked in a Las Vegas hotel room appeared on US gossip website TMZ.
St James's Palace has confirmed the prince is in the photos and that it contacted the PCC on Wednesday because it had concerns about his privacy being intruded upon, in breach of the editors' code of practice.
The photos are believed to have been taken on a camera phone last Friday when the prince was on a private weekend break with friends.
'No harm done' TMZ reported that Harry had been pictured in a group playing "strip billiards".
Analysis
There was a time when he was known as the partying prince, falling out of nightclubs in the early hours, getting himself into scrapes and generally showing a lack of good judgement.In more recent times, Harry has transformed his image. His military service has played a big part in the change. He served in Afghanistan with his regiment, and said he was keen to return.
And time and again during his royal duties he's shown the caring instinct that his late mother demonstrated. Harry has become a huge asset to the Royal Family: committed, but with a sense of fun and mischief to which people have warmed.
So this latest episode will surely be both an embarrassment and a disappointment to his family and, most particularly one imagines, to Harry himself. His friends say he was just "letting his hair down", a young officer having a few days of relaxation before returning to military duties. But it can never be quite as straightforward as that when that "young officer" is third in line to the British throne.
The pictures have been picked up by much of the US media but no British newspapers have published them, although they have appeared on a political blog in the UK and the Sun has mocked up an image of one of them.
Former News of the World executive editor Neil Wallis told the BBC that before the Leveson Inquiry into media ethics and practices he would have published the pictures, but that the inquiry had "neutered" the press.Mr Wallis told BBC Two's Newsnight: "The situation is fun, it's a good, classic newspaper situation.
"The problem is in this post-Leveson era where newspapers are simply terrified of their own shadow, they daren't do things that most of the country, if they saw it in the newspaper, would think 'that's a bit of a laugh'.
"There would be no harm done and they would not think any worse of either the paper or of Prince Harry."
Mr Wallis said it would have been in the public interest to publish the pictures.
"He is third in line to the throne, he's been on the world stage for weeks and weeks, he is supposedly surrounded by police security officers," he said.
Former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie, who also appeared on Newsnight, said the photos represented a "fantastic" story.
"It doesn't affect Prince Harry at all. He is single and he is cavorting with ladies who wish to be cavorted with," Mr MacKenzie said.
"So where are the issues? There are no issues except one - Leveson."
'Fast and loose' However, former royal protection officer Ken Wharfe said the incident was a setback for the prince.
"It really undermines the work that he has been doing in the last six months - that's his charitable work and even his military career, which has taken off in a fantastic direction," he said.
The Leveson Inquiry was launched last year in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal centred on the News of the World.
Broadcaster Vanessa Feltz, an alleged victim of phone hacking, told Newsnight: "If there is some kind of moral awakening then it's about damn time because there are too many people whose lives have been played fast and loose with for nothing more than a bit of titillation over your Frosties."
She added: "What [Prince Harry] does in a private hotel room is what we expect him to be doing.
"He's a young fellow, he's not married, he's not on state business, he's not representing the Queen, and any editor who says it's of no interest to anyone is quite right."
Source;BBC
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