Buckingham Palace finishes report on handling of Meghan bullying allegations, but won't say what's in it

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry attend the National Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral in London on June 3 during the Platinum Jubilee.
Buckingham Palace has revealed that it has
completed a review into the handling of the allegations that Meghan, the
Duchess of Sussex, bullied royal staff, but declined to share the results of
the probe.
Speaking
at a news conference to discuss the Royal Household's annual financial
statement, Michael Stevens -- the official in charge of the Crown's finances --
said that the private company hired to investigate the allegations had completed
its work.
Stevens
said that several recommendations were made, but he did not reveal in any
substantive detail, the conclusions that were reached or recommendations that
were put forward. As the review was privately funded, there was less pressure
for the Crown to publish its findings.
"I
can confirm though that it was a review of the handling of the allegations
aimed at enabling the royal households to consider potential improvements to HR
policies and procedures," said Stevens.
"The
review has been completed and recommendations on our policies and procedures
have been taken forward, but we will not be commenting further."
A
senior royal source said the palace is staying tight-lipped about the
investigation to protect the anonymity of those who cooperated.
"We
recognize that those people who participated in the review, participated on the
understanding that there would be confidentiality in those discussions with the
independent legal firm, and therefore we have a duty to respect that
confidentiality," the source said.
The
source said the Palace has made several policy changes in the review's
aftermath, but declined to reveal them in detail.
"Whenever
you would undertake an independent review or there's an examination of this
nature, there would always be lessons to be learned, there's always ways in
which you can improve processes and procedures," said the source.
"We
wouldn't normally reveal every change to our policies and procedures."
The
allegations surfaced last year, when The Times in the UK published an article
citing unnamed sources who claimed the Duchess drove out two personal
assistants from her Kensington Palace household and undermined the confidence
of a third staff member.
Buckingham
Palace initially said it would investigate the claims, but later hired an
external law firm to do so.
At
the time, a spokesperson for the Sussexes dismissed the Times report as "a
calculated smear campaign," as it was published just days before Oprah
Winfrey's bombshell interview with Meghan and Prince Harry was set to air.
The
interview was the first time the couple spoke publicly after they announced
plans to step back from senior roles in the British royal family in 2020.
Meghan
told Winfrey life as a British royal was so isolating and lonely at one point
she "didn't want to be alive anymore."
She
described herself as the victim of an image-obsessed Buckingham Palace, which
weighed in on everything from how dark her son Archie's skin color would be to
how often she went to lunch with friends.
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