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Heather Mills in News

Mills McCartney Says She Was Near Suicide

In a new broadcast interview, Heather Mills McCartney said she had been pushed "to the edge" by lies in some newspapers, and that she has received death threats and collected a box of evidence in the event that she is killed.

Sarah Ferguson To Heather Mills: Shhhh...

Sarah Ferguson, no stranger to unflattering coverage in the British press, can empathize with Heather Mills McCartney, but doesn't have much sympathy for Paul McCartney's estranged wife in her battle with the media.

Mills exposed in explicit shoot

FORMER model Heather Mills - who is embroiled in a bitter divorce battled with estranged husband Sir Paul McCartney - once posed for explicit full frontal shots.

Mills outburst tops cringe list

Heather Mills' live TV outburst against the press is voted the "most cringeworthy moment" of 2007 by web users.

Report: Paul McCartney Ready to Consider Settling With Mills

Paul McCartney has "let it be known" that he is ready to consider an out-of-court settlement with estranged wife Heather Mills, the U.K.'s Daily Mail reports.

Time to rein in the paparazzi?

Is it time for Britain to impose controls on paparazzi photographers?Ever since those "Dolce Vita" days on the Via Veneto in Rome when they ushered in the era of taking pictures of stars in flagrante by famously riling the exiled playboy King Farouk, the snappers on Lambrettas have plagued the rich and famous.The last few years of Princess Diana and her death in 1997 opened the world's eyes to how frantic the world of celebrity photography had become. More recent hounding of young royals and their girlfriends showed the public appetite for such pictures has not waned. Heather Mills McCartney says the media drive her close to suicide.But shots of the caravan of paparazzi that pursued Britney Spears' police motorcade to hospital last month will have seemed to many like a new low.The obsession with Spears' troubles even prompted one photographer, Nick Stern of the Los Angeles-based Splash agency, to resign, saying things were just getting too dangerous. Photographers' cars -- sometimes 20 or 30 of them -- screaming down the wrong side of the road at speeds approaching 80 mph in pursuit of celebrity prey is now becoming quite normal, he said.Still -- we all look at the photos and there wouldn't be such a plethora of celeb magazines if there was a general public unease about them.Italy and France have tried to rein in the paparazzi. Should we follow suit, or is the genie too long out of the bottle -- andwould a law against intrusive photos of public figures be an unacceptable assault on press freedom?