Coleen Rooney: My online post was a last resort

ANDY RAIN/EPA Coleen RooneyANDY RAIN/EPA
Mrs Rooney said she posted warnings online "many times" from 2017 but personal story leaks "didn't stop"

Coleen Rooney has told the High Court her online post alleging Rebekah Vardy leaked private stories about her to the Sun newspaper was a "last resort".

Mrs Rooney appeared in the witness box for the first time on day four of the libel case, brought by Mrs Vardy.

She told the court on Friday she was "surprised" by "how much interest" her so-called Wagatha Christie social media post caused in 2019.

And that it was never her "intention" for Mrs Vardy to receive abuse.

"It's not in my nature to cause abuse or trolling in any way at all," she said.

Mrs Rooney is being sued for libel by Mrs Vardy, for alleging she leaked personal stories to the Sun newspaper, which she denies.

The case was sparked by a viral social media post from October 2019, in which Mrs Rooney said she had carried out a sting operation to find out who had been passing private information about her life to the Sun.

She said the fake stories she had posted on Instagram in an effort to find the perpetrator had only been viewed by "Rebekah Vardy's account".

Yui Mok/PA Rebekah Vardy arriving at court on FridayYui Mok/PA
Rebekah Vardy arriving at court on Friday

Mrs Vardy's barrister, Hugh Tomlinson, asked Mrs Rooney what she set out to achieve with the widely-shared post.

She replied: "I wasn't achieving anything, what I wanted was to stop the person who was leaking my private information to The Sun". Adding that stories, "no matter how big or small", about her family had been "picked up by the media for 20 years".

Mrs Rooney said she had posted warnings online "many times" from 2017 but that personal story leaks "didn't stop". Private Instagram posts were leaked, she said, at a time when "I didn't know how my marriage was going to work out and whether I was going on with my relationship."

She noted how Mrs Vardy, whose husband Jamie played football for England with her own husband Wayne, was "not in my circle" and they had "never met socially".

The 36-year-old said that whenever her own name appeared in the press, it was "a regular occurrence" that she would then be messaged by Mrs Vardy, 40.

"I felt like when she contacted me it was to try and get information out of me," Mrs Rooney said.

She told the court that Mrs Vardy's messages were "generally nice", but added that "towards the end it was a bit unusual" that "someone who was not that close to me [would be] constantly checking in with me all the time".

Mrs Rooney said in her written witness statement that seeing a message between Mrs Vardy and her agent referencing her late sister "knocked me sick" when it was disclosed.

The defendant stressed she had never fallen out with any of the other partners of her husband's teammates.

Julia Quenzler for BBC News A courtroom sketch of Coleen Rooney in the witness box, as her husband Wayne watches onJulia Quenzler for BBC News
Wayne Rooney looked away as his wife Coleen told the court how leaked stories had added to their marriage issues

When asked if she might have tried to mitigate any online abuse suffered by Mrs Vardy with another social media post, she replied: "Maybe I would have liked to have [done so]", but with little knowledge of the legal system she decided to follow "instruction of my legal team".

In her statement, Mrs Rooney also said she had tried "in vain" to bring the matter to a close before it had made it to court.

"I have sought to resolve this matter amicably on various occasions because I was of the view that the time, money, resources and efforts involved could be better spent elsewhere, particularly in light of the Covid-19 pandemic," she stated.

She added she had "no doubt that this litigation, whatever the outcome, will benefit neither Becky [Mrs Vardy] nor myself".

Getty Images Coleen Rooney [L] and Rebekah VardyGetty Images
Mrs Rooney and Mrs Vardy pictured here watching their partners at Euro 2016 in France

Earlier on Friday, under re-examination from her own barrister, Mrs Vardy broke down in tears once again, as she had done on the two previous days.

She said she felt like she had been "bullied and manipulated" while facing an "exhausting" and "intimidating" cross examination by Mrs Rooney's barrister David Sherborne; and stated that she had pressed on with legal action despite a letter from Mrs Rooney's solicitors which she perceived as a "threat" because she "didn't do anything wrong".

Mrs Vardy said she had discussed Mrs Rooney's private Instagram account only "a handful of times" with her agent agent Caroline Watt, who she confirmed was first given the password to her account when she went into the celebrity jungle on the ITV show I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! in 2017.

'Fuming'

The court heard Mrs Rooney had been left "fuming" about a Sun article in January 2019 about her allegedly being involved in a car crash while she and husband were living in the US, having previously posted on Instagram about damage to her vehicle.

Mrs Rooney was alerted to the story by one of her son's football coaches, who was concerned about them, but, the court heard: "There was no crash."

The Liverpudlian explained that a lorry had "scraped down the side of the car", likely due to the fact she was unused to driving on the right side of the road in the US.

Mrs Rooney said she was "angry" and "annoyed" when the Sun printed information which "was untrue" and the private information was "getting out there".

Mrs Vardy's barrister suggested to Mrs Rooney that she had "no evidence" to link his client to alleged leaks.

"I believe that Mrs Vardy knew that this was happening, whether it was Mrs Vardy herself or it was someone she's given permission to," she responded.

Mr Tomlinson replied: "You might believe that Derby County [the team Mr Rooney currently manages] will win the Premiership. It's not evidence that they are going to."

Mrs Rooney, who described herself as a full-time mum in her witness statement, said at one stage: "I'm not a gossip, I don't like to confirm things unless they are true," later adding that she hadn't picked Mrs Vardy's name "out of thin air" during her own personal investigation.

The trial continues next week.