The Sun reported on July 24 that police were alerted to two intruder scares at Prince Harry and Meghan Markle‘s California house in just 12 days.

The pair and their two children, Archie, three, and Lilibet, one, were assumed to be at their Montecito home when the alarms went off.

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According to Santa Barbara Police records, detectives responded to a trespasser allegation at the couple’s £11 million house on their wedding anniversary, May 19, at 5:44 pm.

They responded to a second intruder report on May 31 at 3:21 pm, only hours before Harry and Meghan returned to Britain for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

The security scares in California came as Harry, 37, was granted permission to sue the Home Office, saying he no longer feels safe in the UK after his taxpayer-funded bodyguards were withdrawn.

The couple has renewed their lease on Frogmore Cottage in the United Kingdom.

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It is guarded by armed police 24 hours a day, seven days a week because it is located on the Queen’s Windsor estate.

They hired former US President Barack Obama’s former bodyguard Christopher Sanchez and Michael Jackson’s former security head Alberto Alvarez while in the United States.

According to police records, their US house has received six security alert calls in the last 14 months.

Both May calls were classified as “trespasser,” “property crimes,” and “suspicious circumstances.”

Cops were called again after the couple’s security staff demanded “documentation of a trespasser, who left.”

“Maybe Harry should concentrate more on the security in California rather than making complaints about his security in Britain,” Angela Levin, Harry’s biographer and royal specialist, stated, adding, “After two intruder alerts in 12 days, surely he should be making the protection of his family in the US his priority.”

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In the previous 14 months, there were four other calls to police, reports The Sun.

Officers responded to a call at 2:52 am on April 9, 2021, but were called off because “no assistance was needed.”

On New Year’s Day this year, at 1:43 am, the alarm was “mistakenly tripped,” prompting the dispatch of a police car.

It’s unclear if the Sussexes were celebrating at home.

Cops were then phoned at 10:41 am on April 8 but did not respond since the call “belonged to other agency.”

On June 8, there was another “miscellaneous dispatch” at 1:17pm, but no cops showed up.

These are not the first instances at the Sussex residence. A man reportedly trespassed on Christmas Eve 2020 and returned on Boxing Day before being detained.

After his UK security was withdrawn, Prince Harry filed a court case seeking a judicial review in September. The review was permitted last Friday. The High Court hearing has not yet been scheduled.