Assault on journalist In 1999, Ernst August was accused of assaulting a journalist with an umbrella. He agreed to pay a fine in a settlement.
Turkish Pavilion Ernst August was photographed urinating on the Turkish Pavilion at the
Expo 2000 event in Hanover, causing a diplomatic incident and a complaint from the
Turkish embassy accusing him of insulting the Turkish people. He successfully sued those who published (
Bild-Zeitung) the photograph for invasion of privacy, obtaining an award of 9,900
euros.
Assault charge In 2000, Ernst August was involved in a dispute with a German man, Joseph Brunnlehner, on the island of
Lamu in Kenya. Brunnlehner was the operator of a disco, and Ernst August allegedly assaulted him with a
knuckleduster, upset about the noise coming from the disco. In 2004, he was convicted in a German court of aggravated assault and causing grievous bodily harm. (Although he was not charged in Kenya, German law allows charges in a German court against a German citizen for possible criminal offences committed outside Germany.) In 2008, he successfully applied for a retrial of the case on the basis of false evidence. His lawyers publicly stated that he has never owned a knuckleduster nor held one in his hand. The retrial was held in 2009. During retrial, he was convicted of
battery in 2010; this verdict was upheld in 2011 by the and has become final.
Family property dispute In 2004, Ernst August had signed over his German property to his elder son, including
Marienburg Castle, the agricultural estate of
Calenberg Castle, the "Princely House" at
Herrenhausen Gardens in Hanover and some forests near
Blankenburg Castle (Harz) which he had repurchased in former East Germany after the German reunification of 1990. At the time, Ernst August's wealth was estimated as high as $250 million. Since then, the younger Ernst August has taken over many representative tasks on behalf of his father. The latter remained in charge of the Austrian family assets. In 2013, however, Ernst August was removed from the chairmanship of a family foundation based in
Liechtenstein, the
Duke of Cumberland Foundation, which holds the properties near
Gmunden in Austria, the Hanovers' main residence in exile after 1866 when their
Kingdom of Hanover was annexed by
Prussia. Instead, the younger Ernst August was put in charge, reportedly for negligence on part of his father, at the initiative of the foundation's trustee Prince Michael of Liechtenstein. The foundation manages vast forests, a game park, a hunting lodge, the ''Queen's Villa'' and other property. In 2017, Ernst August filed legal action to recover his chairmanship, and he intends to revoke the bestowal of his German property. Due to this dispute over family assets, he also declared his intention to withhold consent for his son's marriage to Ekaterina Malysheva, which he did not attend. ==Health==