Here is the article that I saw on CNN.com
READING, England (AP) -- A former teacher who claims she was unfairly dismissed from Eton College after being ordered to help Prince Harry cheat in an exam has tried to prove her allegation to a tribunal by playing a secret tape recording she had made while talking to him.
The former teacher, Sarah Forsyth, 30, has told the tribunal that she wrote nearly all the text of an art project that Prince Harry submitted to pass an important exam in 2002. On the tape, he can be heard saying: "It was a tiny, tiny bit. I did about a sentence of it."
Forsyth claims that Prince Harry, the son of Prince Charles and the late Princess Diana, was referring during this segment of the brief tape to the amount of work that he had done on the course materials submitted to the exam board.
The grade that Prince Harry received for the course work helped him win admission to his next school, Sandhurst, where he is now training as a military officer.
Nigel Giffen, a lawyer for Eton, on Thursday called Forsyth's conduct "pretty grubby."
Paddy Harverson, a spokesman for Prince Charles, told the hearing: "This is incredibly unfair on Harry. Miss Forsyth's lawyers have given the court a brief extract from the tape and placed their own interpretation upon it."
"The tape ... contains barely audible half-sentences, and it appears to have been edited. It is also difficult to tell what Harry is saying and what he is referring to, due to the poor quality of the recording and the disjointed nature of the tape. The fact remains Harry did not cheat. The allegations have been independently investigated and proven unfounded," Harverson said.
Thursday's hearing was held to prepare for next year's tribunal on Forsyth's alleged unfair dismissal.
Forsyth claims that she was fired on June 16, 2003, as a teacher at Eton, one of Britain's most prestigious private elementary and secondary schools, after being harassed by Ian Burke, then head of Eton's art department. She said Burke ordered her to carry out some of the work on Prince Harry's art project.
She said she secretly taped her conversation with the prince in her classroom, knowing that she was about to be unfairly dismissed from her job. "It was very difficult to talk to Prince Harry because he was always closely guarded by bodyguards," she testified.
Robin Allen, Forsyth's lawyer, said she got Burke's order after the school announced she would be given a one-year contract in the future, not a permanent teaching post at Eton.
"She was not happy about the order to help Prince Harry," Allen said. "She feared that if she complained about it at the time she would be victimized."
Previous complaints Forsyth had made about Burke's conduct were ignored, Allen said.
"She said she felt it was unethical and probably contributed to cheating, and she felt she had been asked to do it because of Prince Harry's position at the time," Allen said.
Giffen told the hearing that the "Harry issue" bore no relevance to the unfair dismissal case and should be excluded from the evidence. He argued that Eton headmaster Tony Little had been unaware of the taped conversation at the time he decided to dismiss her.
Allen disputed that, saying Little had known about the tape, that it played a role in her dismissal and therefore was central to her argument of having been mistreated.
Giffen said Forsyth's ultimate goal was to win more than the £10,000 ($18,000, €14,500) that Eton had offered her to terminate her contract.