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By Harrison Jones
BBC News
Coleen Rooney has branded the "Wagatha Christie" trial "horrible", in her first public comments since the case.
In an interview with British Vogue, she suggested she cannot forgive Rebekah Vardy for her libel claim, but said "relief was everything" to win.
Rooney, the wife of ex-England captain Wayne Rooney, had accused Vardy of leaking stories about her.
In an the interview for Vogue's September edition, Rooney opened up about "dreading" going to court - and says she "sticks to" the original claims.
Asked if she could forgive Vardy, who is married to her husband's former team-mate Jamie, she added: "I'm a forgive and forget person, I can't be bothered with things going on and on...
"But this is obviously totally different."
Rooney, 37, continued: "You see social media people calling people out in such nasty ways and I was thinking I wasn't that nasty.
"I've never been in a legal case before so for me it was scary.
"What a horrible experience."
'Not nice to watch'
She also took aim at Vardy, 41, for taking the case to court, but did voice sympathy for her "obviously going through it".
"I just thought, 'Why have you put yourself in this position?' It was not nice to watch", Rooney said.
The July 2022 trial came after Rooney conducted a sting operation in 2019, accusing Mrs Vardy of leaking private information to The Sun.
The sleuthing caused a social media sensation and led to the case being dubbed "Wagatha Christie" - in reference to Wags (footballers' wives and girlfriends) and the writer Agatha Christie.
Rooney told Vogue that 'the relief was everything' after the judgement and explained that she took her son Kai indoor skydiving after initially posting the infamous "It's……….Rebekah Vardy's account" accusation.
Recalling the initial support she received, Rooney added: "All these messages of support [were] coming in... Then I thought, 'Oh, my God, this has gone extreme.'"
Asked about her previous relationship with Vardy, Rooney said the pair would 'associate' but were not friends and did not socialise. She says she now wonders if invitations to events might have been part of a "plan to get closer to me".
The BBC has contacted representatives for Vardy for comment.