David Beckham defends leaked emails saying they were written in ‘heat of moment’ to express his ‘disappointment at not being made a Sir’
THE star is said to have insisted to a friend that he's 'not interested in knighthood'

DAVID Beckham has reportedly explained to friends why he sent explosive emails blasting the Honours Committee as “unappreciative c**ts” for not making him a Sir.
The football legend is said to have told pals he is just a “normal person” who was “extremely disappointed not to get a knighthood".
claims Becks, 41, sent the messages “in the heat of the moment”.
A source told the paper: “David is just like any normal person and he was extremely disappointed that he wasn’t deemed worthy of becoming a Sir.”
He is said to have insisted: “I don’t care about being knighted.”
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A close friend told : “Genuinely, he wasn’t as vitriolic as that, but you do say some things in private and in the heat of the moment.
“To be honest, he does feel that he has given so much to his country. And sometimes you say things in private that anyone would say and you don’t really mean it.”
The superstar, whose image was tarnished by messages claiming to show he exploited his charity work as part of an effort to win a knighthood, is now scared about what more will come out.
It was confirmed a police probe had been launched in Portugal, where his PR chief Simon Oliveira’s Doyen firm has its HQ.
Beckham’s representatives have spoken to specialist investigators in Portugal about the shattering leaks.
Yesterday, as Becks faced a backlash over the scandal, wife Victoria, 42, was spotted at Heathrow as she jetted out of the UK for New York Fashion Week.
The bombshell dossier was obtained by the Football Leaks website and published by European sites including Der Spiegel, L’Equipe and El Mundo.
Beckham’s Unicef 7 fund has raised more than £4.3million since it launched in 2015 — money which has been used to support children all over the world.
More than £500,000 has been sent to train teachers and fund schools in Bangladesh, where around 2.6million children do not regularly go to school.
Another £800,000 has helped support children with disabilities who experience discrimination in central and Eastern Europe.
The fund has also sent money to projects in Latin America and Africa, and Beckham himself visited a centre in Swaziland which supports kids living with HIV.
But emails showed how Beckham, worth an estimated £280million, complained about being approached by Unicef’s ambassador relations manager Chloe Edwards about contributing cash.
Beckham’s team, who have said the emails are hacked and doctored, are focusing on the person behind the leak.
A total of 18.6million emails, communications and documents were accessed from the servers of Doyen Global, the sports management firm run by PR guru Oliveira, 43.
The bombshell material was taken in 2015 and last year, and contains three years’ worth of information.
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