and at 11:30pm, we'll be taking an in—depth look at the papers with our reviewers, georgina wright andstevens. stay with us for that. hello, good evening. the prime minister has denied lying to the queen about his reasons for suspending parliament. boris johnson was speaking after scotland's highest civil court ruled yesterday that the shutdown was unlawful because it was intended to hinder parliamentary debate. mrjohnson also dismissed concerns about newly—released government papers detailing preparations for a no—deal brexit scenario that contained warnings of medical shortages, food price rises and major cross—channel trade delays. he said the documents were just sensible preparations. 0ur political editor, laura kuenssberg, reports. almost a year to the day, this document was snapped by a beady—eyed photographer in westminster. a hint of the turmoil the government believed might come if we leave without a deal. 12 months later, after leaks and suspicion, at last, ministers have been forced to publish the actual details. do you understand what we're actually doing? i don't. let's ho