Prince William has, reportedly, advised his brother Prince Harry to return to London, where it is "safer" than Los Angeles. The Duke of Cambridge is worried for his only sibling and has been reaching out to the Duke of Sussex, who might need his help.

According to London sources, Prince William and the rest of the royal family, including Queen Elizabeth, have been in constant contact with Prince Harry. The royal on the other side of the pond apparently needs his family to lean on, especially with the setbacks in his move to Los Angeles with his wife, Meghan Markle. 

Reports reached the royals that drones have been flying over the Sussex's temporary L.A. home. The source said that the incident has been "creepy and incredibly scary" since the family has a baby who often play outside. 

The source also stated that Prince Harry was not expecting to encounter so many obstacles in their move to Los Angeles. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex arrived in Los Angeles in mid-March, from Vancouver, Canada, where they have been living for nearly six months. 

At the time of their arrival, cities and countries have declared lockdowns as the coronavirus pandemic started spreading and infecting thousands of people. Prince Harry and Meghan were also forced to follow stay-at-home orders thus suspending their plans of launching a new foundation. 

Sources told Us Weekly, however, that Prince Harry and Meghan will stay put in California. They have been planning this move for several months now despite the tricky timing of some unfortunate incidents. 

Meanwhile, royal fans are reportedly wondering why Prince Harry and Meghan are quiet over the death of George Floyd, the black American who was killed under police custody and whose death triggered protests and riots in the U.S. The couple has yet to issue a statement on the injustice as Black Lives Matter protests have been revived. 

Citing that "silence is not an option," royal fans said on Twitter that Prince Harry and Meghan's absence online to speak on issues, especially this racial injustice, has been bothersome. However, the Sussexes have abandoned their only social media page on Instagram when they stepped back as senior royals last March 31. 

Meghan, however, spoke of racial inequality before and her campaign from 2012 resurfaced online amid the noise and the rage on social media. She recalled that her mother was called the N-word and she recounted how she gets mixed reactions, some slurs and offensive jokes for being biracial.

The Queen's Commonwealth Trust, where Prince Harry and Meghan serve as president and vice president, also posted a Black Lives Matter support. Some royal fans think this is good enough to represent the Sussex royals' sentiments.