The family of Michaela McAreavey are to sue the Mauritian newspaper that printed photographs of her body.
The 27-year-old Co Tyrone teacher was strangled in her room in the luxury Legends hotel in Mauritius in January 2011.
In the wake of a high-profile murder trial this summer, which saw two former hotel workers acquitted of the crime, the Mauritian Sunday Times printed police crime scene photos that showed the newlywed's body lying in the room.
The family has launched a civil action against the paper's publisher and editor for damages.
They claim the publication outraged Mrs McAreavey's dignity and compromised the police investigation into the crime.
The paper has no connection to the UK and Ireland Sunday Times.
The McAreavey family's lawyer, Dick Ng Sui Wa, said legal papers have been lodged with the Supreme Court in Mauritius and a date for the first court appearance has been set for 10 January.
He said any damages would be donated to a charity foundation set up in memory of the Ballygawley woman.
After the publication in July, the editor of the paper, Imran Hosany, was charged by Mauritian police with outraging public and religious morality.
He denies the charges.
The latest legal development comes after the family launched a civil case against the hotel where Mrs McAreavey died for damages that could top £1m.
The hotel has since been renamed Lux.
The basis for that case will be the claim that the hotel failed to provide a safe place for Mrs McAreavey to stay.