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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 16 Aug 11, 22:48 
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Phone hacking: News of the World reporter's letter reveals cover-up

Disgraced royal correspondent Clive Goodman's letter says phone hacking was 'widely discussed' at NoW meetings

Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 23 Aug 11, 11:26 
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Andy Coulson reportedly paid by News International when hired by Tories

Fresh questions for PM after reports Coulson received cash payments from NoW publisher until end of 2007
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 24 Aug 11, 11:22 
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For all you need to know about Rupert Murdoch, look at his lawyers

As Nixon's counsel during Watergate, I can tell from the cost of News Corp's legal team the scandal will not be contained long

Americans are extremely interested in Rupert Murdoch's unfolding scandal in the UK. As I wrote a few weeks ago, it has striking parallels with Watergate, an observation I offer based on personal knowledge and experience. (I am sure I speak for many Americans when I shout out a thank you to the Guardian, whose journalism on the Murdoch story is every bit as good, and in many instances better, than the legendary work of the Washington Post during Watergate.) Many Americans wonder if this scandal will leap the Atlantic or remain "contained" in Britain. Because of Watergate, I have some familiarity with containment – when it works and when it does not.

The answer depends on the width and depth of illegal behaviour. Cover-ups seldom work. At this time we know little about any cover up at News Corp, but hints have emerged. While not an ideal measurement of wrongdoing, I find there is usually a direct correlation between lawyers hired and the seriousness of the problem. Accordingly, I've been watching the lawyers who have become key actors in this story, and their actions suggest that this scandal will not be contained in the UK. Rather, with time, it will become an American scandal, although possibly with less consequences than in the UK, given the skilled legal team now at work.

News Corp has retained one of London's most expensive commercial lawyers, Lord Grabiner, who reportedly bills at £3,000 per hour. While Grabiner has a reputation for litigating miracles, it appears he was hired to give credibility to an independent management and standards committee investigation of the phone-hacking, police bribery and related criminal allegations. To assist Grabiner, News Corp retained the London office of a prominent Washington law firm, Arnold & Porter – whose London partner, Kathleen Harris, happens to be an experienced criminal defence lawyer. Harris formerly served as the head of the fraud business group at the Serious Fraud Office and as a senior strategic adviser at the Attorney General's Office.

This UK self-investigation committee reports to Murdoch's top US attorney, a relatively recent hire: Joel Klein, who joined News Corp after a stint as chancellor of the New York City school system. Klein collects his reported $2m salary to bring the firm into the for-profit education business – work which he has probably now set aside.

When the UK scandal erupted, Klein was with Murdoch at a conference in Sun Valley, Idaho. And Murdoch had an ideal fixer. Klein was too new to News Corp to be implicated in anything improper, plus he has impeccable legal credentials (Harvard Law, US supreme court law clerk, and a successful law practice). Klein had served as deputy White House counsel during Bill Clinton's Whitewater scandal, and as the assistant attorney general for antitrust. Known for his ego, persistence and integrity, Klein was placed in charge by Murdoch.

Klein in turn reports to Viet Dinh, a member of the News Corp board since 2004, a former assistant attorney general in the George W Bush department of justice, and currently a law professor at Georgetown University as well as a private attorney. Viet Dinh, another Harvard Law graduate and former US supreme court law clerk, is considered the conservatives' "Mr Fixit" in Washington DC legal circles. His law firm, Bancroft Associates, is known for its ability to get defendants off on legal technicalities. It appears Klein and Dinh have hired all the key players who might be helpful in dealing with News Corp's criminal problems in the US.

In addition to Arnold & Porter, Klein and Dinh retained another top Washington law firm, Williams & Connolly, and the firm's highly skilled criminal defence attorney, Brendan Sullivan, to assist with the criminal investigation in the US. Klein and Dinh retained Mark Mendelsohn, who until recently had been the deputy chief, fraud section, criminal division, of the US department of justice, and understands the department's thinking about prosecuting under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (which prohibits American businesses from bribing foreigners to assist their business, and appears applicable to some of the allegations against News Corp).

In addition, they hired Bush's former attorney general Michael Mukasey and former Manhattan US attorney Mary Jo White, both of Debevoise & Plimpton, to assist with the investigation. Criminal prosecutions are always a matter of discretion, and Klein, Dinh and their hires are friends and former associates of those who might undertake any prosecution of News Corp.

Klein and Dinh surely now know the full extent of their problems. If they could state that no person remaining in the News Corp organisation, or the corporation itself, was involved in any criminal misconduct, there would be no reason for them to remain silent. Such a statement would largely end the story. The fact that the lawyers have absolved no one suggests to me that they have discovered potentially serious problems. Only Murdoch is suggesting the scandal will remain in the UK, and he is not the most reliable source.

News Corp's board held its first meeting since the UK scandal erupted in Los Angeles on 9 August. What the lawyers did or did not report to the board is unknown. Following the meeting, on 10 August, Murdoch gave a less than illuminating public statement, largely absolving all of the company except the UK operations, during a conference call to financial analysts. Indeed, he claimed he was "shocked" to learn of the criminality at News of the World. (This was voice only, so we don't know if he winked or crossed his fingers when he made his claims.)

On 10 August, News Corp filed a report with the Securities and Exchange Commission that included a carefully vetted statement reporting the close of the News of the World "after allegations of phone hacking and payments to police. As a result of these allegations, the company is subject to several ongoing investigations by UK and US regulators and governmental authorities, including investigations into whether similar conduct may have occurred at the company's subsidiaries outside of the UK. The company is fully co-operating with these investigations." This statement is much less assuring than Murdoch's more sweeping assertion during the 10 August call.

If the problems are half as serious as the level of legal talent retained suggests, I would not be surprised if News Corp co-operates with the prosecutors to get this matter behind the organisation. Rupert might throw his son James to the wolves. If evidence of wrongdoing by senior figures is found, the lawyers can defend it while requiring the government to prove its case, but they cannot assist in a cover up – a reality I learned the hard way. Rather they must withdraw from representation. And if that happens, we will all know they are fleeing a sinking ship.

• This article was amended on 19 August 2011 because the original said Kathleen Harris was a senior strategic policy adviser in the fraud business group at the Serious Fraud Office.
Guardian - (Total 94 comments)


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 13 Sep 11, 15:12 
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Phone hacking: James Murdoch recalled by MPs


News Corp boss to face fresh questions about whether he knew News of the World hacking went further than one reporter


James Murdoch is to be recalled to give evidence to MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee following a vote on Tuesday.

Murdoch, who oversees News International as deputy chief operating officer of News Corporation, will face fresh questions about whether he knew that phone-hacking at the News of the World went wider than one "rogue reporter".

The date of his appearance has not yet been finalised, but it is understood that he could appear in November.

Murdoch insists he was not told about the existence of an email sent by a News of the World reporter marked "for Neville", which is understood to have been a reference to Neville Thurlbeck, who was the paper's chief reporter. That suggested phone hacking was not the work of a single reporter, as the company claimed until recently.

Colin Myler, the former editor of the paper, and Tom Crone, its head of legal, told MPs last week that they told Murdoch about the email and said that is why he approved an out-of-court settlement of £700,000 including costs to Gordon Taylor, the former chief executive of the PFA.

Murdoch told MPs in July that he did not know about the email and was not shown it or informed of its existence. In a statment last week he reiterated that was the case.

A News Corp spokeswoman said: "We await details of the commitee's request, however James Murdoch is happy to appear in front of the committee again to answer any further questions members might have."
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 20 Sep 11, 23:26 
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Metropolitan police drop action against the Guardian

Scotland Yard forced into abrupt climbdown over attempt to make Guardian reporters reveal phone-hacking sources

Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 30 Sep 11, 20:28 
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Phone hacking: Neville Thurlbeck says 'truth will out'

Former News of the World senior reporter breaks silence, saying he 'took no part in the matter which led to my dismissal'
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 06 Oct 11, 18:47 
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Sun editor: celebrity reporters operate just like political hacks

Dominic Mohan defends showbiz journalism at Leveson inquiry, while Daily Telegraph editor explains pressures facing papers.
Guardian

Leveson inquiry


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 12 Oct 11, 14:17 
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Paul Dacre's speech at the Leveson inquiry - full text

Daily Mail editor-in-chief's presentation to the seminar on press standards




Thank you for inviting me to speak to you today. Let me start by making it clear that I unequivocally condemn phone hacking and payments to the police. Such practices are a disgrace and have shocked and shamed us all. They need to be purged from journalism and reforms instigated to prevent such criminal activities ever happening again.

But let's keep all this in proportion. Britain's cities weren't looted as a result. No-one died. The banks didn't collapse because of the News of the World. Elected politicians continued to steal from the people they were paid to represent.

The nation didn't go to war. Yet the response has been a judicial inquiry with greater powers than those possessed by the public inquiries into the Iraq war – an inquiry, incidentally, that includes a panel of experts who – while honourable distinguished people – don't have the faintest clue how mass-selling newspapers operate.

Indeed, am I alone in detecting the rank smells of hypocrisy and revenge in the political class's current moral indignation over a British press that dared to expose their greed and corruption – the same political class, incidentally, that, until a few weeks ago, had spent years indulging in sickening genuflection to the Murdoch press.

Which is why today, I'd like to try to persuade this inquiry that self-regulation – albeit in a considerably beefed up form – is, in a country that regards itself as truly democratic, the only viable way of policing a genuinely free press.

I'd also today like to persuade you that there are thousands of decent journalists in Britain who don't hack phones, don't bribe policemen and who work long anti-social hours for modest recompense – and if they're in the regional press often for a pittance – because they passionately believe that their papers give voice to the voiceless and expose the misdeeds of the rich, the powerful and the pompous.

And in that context, I'd first like to explore several illuminating paradoxes in the current furore over the press.

Paradox number one is that the political class's current obsession with clamping down on the press is contiguous with the depressing fact that the newspaper industry is in a sick financial state. Several of our quality papers are losing awesome amounts of money. More worrying, Britain's proud provincial and local press – currently subject to closures, mergers and swingeing cuts – is arguably facing the severest challenges.

This diminishes our democracy. Courts go uncovered. Councils aren't held to account. And the corrupt go unchallenged. That is a democratic deficit that in itself is worthy of an inquiry.

My second paradox is this growing clamour for more regulation ignores the uncomfortable truth that the Press is already on the very cusp of being over regulated. Indeed, over the past twenty years, restriction has been piled upon restriction.

The Data Protection Act means that reporters can be criminalised for such basic journalist practices as obtaining ex-directory numbers which they need to do to check stories are accurate.

The Human Rights Act is resulting in the creation of a privacy law by judges who seem to attach more weight to the right to privacy than to the right to freedom of expression. This is being compounded by the growth of injunctions and super-injunctions to prevent information being printed that is freely available on the internet.

Then we have the ruinous CFA system and its cynical partner "After The Event insurance" which means that virtually no newspaper can today afford to fight a court case that could end up costing many millions.

Meanwhile the Bribery Act – in which there's no public interest defence – makes it illegal to pay a civil servant for information that could reveal corruption and, indeed, would have prevented The Telegraph from paying for the material confirming MPs' fraud.

And finally, I believe that the PCC's code, which has been rightly strengthened over the years, has blunted Sunday newspapers' ability to secure the kind of sensational stories that were the bread and butter of their huge circulations in the past.

Today, we are in danger of ignoring the fact that news doesn't grow on trees. News, let me remind you, is often something that someone – the rich, the powerful, the privileged – doesn't want printed. Establishing the truth and accuracy of such news demands considerable resource and resourcefulness and is, frankly, becoming increasingly difficult.

My last paradox is that this demand for greater press regulation comes at a time when more and more of the information that people want to read is being provided by an utterly unregulated and arguably anarchic internet.

In an age of global communication, imposing rules on British print publications is not going to stop the spread of "celebrity tittle tattle", which seems to upset some commentators so much. Web users can easily access sources for such information if they can't get it from the printed press – and no regulator will be able to stop them. Indeed, it would be commercially ruinous to constrain British newspapers from publishing material that is freely available elsewhere.

I now come to the PCC and the myths that surround it.

And Myth One is that the conduct of the press has deteriorated over the years. Let me assure you the British press is vastly better behaved and disciplined than when I started in newspapers in the seventies. Then much of its behaviour was outrageous.

It was not uncommon for reporters to steal photographs from homes. Blatant subterfuge was commonly used. There were no restraints on invasions of privacy. Harassment was the rule rather than the exception.

The PCC has changed the very culture of Fleet Street. The editor's code of conduct imbues every decision made by news desks and back benches. When a photograph is presented, the question is immediately asked: did the subject of the picture have a reasonable expectation of privacy? In stories, executives question whether the privacy of the person's family or health is being invaded and whether their children are being protected. Were we harassing people? Was there a danger of, say, inciting copy-cat suicides? No, the newspaper industry is indisputably much better behaved than it was twenty years ago and to deny it is frankly churlish.

Myth Two is that the phone hacking scandal means that self-regulation doesn't work. I think that's very unfair. Yes, the PCC was naïve but its main mistake was failing to communicate the fact that phone hacking is blatantly illegal. It is against the law and no regulator can set itself above the law. The truth is the police should have investigated this crime properly and prosecuted the perpetrators. If phone hacking results in the abolition of the PCC, then logically it should result in the abolition of the police and the CPS. Should we end the jury system because of major miscarriages of justice?

And let's quickly debunk the other myths: Editors sit in judgement on themselves: They don't. They leave the room when any complaint against their paper or group is discussed. News International controls the PCC: In fact, NI has not had a member on the commission since 2007. Editors dominate the PCC: They don't – they are in a minority of ten to seven and I tell you as one who sat on the commission for many years, editors were often far more critical of newspaper malpractice than the lay members. Editors regard adjudications as a slap on the wrist: They certainly don't. They are genuine sanctions. I, and other editors, regard being obliged to publish an adjudication as a real act of shame.

OK, enough of being defensive. The truth is we are where we are. The perception is that the PCC is broken. It needs to be reformed if it is to regain trust, so may I make several suggestions.

Firstly, it is vital that the good work of the PCC, helping vulnerable people obtain protection and redress, without compromising freedom of expression, is not lost. Any reformed system of self-regulation will have to cover the current work of the PCC: dealing with complaints against the whole of the press and producing swift results, offering pre-publication advice to complainants; preventing possible harassment by journalists and broadcasters; giving guidance to editors to help with ethical dilemmas; training journalists; and using a body of case law that has set standards and understanding. It will have to do so without governmental interference. It will have to do so with the collaboration of the industry. It will have to do so in an online environment. It will have to do so efficiently in cost terms. Which is why I believe it would be disastrous for a commission to impose fines. If that were to happen, lawyers would inevitably be used by newspapers resulting in the end of quick and free PCC justice.

Secondly, while I abhor statutory controls, there's one area where Parliament can help the press. Some way must be found to compel all newspaper owners to fund and participate in self-regulation.

God knows, the industry fought hard enough to prevent it, but the Express Group's decision to leave the PCC was a body blow to the commission. How can you have self-regulation when a major newspaper group unilaterally withdraws from it?

But let's not forget that it was the political class in the form of the Blair Government –in the risible belief that he'd turn the Express Labour – which decided that Richard Desmond, the businessman who'd made his money from porn, was a fit and proper person to own a newspaper. And it was OFCOM, itself a statutory regulator, which recently judged Mr Desmond a fit person to buy Channel 5 – this AFTER he'd quit the PCC, effectively holing self-regulation below the line.

Thirdly, I believe corrections must be given more prominence. As from next week, the Daily Mail, the Mail on Sunday and Metro will introduce a "Corrections and Clarifications" column on page two of these papers.

Fourthly, the Editors' code Committee which, in fact, is already attended by the PCC's Chairman and Director – both representing the commission's lay members – should include some lay members actually on the committee. Indeed, I note with some pride, that the Editors' code, which has changed forty times in the last twenty years, is rarely if ever criticised. We have nothing to fear and possibly much to gain from responsible lay participation in our deliberations and possibly some form of pubic consultation over changes to the code.

The number of lay members on the commission should, incidentally, not be increased. They form the largest lay majority of any Press Council in Europe. Lawyers sit in judgement on lawyers as do doctors on doctors. You need editors on the commission so that they can explain the practicalities of news gathering to the lay members. You also need them to buy into the system and learn from the concerns of those lay members.

And lastly I believe the time has come to debate the need for some kind of Newspaper Industry Ombudsman – possibly sitting in tandem with the commission – to deal specifically with press standards.

The commission should continue to do what it does well: resolve complaints, issue adjudications and impose the code.

An Ombudsman – possibly a retired judge or civil servant, and possibly advised by two retired editors from both ends of newspaper spectrum – could have the power to investigate, possibly with specialists co-opted onto his panel, potential press industry scandals.

The Ombudsman could also have the power to summon journalists and Editors to give evidence, to name offenders and, if necessary, – in the cases of the most extreme malfeasance – to impose fines. On the principle of "polluter pays" offending media groups could, within reason, be forced to carry the costs of any investigation affecting their newspapers.

Now I'm well aware that these proposals provoke thousands of questions – not least as to how such appointments are to be made – but I believe the debate over them should start now.

My greatest concern, however, – and it's a very real one – is that any future reforms must take into consideration the needs and commercial realities of ALL newspapers, the provincial press, mass-selling red tops, as well as loss-making broadsheets.

Indeed, we should not be blind to the irony that the most virulent criticism of self-regulation comes from papers that lose eye watering amounts of money and which are subsidised either by trusts or Russian billionaires. I do not deprecate these papers. They are brilliant. But they are also, I would suggest, freed from the compulsion to connect with enough readers to be financially viable and the constraints of having to operate in the real world.

"Only connect" said E.M. Forster and in that real world, Britain's free commercially viable mass selling newspapers have to use great skills to connect with their millions of readers.

They leaven their papers with sensation, exclusive pictures, scandal, celebrity gossip and dramatic human stories while still devoting considerable space to serious news, politics and campaigns that reflect their readers' aspirations and anxieties.

In the coming weeks, I suspect we will hear much about those old chestnuts – the public interest and what interests the public. This inquiry will doubtless devote many hours to debating the almost terminal tension between the right to privacy and the public's right to know.

My own view is that as long as the code is observed and no law is broken, papers should be free to publish what they believe is best for their markets.

And anyway, who should decide what interests the public – or where the public interest really lies? Judges? Politicians? Is that what Britain really wants.

The Mail, of course, which has more quality readers than The Times and Telegraph put together, has feet in both the broadsheet and tabloid camps.

The problem is Britain's liberal class – the people who know best and who really run this country – by and large hate all the popular press. After all, the red tops can be vulgar, irreverent, outrageous and even malign. They also represent the views of millions of ordinary Britons. On the Euro and immigration, these papers scornfully reject the nostrums of the people who know best.

My worry is that this liberal hatred of mass selling papers has transmogrified into a hatred of self-regulation itself and I would ask the inquiry to be aware of this bias.

The Hampstead liberal with his gilded life-style understandably enjoys the Guardian – a paper that deals with serious issues. But does he or a judge have any right to deny someone who works ten hours a day in a Sunderland call centre and lives for football, the right to buy a paper that reveals the sexual peccadilloes of one of his team's millionaire married players – a player who uses his celebrity to sell products to him and his children.

And at this point, it would be useful to deal with two canards about regulation.

The first is that independent regulation would be superior to self-regulation. The question, of course, is who choses these "independent" regulators … Who will guard the guards themselves?

Take OFCOM, the so-called independent media regulator. Its chief executive was a close Labour adviser who helped write the Party's 2001 manifesto. Its first chairman – albeit a brilliant man – was a Labour party donor. And with an annual budget of £115 million – compared to the PCC's £2 million budget – it receives millions of pounds in government support.

And the second canard is that other forms of media have superior regulatory systems.

But consider this. Terrestrial TV and radio, which have a legal obligation to be impartial, rely on an airwave spectrum which can be taken away by politicians. Satellite TV is effectively controlled by Rupert Murdoch. The BBC relies for its existence on a government imposed poll tax. And if any evidence is needed of how politicians can bully the BBC, look at the way Alistair Campbell assaulted the corporation after the death of David Kelly and the subsequent defenestration of the director general.

Indeed, I would argue that Britain's commercially viable free press – because it is in hock to nobody – is the only really free media in this country. Over regulate that press and you put democracy itself in peril.

Don't listen to me. Listen to the judges themselves.

I quote Lord Woolf in a 2002 appeal court judgment on a footballer's dalliance with a lap dancer:

"The courts must not ignore the fact that if newspapers do not publish information which the public are interested in, then there will be fewer newspapers published, which will not be in the public interest."

Or Baroness Hale in a 2004 Law Lords case:

"One reason why freedom of the press is so important is that we need newspapers to sell in order to ensure that we still have newspapers at all. It may be said that newspapers should be allowed considerable latitude in the intrusions into private grief so that they can maintain circulation and the rest of us can continue to enjoy the variety of newspapers and other mass media which are available in this country."

And self-regulation, I would argue, is at the very heart of a free press. Which is why I profoundly regret that a Prime Minister – who had become too close to News International in general and Andy Coulson and Rebekah Wade in particular – in a pretty cynical act of political expediency has prejudiced the outcome of this inquiry by declaring that the PCC, an institution he'd been committed to only a few weeks previously, was a "failed" body.

It is emphatically not. In a speech last week, Ray Snoddy, the FT's brilliant one-time media commentator, put it perfectly:

"Save in one respect – dealing with illegal phone hacking – the PCC is not a failed organisation. It is one that has worked tirelessly to get fast, free redress for those who have been subject to inaccurate or intrusive reporting without reasonable cause and you can actually make a strong case that on the whole press behaviour has improved over the past 20 years."

Over the past month, I have read calls by so-called academic experts for the licensing of journalists and the need for a regulator with supervisory powers over the press, to set and monitor standards and have the right – backed by the force of the law – to conduct spot checks on newspaper offices and seize equipment and evidence.

My own response to these experts is that they should emigrate to Zimbabwe.

Which brings me to the final myth about the PCC – the one that says that Britain is alone in having a press self-regulating system. Au contraire. There are no less than twenty nations in Europe with self-regulating systems – many based on the PCC. There are two exceptions however: France with its draconian privacy laws and pathetic torpid government subsidised press; and Italy which maintains the state licensing of journalists introduced by Mussolini.

No prizes for guessing which nation gave the world paparazzi photographers.

Thank you.
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 03 Nov 11, 23:05 
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Phone hacking: number of possible victims is almost 5,800, police confirm

News of the World private investigator Glenn Mulcaire may have targeted 2,000 more people than previously acknowledged
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 06 Nov 11, 16:22 
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Murdoch gave loyal lieutenant Rebekah Brooks £1.7m pay-off, car and office

News International chairman may face questions in Commons over generous severance deal despite phone-hacking scandal

Gaurdian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 06 Nov 11, 16:27 
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The question James Murdoch can't answer: will his father's empire survive?

Unless James Murdoch proves particularly impressive in his Commons grilling on Thursday, his family may cease to be a force in British life
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 09 Nov 11, 15:04 
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Claims James Murdoch knew about 'for Neville' email in May 2008

Tom Crone, former NoW legal chief, has told MPs that emails published last week appear to show that Murdoch knew about email in May 2008

Tom Crone, the former News of the World legal chief, has told MPs that emails published last week appear to show that James Murdoch knew about the "for Neville" email in May 2008 – years before the News Corp boss insists he was told about widespread hacking at the now-defunct newspaper.

In a letter to the culture, media and sport committee published on Tuesday, Crone said that Murdoch "already had knowledge of the new evidence (the 'for Neville' email)" as a result of a meeting with Colin Myler, then-NoW editor, on 27 May.

Neither Murdoch nor Myler recall the meeting, in which they discussed settling a legal action brought by Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers' Association. Murdoch told MPs in July that he had not seen the "for Neville" email when he signed off the £700,000 out-of-court settlement to Taylor in 2008.

However, Crone and Myler immediately contested Murdoch's recollection of events, claiming that they had told him of the existence of the email that blew a hole in its defence that phone hacking was restricted to a single "rogue reporter" at the paper.

The 27 May meeting was first revealed by Julian Pike, lawyer for News International, as part of documents published by the committee last week. Previously it had been thought the only time the Taylor case had been discussed by James Murdoch was on June 10 at a meeting between the News Corp boss, Colin Myler and Tom Crone, where they agreed to settle the case.

In a letter published on Tuesday the committee chairman, John Whittingdale, asks Crone why he did not mention his and Myler's May 27 meetings with Murdoch when they appeared before MPs in September.

Crone apologised and said he had no memory of the meeting when he first gave evidence.

"Having seen the evidence given by Julian Pike and the documents produced by him which now appear on your website, I accept that my recollection was incorrect in relation to certain details. I apologise for that," Crone said.

"We may both be criticised for this, but I think it is probably not unusual for busy people to fail to recall detail (or even the existence) of meetings and conversations from more than three years earlier without being able to refer to written records".

Michael Silverleaf, the QC advising News International at the time, sent a seven-page opinion to Crone on 3 June 2008 noting that there was "a powerful case that there is (or was) a culture of illegal information access" at the News of the World and that any trial would be "extremely damaging" to the publisher's reputation.

Silverleaf also noted that evidence obtained by Taylor's lawyers shows that "at least three" News of the World journalists "appear to have been intimately involved in Mr Mulcaire's illegal researching into Mr Taylor's affairs".

News International declined to comment.
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 10 Nov 11, 16:24 
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James Murdoch faces MPs' questions over phone hacking - live coverage Guardian


James Murdoch: News International can't rule out closing the Sun

News Corp boss tells MPs that Britain's most popular newspaper could be closed if evidence of phone hacking emerged
Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 13 Nov 11, 16:28 
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It wasn't me: James Murdoch, Theresa May and a mysterious world of denial


Murdoch and May have shown how people in high places can profess to know the least about the organisations they lead

Between James Murdoch and Theresa May, it has been quite the week for plausible deniability. The concept hasn't been stretched quite so close to breaking point since Jamaican reggae rapper Shaggy sang "it wasn't me".

During Murdoch's appearance before MPs on Thursday, Tom Watson eschewed the chance to tell the News International chairman that he'd caught him not just on the counter, but banging on the sofa. Instead, he went Godfather, declaring: "You must be the first mafia boss in history who didn't know he was running a criminal enterprise."

Many found the comment unpalatably crass. But it was – amusingly in the circumstances – a quintessentially tabloid tactic. The screamer of a clip found its way on to every major news bulletin, leading several, and in the process fanned the association between News Corp and criminality in the public imagination. Watson's calculated outburst was a real headline-grabber, and there is of course a piquant irony in a newspaper boss like James Murdoch finding the tactic of headline-grabbing to be "inappropriate".

But then, Murdoch Jr isn't a newspaper boss in the days-of-yore mould. One senses the ways of the old country are too coarse for his tastes. What put life in his father must seem antiquated, even distasteful, to the Harvard-schooled son, who never had to fight his way to the world of boardrooms and yachts. To the son, the Sicilian filth and fury of a tabloid newsroom must be anathema, not an adrenalin rush. Such is often the way with the second generation (or even the third, if you count Rupert's locally successful papa, Keith), where the son lacks the ferocious hunger of the immigrant father.

As such, I can't help feeling James is in fact a most appropriate analogue for the manicured Michael Corleone, who declares in The Godfather: "My father's way of doing things is over, it's finished. Even he knows that. In five years, the Corleone family is going to be completely legitimate." Inevitably, by the time we get to the sequel, his long-suffering wife points out: "That was seven years ago, Michael."

And so with James, who appears to have suffered similarly bad luck in his bid to clean up the family firm. On Thursday, he made a droll claim: that two of his then consiglieri – former News International legal manager Tom Crone and former News of the World editor Colin Myler – never showed him, nor informed him of the significance of, the so-called "For Neville" email. Furthermore, he did not ask to see the legal advice that classed the email as "damning". Nor did he ask any searching questions when sanctioning a payoff totalling almost £1m.

Under questioning by Watson, Murdoch professed only the vaguest familiarity with the term omerta, saying he was no "aficionado" of mafia movies. But whatever his cultural tastes these days – he once owned a hip-hop label – he must at least be familiar with the notion of "motive". What is the possible motive for his lieutenants not to have informed him? The lawyer would have done so to cover his arse, as lawyers do. As for Myler, everyone knows the News of the World editor's chair is one of the Murdoch empire's most sensitively rigged ejector seats, and anything other than full disclosure on a matter that might so easily have been blown open could have resulted in the button being pressed rather quicker than it might otherwise have been.

Which brings us to the other implausible denial of the week – Theresa May's insistence that the head of the UK border force improperly relaxed passport checks at UK airports without her say-so. Brodie Clark has resigned and promises to fight this one, and at present the home secretary seems to be holding the "rogue civil servant" line. To which the only reasonable response is – and apologies for the legalese – Do. Me. A. Favour.

Career civil servants don't take unilateral policy decisions, let alone ones that might place their career in jeopardy and threaten their handsome pensions. Does that sound like Sir Humphrey to you? The popular caricature of studied inertia in the upper ranks of the civil service is funny because it's true, as Homer Simpson would say. Every atom of the career civil servant's being is dedicated to avoiding personal risk. They would fight to the death to maintain the status quo.

Perhaps Clark was careful enough to create some contemporaneous note that will back up his side of the story in the constructive dismissal suit he threatens to bring. It seems odd that with her back against the wall, May has declined to claim there is any such document to verify her version. The assumption is that the bigger the decision, the less of a paper trail there is. Think of Tony Blair's den, an unminuted space in which all manner of martial decisions – and who knows what others – were taken.

In some governments, some corporations, and all mafia organisations, sensitive decisions are actioned via nods and winks. Evidence is not left. Think of the boss in Goodfellas, and the intricate, word-of-mouth communications operation designed to protect his activities from the attentions of the law. "For a guy who moved all day," observes the narrator in Martin Scorsese's movie, "Paulie didn't talk to six people."

Perhaps the emails that reveal exactly what Murdoch knew when were in those millions of archives alleged to have been unfortunately deleted by a News International executive. More likely, they were never written. From those lacunae, you must infer what you will.

• This article will be open to comments from 9am on Saturday, UK time
Marina Hyde - Guardian


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 Post subject: Re: Hacking dossier brings down Murdoch's NOTW
PostPosted: 14 Nov 11, 15:05 
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