Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator embroiled in the News of the World phone hacking scandal, may soon be forced to name the people who gave him the orders. Read the full story
Posted on 01 February 2012.
Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator embroiled in the News of the World phone hacking scandal, may soon be forced to name the people who gave him the orders. Read the full story
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Posted on 19 January 2012.
News Group, the News International subsidiary that published the News of the World, is about to take a significant chunk out of the £20 million compensation fund it prepared for victims of phone hacking after settling 19 cases. Read the full story
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Posted on 18 January 2012.
No statutory regulation needed, insists Hislop
Private Eye editor Ian Hislop yesterday told the Leveson inquiry that no new laws are needed to ensure good media practice, insisting that current ones just needed to be enforced.
“I do think that statutory regulation is not required,” said Hislop. “Most of the heinous crimes that came up and have made such a splash in front of this inquiry have already been illegal.
“Contempt of court is illegal, phone-tapping is illegal, policemen taking money is illegal. All of these things don’t need a code, we already have laws for them.
“The fact that these laws were not rigorously enforced is again due to the failure of the police, the interaction of the police and News International – and let’s be honest about this, the fact that our politicians have been very, very involved in ways that I think are not sensible with senior News International people.”
Looking at the industry broadly, he stressed the importance of making it “easier and cheaper” to sue newspapers for libel and criticised sections of the press for its coverage of the Leveson inquiry itself, reserving his ire particularly for Richard Desmond, “the worst example, obviously” of a proprietor, whose newspapers had not even mentioned the appearances of Desmond or its editors in Leveson’s dock. (Source: Press Gazette)
Times editor: we should have covered hacking ‘harder, earlier’
Times editor James Harding has told the Leveson inquiry that his newspaper – a News International stablemate of the defunct News of the World – should have covered the issue of phone hacking “harder, earlier”, saying that its approach “fundamentally changed” after the revelation that Milly Dowler’s phone had been targeted.
The paper went on to strongly criticise its owner’s handling of the affair and Harding insisted it “never raised a finger to stop us doing so”.
Harding also revealed that he turned down the chance to buy the data used by the Daily Telegraph in the MPs’ expenses scandal, as the paper had a general policy of not paying for stories. It was decided not to make an exception as a public interest defence would “not be necessarily” strong enough on that occasion. (Source: Press Gazette)
Brown’s bank blagged
Sunday Times editor John Witherow confirmed an allegation by Abbey National that someone from the newspaper had phoned the bank impersonating Gordon Brown to obtain information. He said the use of subterfuge was justified in the public interest as the paper believed the then Chancellor (in 2000) had purchased a flat below market value from a company owned by the late media baron Robert Maxwell.
Witherow said the paper only used subterfuge in the public interest, but never “fishing expeditions”. Looking at the relationship with politicians, he said people from his paper met with them from “time to time” but rarely got extra information compared to on-the-record interviews. (Source: Press Gazette)
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Posted on 09 January 2012.
Despite the Christmas break, the Leveson inquiry has lost none of its drama as former Sun editor Kelvin Mackenzie took to the stand. Mackenzie’s presence immediately reignited the inquiry, with the appearance of a heckler one of the less controversial moments of his 50 minutes of evidence. Read the full story
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Posted on 06 January 2012.
Police officers acting under Operation Weeting, the investigation into alleged phone hacking at the News of the World, have reportedly arrested the former personal assistant of Rebekah Brooks, a former editor of the now defunct tabloid newspaper. Read the full story
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Posted on 05 January 2012.
Former News of the World journalists are working on a new iPad-focussed project for News International. Read the full story
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Posted on 21 December 2011.
Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson will have to pay his own legal fees if criminal charges are brought against him for phone hacking, after a judge ruled News Group Newspapers was not liable. Read the full story
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Posted on 19 December 2011.
Phone hacking was “routine” at both the News of the World and The Sun, a Leveson inquiry witness has claimed. Read the full story
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