Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Fri Jul 08, 2011 12:38 pm

[
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:Decoy event to occlude the anniversary of the inside-job 7/7.

Tabloids are spook-run. Spooks hack and do surveillance for psyops.

Stories with victimized girls as anchors are spook stock.


Lol. So Murdoch shut down the biggest selling newspaper in the UK, one which still makes a hefty profit and laid off a couple of hundred journalists in order to "occlude the anniversary of the inside-job 7/7"? And he did this using the amazingly cunning method of hacking the 7/7 victims phones thus ensuring that everyone gets reminded of it?

Bollocks he did. He shut the NOTW down so he can get hold of BSkyB. Murdoch couldn't care less about 7/7, 9/11 or anything other than acquiring more power for himself.


Clarification and expansion.

Murdoch is not an independent mogul. He's been in bed with spook culture ever since post-Vietnam CIA drug culture used Australia for laundering profits.
His anglophone psyops empire is used by CIA/MI5/MI6 for their own agendas and he can even be used as a Nixon-esque whipping boy to hide The System's WORSE crimes.

Hide what?
Hide that Total Surveillance and Miilitary-controlled Media has been the social control system in place for decades.
This is in danger of being exposed.

So is the impossible role of cellphones to embed the cover story of 9/11. Hence the value of tying into 7/7 thematically.

BUT. Now the subject is 'merely that Murdoch jerk's TABLOIDS hacking celebrities for sensationalism and profits.'
A limited hangout diversion.
Crumbs thrown to hide the cake.
And Murdoch is just today's Nixon.

This technique is called personification or 'the man who....' and has been used many times.
Like James Bamford calling the Rendon Group "The Man Who Sold the War."
Like Jane CIA Mayer spotlighting the Koch Brothers instead of the Koch who built the Twin Towers and wondered where all the floors went to plus the cocaine economy in Prof. Peter Dale Scott's latest book, 'American War Machine.'

The System Must Go On. And this kerfuffle diverts and buys time.
Last edited by Hugh Manatee Wins on Fri Jul 08, 2011 12:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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...
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Harvey » Fri Jul 08, 2011 12:42 pm

Searcher08 wrote:It was in the context of the hacks posing as constituents visiting his MP surgery.

I like Vince (he is my local MP) - he is not exciting, he works hard, is dedicated to what he does, and lives local.


Sure, I've always liked Cable, but you would imagine that he would have bit his tongue in the presence of people he didn't personally know.

Maybe someone spiked his coffee with a wee dram...
And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings
This he said to me
"The greatest thing
You'll ever learn
Is just to love
And be loved
In return"


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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 08, 2011 12:52 pm

seemslikeadream wrote:
Murdoch's American Sins: Less Sensational, But More Dangerous
Posted: 7/7/11

For more than three decades, as global press baron Rupert Murdoch amassed more and more power over both the journalism and the politics of the Western world -- usually to the detriment of both -- the question lingered in the air. What, if anything, could possibly bring down the empire of this turn-of-the-millennium Citizen-Kane-without-the-sled, a man who seemingly had the power to pick American presidents and collected British prime ministers as easily as Wingo cards on the way to fame and billions of dollars?

Now, not long after Murdoch celebrated his 80th birthday, we may finally know the answer.

It wasn't the years of influence trading on a global scale, but his paper's ruthless treatment of a murdered 13-year-old and her family.

That's always the way, isn't it? The stunning news today is that Murdoch is shutting down his reportedly most lucrative publication, the sleazy British News of the World tabloid, in the wake of a phone hacking scandal marked by intercepting messages left for the slain girl, Milly Dowler, in a way that impeded the police probe and gave her parents false hope she was still alive. The power of the scandal seemed a fitting a bookend to a week in which we debated what kind of news pushes our buttons -- and why.

It was only Tuesday here in America that a nation staggering from a years of a high unemployment -- with a crisis of governmental gridlock looming -- stopped to absorb every detail of a lurid Florida murder case -- and that shouldn't surprise anyone: It's as easy to get emotionally wrenched by the death of an adorable 2-year-old and the flaunting of bad motherhood as it's hard to wrap yourself around the true meaning of $14 trillion, or understand why there are no new jobs in America anymore.

Viewers prefer human dramas involving total strangers over the ideological debates that affect our actual lives; likewise, journalists crave these simpler morality plays of good and evil -- where the facts are smaller yet objectively provable or disprovable -- over the ever-so-complicated big picture. In American politics, we saw a president impeached for lying about an extramarital affair of no national import, while no punishment even close to that was seriously discussed for his successor who invaded a sovereign nation under false pretenses, leading to the deaths of tens of thousands of people.

And so now it's the simple memory of a slain Brtitish teenaged girl -- with the added shock that family members of casualties in that Iraq War and in Afghanistan were also phone-hacked, and reports of police officers taking bribes from journalists -- that brings the world's largest media empire to the edge of the abyss.

Right now, there's still a big disconnect between the uproar over the Murdoch empire in Great Britain -- salacious, tabloid-style crimes committed by tabloid journalists -- and closer scrutiny of the press baron's operation in the United States, which in addition to the highly profitable Fox television network also includes the politically influential Fox News Channel, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Post among its outlets.

I would argue there's no disconnect at all.

There are important differences but also key similarities between the way that Murdoch -- an Australian by birth who amassed a lot of a fortune first in the UK and finally in America, where he is now a citizen -- does business on either side of the Atlantic. The common denominator is a seamless rinse-repeat cycle of using his media power to gain political influence and then using that influence to gain greater wealth. In England, the dirty tricks and apparent lawbreaking of The News of the World helped Murdoch on the wealth side by selling lots of newspapers with scoops about racy murders and celebrity gossip -- but it's less clear how that pseudo-journalism mucked up the nation's broader politics.

In the U.S. of A., it's a different story, and it cannot be understated. Here, Murdoch's sins were less sensational -- but more important, arguably a matter of life and death on some stories. With his most audacious move, the invention of the Fox News Channel, Murdoch and his minions created a vortex of misinformation and emotion draped in an American flag that changed a nation's politics for the worse. That affects a lot more people than phone hacking, no matter how heartless that was.

Murdoch had help from brilliant, cynical aides on both sides of the pond. In England, it was the massively ethically challenged, wild-eyed redhead Rebekah Brooks; in America, it is the frumpy and grumpy Roger Ailes, the only man to run the Fox News Channel since it was launched in the mid-1990s. As recent documents have shown, Ailes -- who learned the American conservative politics of middle-class resentment at the foot of the master, Richard Nixon -- was long involved in a scheme for a conservative TV counterweight to the so-called "liberal media." But it took the arrival of Murdoch years later to execute the plan with the vision that a conservative cable news network could make millions in profits while wielding influence on a scale that a "Headless Body in Topless Bar" newspaper could only dream of.

But Ailes and Murdoch -- with a typical disregard for the consequences -- created a monster as their FNC grew in popularity over the course of the 2000s. They held onto to their millions of viewers by playing to their emotions, and to what they felt was true about America -- regardless of whether it was actually true. Over the years, misinformed Fox viewers wielded more and more clout over a directionless Republican Party that in turn drove the U.S. body politic, with disastrous consequences.

You want examples?

Iraq and the war on terrorism: America's misguided "pre-emptive war" in the oil-rich Persian Gulf would not have been possible unless the 9/11 attacks and a response to terrorism became conflated with Saddam Hussein's Iraq, which for all its horrors had nothing to do with the assault on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The Fox News Channel, and its parade of GOP-talking-point infused hosts and military "experts," helped to make sure that wrongful conflation took place, as later evidence proved.

A 2003 poll by the Program on International Policy (PIPA) at the University of Maryland and Knowledge Networks found that regular Fox News viewers were significantly more likely than other news consumers to believe one of three significant falsehoods about the Iraq war -- that Iraq was somehow connected to 9/11, that weapons of mass destruction had been found in Iraq, or that global opinion was in favor of the war. These jingoistic myths -- most heavily adopted by Fox viewers -- fueled years of continued fighting in a war in which thousands of Americans and Iraqi civilians died needlessly.

Climate change: It's hard to believe in 2011, but there was a time a few years ago when a majority of Republicans, just like a majority of all Americans, believed that man-made global warming was real and needed to be addressed in some fashion. That was before a parade of global warming skeptics and outright deniers on Fox News Channel -- a development that was actually encouraged by FNC top management. Most famously, FNC's Washington bureau chief wrote in a December 2009 memo " we should refrain from asserting that the planet has warmed (or cooled) in any given period without IMMEDIATELY pointing out that such theories are based upon data that critics have called into question."

In recent years, Fox News Channel has found a variety of ways to spread misinformation and outright lies about the state of the world's climate -- claiming, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, that the world is actually cooling -- and the plan has worked. A majority of Republicans now believe that climate change theories endorsed by 90 percent of the world's leading climatologists are a hoax, and more importantly, so do the political leaders they elect. Fox-fueled opposition scuttled what appeared to be momentum for climate change legislation in Washington, even as the planet records its hottest years on record and predictions of future food shortages and natural disasters grow more dire.

The 2010 elections: The right-wing tide that changed the direction of Congress last November was powered by a large turnout of conservative voters, who once again -- as research showed -- were misinformed on the issues if their primary source of information was Fox News. It started with what the Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking outfit Politifact called its Lie of the Year for 2010 -- the reporting on Fox News that President Obama's health care plan was "a government takeover" of the system.

But that was just one area where Fox News viewers had bad info, according to a new report (PDF) by the Program on International Policy Attitudes; this study found that FNC watchers were much more likely to think that their taxes went up (they were cut in 2009 for most Americans) or that health care reform increases the deficit (it lowers it) or that Obama was possibly not born in the United States.

There's more, but I think you get the idea. Meanwhile, misinformed Fox viewers are the tail wagging the dog of American politics; just ask the now former South Carolina congressman who had the nerve to criticize the then-popular, now-departed FNC host Glenn Beck before his 2010 primary defeat. Increasingly, it's impossible to tell where Fox News stops and the Republican Party begins, which is why it wasn't surprising to hear that FNC's Ailes even lobbied a would-be candidate, New Jersey's Chris Christie, to enter the 2012 White House race. Did Ailes think that would be good for the country or good for ratings?

That's the kind of ethical question that doesn't get asked any more at Murdoch's Fox News Channel than it was asked at Murdoch's News of the World. But the stakes in this country -- endless wars, looming environmental disasters, lousy policies that are leaving America mired in economic despair -- are far greater. So if you are outraged tonight by what the Murdoch empire was up to in Great Britain all these years -- and you should be -- than you should be doubly outraged by what they've pulled off here.

The only real question for America is what are we going to do about Rupert Murdoch now?


Murdoch is not the question nor the answer.
The bolded above are obvious to most @ R.I.,
& the result of same , planned psyops. Same old psi-wars
w/ mayb e a few more sophisticated methodologies.

toss it back to the Brits whose humour & sense of irony
honed over the bone of
Empire

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 08, 2011 12:58 pm

Harvey wrote:
Searcher08 wrote:It was in the context of the hacks posing as constituents visiting his MP surgery.

I like Vince (he is my local MP) - he is not exciting, he works hard, is dedicated to what he does, and lives local.


Sure, I've always liked Cable, but you would imagine that he would have bit his tongue in the presence of people he didn't personally know.

Maybe someone spiked his coffee with a wee dram...


:lol: It wasnt poisoning, it was extraction of information for the gud of da people, for a hiher caws, innit
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:07 pm

Phone hacking: Police probe suspected deletion of emails by NI executive

• 'Massive quantities' of archive allegedly deleted
• Emails believed to be between News of the World editors


Nick Davies and Amelia Hill
guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 July 2011 14.18 BST
Article history

News of the World
News International's claims of cooperating with police over phone hacking scandal brought into question. Photograph: Graeme Robertson

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal.

The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.

According to legal sources close to the police inquiry, a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities' of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair.

The allegation directly contradicts repeated claims from News International that it is co-operating fully with police in order to expose its history of illegal news-gathering. It is likely to be seen as evidence that the company could not pass a 'fit and proper person' test for its proposed purchase of BSkyB.

A Guardian investigation has found that, in addition to deleting emails, the company has also:

• infuriated police by leaking sensitive information in spite of an undertaking to police that it would keep it confidential; and

• risked prosecution for perverting the course of justice by trying to hide the contents of a senior reporter's desk after he was arrested by Weeting detectives in earlier this year.

News International originally claimed that the archive of emails did not exist. Last December, its Scottish editor, Bob Bird, told the trial of Tommy Sheridan in Glasgow that the emails had been lost en route to Mumbai. Also in December, the company's solicitor Julian Pike from Farrer and Co provided the high court with a statement claiming that it was unable to retrieve emails which were more than six months old.

The first hint that this was not true came in late January when News International handed Scotland Yard evidence which led to the immediate sacking of its news editor Ian Edmondson and to the launch of Operation Weeting. It was reported at the time that this evidence consisted of three old emails.

Three months later, on 23 March this year, Pike formally apologised to the high court and acknowledged that News International could locate emails as far back as 2005 and that no emails had ever been lost en route to Mumbai or anywhere else in India. In a signed statement seen by the Guardian, Pike said he had been misinformed by the News of the World's in-house lawyer, Tom Crone, who had told him that he, too, had been misled. He offered no explanation for the misleading evidence given by Bob Bird.

The original archive was said to contain half a terabyte of data - equivalent to 500 editions of Encyclopaedia Britannica. But police now believe that there was an effort to substantially destroy the archive before News International handed over their new evidence in January. They believe they have identified the executive responsible by following an electronic audit trail. They have attempted to retrieve the data which they fear was lost. The Crown Prosecution Service is believed to have been asked whether the executive can be charged with perverting the course of justice.

At the heart of the affair is a specialist data company, Essential Computing, based in Clevedon, near Bristol. Staff there have been interviewed by Operation Weeting. One source speculated that it was this company which had compelled News International to admit that the archive existed.

The Guardian understands that Essential Computing has co-operated with police and has provided evidence about an alleged attempt by the News International executive to destroy part of the archive while they were working with it. This is said to have happened after the executive discovered that the company retained material of which News International was unaware.

The alleged deletion has caused tension between News International and Scotland Yard, who are also angry over recent leaks. When the Murdoch company handed over evidence of their journalists' involvement in bribing police officers in late June, they wanted to make a public announcement, claiming credit for their assistance to police. They were warned that this would interfere with inquiries and finally agreed that they would keep the entire matter confidential until early August, to allow police to make arrests. In the event, this week, a series of leaks has led Scotland Yard to conclude that News International breached the agreement.

There was friction too earlier this year when Weeting detectives arrested a senior journalist. When they went to the News of the World's office to search his desk, they found that all of its contents had been removed and lodged with a firm of solicitors, who initially refused to hand it over. The solicitors eventually complied. A file is believed to have been sent to the Crown Prosecution service seeking advice on whether anybody connected with the incident should be charged.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:13 pm

Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:[
gnosticheresy_2 wrote:
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:Decoy event to occlude the anniversary of the inside-job 7/7.

Tabloids are spook-run. Spooks hack and do surveillance for psyops.

Stories with victimized girls as anchors are spook stock.


Lol. So Murdoch shut down the biggest selling newspaper in the UK, one which still makes a hefty profit and laid off a couple of hundred journalists in order to "occlude the anniversary of the inside-job 7/7"? And he did this using the amazingly cunning method of hacking the 7/7 victims phones thus ensuring that everyone gets reminded of it?

Bollocks he did. He shut the NOTW down so he can get hold of BSkyB. Murdoch couldn't care less about 7/7, 9/11 or anything other than acquiring more power for himself.


Clarification and expansion.

Murdoch is not an independent mogul. He's been in bed with spook culture ever since post-Vietnam CIA drug culture used Australia for laundering profits.
His anglophone psyops empire is used by CIA/MI5/MI6 for their own agendas and he can even be used as a Nixon-esque whipping boy to hide The System's WORSE crimes.

Hide what?
Hide that Total Surveillance and Miilitary-controlled Media has been the social control system in place for decades.
This is in danger of being exposed.

So is the impossible role of cellphones to embed the cover story of 9/11. Hence the value of tying into 7/7 thematically.

BUT. Now the subject is 'merely that Murdoch jerk's TABLOIDS hacking celebrities for sensationalism and profits.'
A limited hangout diversion.
Crumbs thrown to hide the cake.
And Murdoch is just today's Nixon.

This technique is called personification or 'the man who....' and has been used many times.
Like James Bamford calling the Rendon Group "The Man Who Sold the War."
Like Jane CIA Mayer spotlighting the Koch Brothers instead of the Koch who built the Twin Towers and wondered where all the floors went to plus the cocaine economy in Prof. Peter Dale Scott's latest book, 'American War Machine.'

The System Must Go On. And this kerfuffle diverts and buys time.



The System Must Go On. And this kerfuffle diverts and buys time.

Until it doesn't...



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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:21 pm

Searcher08 wrote:Phone hacking: Police probe suspected deletion of emails by NI executive

• 'Massive quantities' of archive allegedly deleted
• Emails believed to be between News of the World editors


Nick Davies and Amelia Hill
guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 July 2011 14.18 BST
Article history

News of the World
News International's claims of cooperating with police over phone hacking scandal brought into question. Photograph: Graeme Robertson

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal.

The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.

According to legal sources close to the police inquiry, a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities' of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair.

The allegation directly contradicts repeated claims from News International that it is co-operating fully with police in order to expose its history of illegal news-gathering. It is likely to be seen as evidence that the company could not pass a 'fit and proper person' test for its proposed purchase of BSkyB.

A Guardian investigation has found that, in addition to deleting emails, the company has also:

• infuriated police by leaking sensitive information in spite of an undertaking to police that it would keep it confidential; and

• risked prosecution for perverting the course of justice by trying to hide the contents of a senior reporter's desk after he was arrested by Weeting detectives in earlier this year.

News International originally claimed that the archive of emails did not exist. Last December, its Scottish editor, Bob Bird, told the trial of Tommy Sheridan in Glasgow that the emails had been lost en route to Mumbai. Also in December, the company's solicitor Julian Pike from Farrer and Co provided the high court with a statement claiming that it was unable to retrieve emails which were more than six months old.

The first hint that this was not true came in late January when News International handed Scotland Yard evidence which led to the immediate sacking of its news editor Ian Edmondson and to the launch of Operation Weeting. It was reported at the time that this evidence consisted of three old emails.

Three months later, on 23 March this year, Pike formally apologised to the high court and acknowledged that News International could locate emails as far back as 2005 and that no emails had ever been lost en route to Mumbai or anywhere else in India. In a signed statement seen by the Guardian, Pike said he had been misinformed by the News of the World's in-house lawyer, Tom Crone, who had told him that he, too, had been misled. He offered no explanation for the misleading evidence given by Bob Bird.

The original archive was said to contain half a terabyte of data - equivalent to 500 editions of Encyclopaedia Britannica. But police now believe that there was an effort to substantially destroy the archive before News International handed over their new evidence in January. They believe they have identified the executive responsible by following an electronic audit trail. They have attempted to retrieve the data which they fear was lost. The Crown Prosecution Service is believed to have been asked whether the executive can be charged with perverting the course of justice.

At the heart of the affair is a specialist data company, Essential Computing, based in Clevedon, near Bristol. Staff there have been interviewed by Operation Weeting. One source speculated that it was this company which had compelled News International to admit that the archive existed.

The Guardian understands that Essential Computing has co-operated with police and has provided evidence about an alleged attempt by the News International executive to destroy part of the archive while they were working with it. This is said to have happened after the executive discovered that the company retained material of which News International was unaware.

The alleged deletion has caused tension between News International and Scotland Yard, who are also angry over recent leaks. When the Murdoch company handed over evidence of their journalists' involvement in bribing police officers in late June, they wanted to make a public announcement, claiming credit for their assistance to police. They were warned that this would interfere with inquiries and finally agreed that they would keep the entire matter confidential until early August, to allow police to make arrests. In the event, this week, a series of leaks has led Scotland Yard to conclude that News International breached the agreement.

There was friction too earlier this year when Weeting detectives arrested a senior journalist. When they went to the News of the World's office to search his desk, they found that all of its contents had been removed and lodged with a firm of solicitors, who initially refused to hand it over. The solicitors eventually complied. A file is believed to have been sent to the Crown Prosecution service seeking advice on whether anybody connected with the incident should be charged.



Friction? Tension? Good lord. What next? Compulsion? Obsession?


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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:32 pm

The Guardian is doing reporting on this kerfuffle that buys it creds for it's disinfo stories framing Bradley Manning as a patsy to occlude the David Manning memo of March 2002.

Amy Goodman just broadcast an event where Julian Assange spoke at length. So that wikileaks ball is part of the juggling of media credibility issues.
CIA runs mainstream media since WWII:
news rooms, movies/TV, publishing
...
Disney is CIA for kidz!
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:40 pm

...


Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:The Guardian is doing reporting on this kerfuffle that buys it creds for it's disinfo stories framing Bradley Manning as a patsy to occlude the David Manning memo of March 2002.

Amy Goodman just broadcast an event where Julian Assange spoke at length. So that wikileaks ball is part of the juggling of media credibility issues.


Astute observation, HMW. As they are conflated, conflating.


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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:47 pm

Phone hacking: Police probe suspected deletion of emails by NI executive

• 'Massive quantities' of archive allegedly deleted
• Emails believed to be between News of the World editors

Nick Davies and Amelia Hill
guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 July 2011 14.18 BST



Purple will be used to translate into what is really meant


News of the World
News International's claims of cooperating with police over phone hacking scandal brought into question.

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal (to keep Rupert James and Fanta Pants out of the loop)

The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable
(pants wettingly criminally incriminating for all involved)
both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.

According to legal sources close to the police inquiry,
(my mate who is also a bent cop who I paid off too)
a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities'
(massive = we were utterly up to our necks in REALLY sordid shit)
of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair.

The allegation directly contradicts repeated claims from News International that it is co-operating fully with police in order to expose its history of illegal news-gathering.
(NI has decided it it better to enact a scorched earth policy.
Hear those SHREDDERS!)

It is likely to be seen as evidence that the company could not pass a 'fit and proper person' test for its proposed purchase of BSkyB.
(Rupert = Getting ass reamed)

A Guardian investigation has found that, in addition to deleting emails, the company has also:

• infuriated police
(= reduced plod to a state of incandescent anger)
by leaking sensitive information in spite of an undertaking to police that it would keep it confidential; and

• risked prosecution for perverting the course of justice
(and actually didnt give a shit cos they knew, "we go down, so will you")
by trying to hide the contents of a senior reporter's desk after he was arrested by Weeting detectives in earlier this year.

News International originally claimed that the archive of emails did not exist. Last December, its Scottish editor, Bob Bird, told the trial of Tommy Sheridan in Glasgow that the emails had been lost ( :lol2: :lol2: :lol2: ) en route to Mumbai.

Also in December, the company's solicitor Julian Pike from Farrer and Co provided the high court with a statement claiming that it was unable to retrieve emails which were more than six months old.
(cos they had fallen out of the back of the plane enroute)

The first hint that this was not true came in late January when News International handed Scotland Yard evidence which led to the immediate sacking of its news editor Ian Edmondson and to the launch of Operation Weeting. It was reported at the time that this evidence consisted of three old emails.

Three months later, on 23 March this year, Pike formally apologised to the high court and acknowledged that News International could locate emails as far back as 2005 and that no emails had ever been lost en route to Mumbai or anywhere else in India. In a signed statement seen by the Guardian, Pike said he had been misinformed by the News of the World's in-house lawyer, Tom Crone, who had told him that he, too, had been misled. He offered no explanation for the misleading evidence given by Bob Bird.
(It wasnt me, I was misled myself!!! - said everyone involved)

The original archive was said to contain half a terabyte of data - equivalent to 500 editions of Encyclopaedia Britannica. But police now believe that there was an effort to substantially destroy the archive before News International handed over their new evidence in January. They believe they have identified the executive responsible by following an electronic audit trail.
(whose nickname is Fanta Pants???)
They have attempted to retrieve the data which they fear was lost. The Crown Prosecution Service is believed to have been asked whether the executive can be charged with perverting the course of justice.

At the heart of the affair is a specialist data company, Essential Computing, based in Clevedon, near Bristol. Staff there have been interviewed by Operation Weeting. One source speculated that it was this company which had compelled News International to admit that the archive existed.

The Guardian understands that Essential Computing has co-operated with police and has provided evidence about an alleged attempt by the News International executive to destroy part of the archive while they were working with it. This is said to have happened after the executive discovered that the company retained material of which News International was unaware.
(West Country nerds decide they will not let Rupert butt fuck them)

The alleged deletion has caused drunken fist fights between News International and Scotland Yard, who are also angry over recent leaks. When the Murdoch company handed over evidence of their journalists' involvement in bribing police officers in late June, they wanted to make a public announcement, claiming credit for their assistance to police. They were warned that this would interfere with inquiries and finally agreed that they would keep the entire matter confidential until early August, to allow police to make arrests. In the event, this week, a series of leaks has led Scotland Yard to conclude that News International breached the agreement. (News International shafted the Met)

There were knock-down fist fights too earlier this year when Weeting detectives arrested a senior journalist. When they went to the News of the World's office to search his desk, they found that all of its contents had been removed and lodged with a firm of solicitors, who initially refused to hand it over. The solicitors eventually complied. A file is believed to have been sent to the Crown Prosecution service seeking advice on whether anybody connected with the incident should be charged.[/quote]
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby coffin_dodger » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:54 pm

@ Searcher - well, blow me down, Vince Cable is my MP, too. Nice round here, innit? :thumbsup
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:54 pm

Searcher08 wrote:Phone hacking: Police probe suspected deletion of emails by NI executive

• 'Massive quantities' of archive allegedly deleted
• Emails believed to be between News of the World editors

Nick Davies and Amelia Hill
guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 July 2011 14.18 BST



Purple will be used to translate into what is really meant


News of the World
News International's claims of cooperating with police over phone hacking scandal brought into question.

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal (to keep Rupert James and Fanta Pants out of the loop)

The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable
(pants wettingly criminally incriminating for all involved)
both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.

According to legal sources close to the police inquiry,
(my mate who is also a bent cop who I paid off too)
a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities'
(massive = we were utterly up to our necks in REALLY sordid shit)
of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair.

The allegation directly contradicts repeated claims from News International that it is co-operating fully with police in order to expose its history of illegal news-gathering.
(NI has decided it it better to enact a scorched earth policy.
Hear those SHREDDERS!)

It is likely to be seen as evidence that the company could not pass a 'fit and proper person' test for its proposed purchase of BSkyB.
(Rupert = Getting ass reamed)

A Guardian investigation has found that, in addition to deleting emails, the company has also:

• infuriated police
(= reduced plod to a state of incandescent anger)
by leaking sensitive information in spite of an undertaking to police that it would keep it confidential; and

• risked prosecution for perverting the course of justice
(and actually didnt give a shit cos they knew, "we go down, so will you")
by trying to hide the contents of a senior reporter's desk after he was arrested by Weeting detectives in earlier this year.

News International originally claimed that the archive of emails did not exist. Last December, its Scottish editor, Bob Bird, told the trial of Tommy Sheridan in Glasgow that the emails had been lost ( :lol2: :lol2: :lol2: ) en route to Mumbai.

Also in December, the company's solicitor Julian Pike from Farrer and Co provided the high court with a statement claiming that it was unable to retrieve emails which were more than six months old.
(cos they had fallen out of the back of the plane enroute)

The first hint that this was not true came in late January when News International handed Scotland Yard evidence which led to the immediate sacking of its news editor Ian Edmondson and to the launch of Operation Weeting. It was reported at the time that this evidence consisted of three old emails.

Three months later, on 23 March this year, Pike formally apologised to the high court and acknowledged that News International could locate emails as far back as 2005 and that no emails had ever been lost en route to Mumbai or anywhere else in India. In a signed statement seen by the Guardian, Pike said he had been misinformed by the News of the World's in-house lawyer, Tom Crone, who had told him that he, too, had been misled. He offered no explanation for the misleading evidence given by Bob Bird.
(It wasnt me, I was misled myself!!! - said everyone involved)

The original archive was said to contain half a terabyte of data - equivalent to 500 editions of Encyclopaedia Britannica. But police now believe that there was an effort to substantially destroy the archive before News International handed over their new evidence in January. They believe they have identified the executive responsible by following an electronic audit trail.
(whose nickname is Fanta Pants???)
They have attempted to retrieve the data which they fear was lost. The Crown Prosecution Service is believed to have been asked whether the executive can be charged with perverting the course of justice.

At the heart of the affair is a specialist data company, Essential Computing, based in Clevedon, near Bristol. Staff there have been interviewed by Operation Weeting. One source speculated that it was this company which had compelled News International to admit that the archive existed.

The Guardian understands that Essential Computing has co-operated with police and has provided evidence about an alleged attempt by the News International executive to destroy part of the archive while they were working with it. This is said to have happened after the executive discovered that the company retained material of which News International was unaware.
(West Country nerds decide they will not let Rupert butt fuck them)

The alleged deletion has caused drunken fist fights between News International and Scotland Yard, who are also angry over recent leaks. When the Murdoch company handed over evidence of their journalists' involvement in bribing police officers in late June, they wanted to make a public announcement, claiming credit for their assistance to police. They were warned that this would interfere with inquiries and finally agreed that they would keep the entire matter confidential until early August, to allow police to make arrests. In the event, this week, a series of leaks has led Scotland Yard to conclude that News International breached the agreement. (News International shafted the Met)

There were knock-down fist fights too earlier this year when Weeting detectives arrested a senior journalist. When they went to the News of the World's office to search his desk, they found that all of its contents had been removed and lodged with a firm of solicitors, who initially refused to hand it over. The solicitors eventually complied. A file is believed to have been sent to the Crown Prosecution service seeking advice on whether anybody connected with the incident should be charged.
[/quote]

:rofl: Priceless. Fanta Pants? Gotta love those Brits.



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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 08, 2011 2:28 pm

Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:The Guardian is doing reporting on this kerfuffle that buys it creds for it's disinfo stories framing Bradley Manning as a patsy to occlude the David Manning memo of March 2002.

Amy Goodman just broadcast an event where Julian Assange spoke at length. So that wikileaks ball is part of the juggling of media credibility issues.


The Guardian isnt having its cred raised - it is a pompous whine-filled self-entitled rag.

This isnt controlled psyops FFS - one look at the faces of Cameron (WTF! WTF!!) , Milliband (trying desperately to look good and failing dramatically), News Corp (credibility in utter free fall, brand toxicity contagion happening as we speak)

This is not going to remain as a TABLOID thing - advertisers (Renault) are already pulling their advertising from all News International publications.

Murdoch has been the kingmaker in the UK since Thatcher - I would suggest his influence on UK culture has been MUCH more powerful and pervasive than UK Intel or the CIA agencies.

News Corp is also, in an aspect that is not being reported AFAICS, in a state of virtual civil war as Rupert want his newer kids (with his Chinese wife, whom his older children loathe, in a battle straight outta Dynesty) to inherit the kingdom.
Last edited by Searcher08 on Fri Jul 08, 2011 2:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 08, 2011 2:47 pm

OMG!!!! Latest News!!!!

Rebekka Brookes CEO Of News International, has been spotted at Russett Lodge!!



Hey coffin_dodger (great name BTW!) - I'm in Twickenham!
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby coffin_dodger » Fri Jul 08, 2011 3:02 pm

@ searcher (sorry to turn this into a south-west london lovefest, everyone :lovehearts: ) - I grew up in Twickenham, now live in Hampton. Shit, we might even know one another!

I have to say, I'm ABSOLUTELY LOVING seeing these elites squirm. And so much more to come!
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