Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Jul 23, 2011 7:03 pm

Calls grow for scrutiny of Murdoch’s education division
By Valerie Strauss

Calls are growing in New York for government officials to review and reject multimillion-dollar no-bid contracts let by the state and New York City education departments to Rupert Murdoch’s beleaguered News Corp.

The contracts either have gone or are set to go to Wireless Generation, an education technology company that became a subsidiary of News Corp. last November when Murdoch’s firm purchased 90 percent of it for about $360 million. The sale made news in part because Wireless Generation had financial ties to the New York City public school system, and just a few weeks earlier, the school system’s chancellor, Joel Klein, had resigned to become executive vice president at News Corps.

Murdoch recently appointed Klein, once the country’s chief antitrust enforcer at the Justice Department, to serve as his adviser on the scandal over alleged phone hacking and other illegal newsgathering at the now-closed News of the World tabloid.

On Tuesday, Klein sat next to Murdoch’s wife, Wendi Deng, as Murdoch and his son, James, testified about the scandal before a British parliamentary committee.

Klein, who was New York City schools chancellor for eight years, signed on to News Corp to advise Murdoch on building a business in the education marketplace, company officials said at the time. Murdoch had said in a Nov. 2010 statement about the Wireless Generation purchase that “we see a $500 billion sector in the U.S. alone that is waiting desperately to be transformed by big breakthroughs that extend the reach of great teaching.”

When Klein announced that he was moving to News Corp., he said, according to a statement released by the company: “I’ve long admired News Corporation’s entrepreneurial spirit and Rupert Murdoch’s fearless commitment to innovation. I am excited for the opportunity to be part of this team — and to have the chance to bring the same spirit of innovation to the burgeoning education marketplace.”

The Huffington Post quoted a Wireless Generation spokeswoman, Joan Lebow, as saying:

“Wireless Generation has absolutely no involvement in the events in question — which took place years before the transaction with News Corp. Wireless Generation is an independent subsidiary and does not share student data with News Corp. or any other News Corp. subsidiary or entity. As for our own business, especially as it relates to data security and personal privacy, we have a long and successful track record of safeguarding user data, in accordance with the highest standards and industry regulations, in New York and nationwide.”

In New York, critics are urging state and city officials to stop contracts from going to Wireless Generation, which, among other things, builds large-scale data systems that centralize student data.

Before it was sold, Wireless Generation had partnered with New York City’s Education Department to build the Achievement Reporting and Innovation System (ARIS) and for work on another project, the online School of One.

The New York City Comptroller’s office recently approved a $2.7 million extension of the School of One contract between the state Education Department and Wireless Generation, the Huffington Post reported. According to the Daily News, the contract was initially rejected in June by the comptroller because the application package did not include basic information, including a letter from Klein saying he had recused himself from any involvement. Once the letter was received, the contract was approved.

The state education department has also awarded a $27-million contract for student data systems to Wireless Generation, but the state comptroller has until this fall to decide whether to approve it.

The New York Daily News, in a story about how the media scandal could affect News Corp.’s new education division, quoted Patrick Sullivan, a parent leader on the city’s Panel for Educational Policy, as saying that it was “really disturbing” that education officials had “hired a Murdoch company to work on our children's data.”

And now, Class Size Matters, a New York-based education advocacy nonprofit organization, has organized a petition drive asking the state and the New York City comptroller to reject no-bid contracts with Wireless Generation. [Correction: The original version of this post gave the incorrect name of the advocacy organization. Class Size Matters is correct.]

The petition says that its signers have concerns about a number of issues regarding the contracts, including the fact that they were no-bid, and questions whether there were any “troubling conflict of interest” issues concerning the timing of Klein’s move to News Corp. and the purchase of Wireless Generation.

Tim Knowles, director of the University of Chicago's Urban Education Institute, told the Huffington Post that he couldn’t say whether News Corp’s. education division would be financially affected by the scandal in the company’s media division, but he predicted that Murdoch’s reputation would be harmed in the education world.

“There will be fewer people who want to hear from Rupert Murdoch on questions that run right to the heart of student learning,” he was quoted as saying.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Jul 23, 2011 11:03 pm

Phone hacking inquiry judge attended parties at home of Rupert Murdoch's son-in-law
The judge in charge of the phone hacking inquiry has attended parties at the home of Rupert Murdoch’s son-in-law.
Lord Justice Leveson was appointed by Mr Cameron last week and will be able to call any journalist, politician or proprietor, raising the possibility that Rupert Murdoch could face further questions

By Christopher Hope, Whitehall Editor

9:19PM BST 22 Jul 2011

Lord Justice Leveson went to two parties in the past year at the London home of Matthew Freud, a PR executive married to Elisabeth Murdoch, the daughter of Rupert Murdoch widely tipped to be her father’s successor.

MPs said last night that Lord Leveson’s social connections to News Corp raised questions about his impartiality and suitability to lead the inquiry.

The judge was appointed by Mr Cameron last week and will be able to call any journalist, politician or proprietor, raising the possibility that Rupert Murdoch could face further questions. It emerged yesterday that Lord Leveson, while chairman of the Sentencing Council that advises the Government on punishing criminals, met Mr Freud at a dinner in February last year in an Oxford University college.

The pair discussed how to promote public confidence in the criminal justice system.

Mr Freud then offered to provide some staff from his company Freud Communications to work for nothing advising the council on how to raise confidence in sentencing. This resulted in Lord Leveson attending two parties at Mr Freud’s London home, in July last year and last January. His attendance was approved by Lord Judge, the Lord Chief Justice.
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The statement said: “In his capacity as Chairman of the Sentencing Council, and with the knowledge of the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Justice Leveson attended two large evening events at Mr Freud’s London home: these were on July 29, 2010, and January 25, 2011.”

Lord Leveson’s spokesman declined to say whether the judge had met any of the Murdoch family at the parties.

In May last year, two Sentencing Council staff met a member of Mr Freud’s company in the reception area. There were no further meetings.

Lord Leveson’s office insisted that David Cameron had been informed of the judge’s attendance at the parties and had not raised any objections.

Lord Leveson’s office continued: “Lord Justice Leveson was not involved in that meeting and he has neither met nor spoken to anyone from Freud Communications since January 2011.

“There is, in any event, no continuing relationship. Prior to his appointment to the inquiry, Lord Justice Leveson ensured that these matters were brought to the attention of the Prime Minister.”

Chris Bryant, the Labour MP who has been campaigning on phone hacking, said the news “makes it very difficult to see how Lord Justice Leveson can be seen to be independent because in practice he will have to bend over backwards to have a go at Murdoch or be accused of giving him an easy time”.

“If this had been known from the start it might be fine – as with every step, transparency has come by dragging it out of them.”

A spokesman for the Prime Minister said: “Lord Justice Leveson was appointed on the recommendation of the Lord Chief Justice in line with the procedure set out in the Enquiries Act 2005.”

The 62-year-old judge became head of the Sentencing Council last year after serving as Lord Justice of Appeal since October 2006. He was educated at Liverpool College and Merton College, Oxford.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby 2012 Countdown » Sun Jul 24, 2011 10:30 am

Phone hacking
Tea with Tony and dinner with Cherie – how the Murdochs wined and dined the Blairs
As David Cameron and Gordon Brown turn on their former News International ally over the phone-hacking scandal, Tony Blair's reluctance to join the condemnation is raising questions

Jamie Doward
The Observer, Sunday 24 July 2011

The speed of Wendi Deng Murdoch's right hook, to stop a protester during her husband Rupert Murdoch's testimony to MPs, caused a stir around the world. Two particularly admiring onlookers of the must-see TV moment are likely to have been the Murdochs' increasingly close friends, Tony and Cherie Blair.

Blair's reluctance to speak out against Murdoch over the phone-hacking affair will undoubtedly bolster accusations that he has been compromised by his close ties with the media tycoon and his wife. The former prime minister recently played down claims he had been a target of a private investigator working for the News of the World, saying he did not have a mobile phone while in office. But there is evidence his personal details may have been targeted by people working for the paper, according to those familiar with the police investigation. Similarly, the Observer has learned there are allegations the phone of his wife, Cherie, was intercepted.

When asked for a response to the allegations, a spokesman for the couple repeatedly declined to comment. "It may be a case of them thinking let sleeping dogs lie," said someone who knows the Blairs. But it is clear that a friendship between the two power-couples has been flourishing since Blair stood down as prime minister in 2007.

The actor Michael Sheen, who has played Blair three times in TV movies and The Queen, has told how he was at a party in New York a couple of years ago when he was approached by Deng who said: "We're having a dinner for Tony next week in LA, you must come."

Deng's Chinese MySpace page has photographs of her socialising with both Blairs. Deng lists Tony as a friend on her page and has used it to promote a "Tea with Tony" fundraising event. She has also been a judge for an annual short film competition sponsored by Blair's Faith Foundation. "We are delighted to have Wendi Murdoch on our judging panel for Faith Shorts, our global film competition for young people," a spokesman said. "Wendi also has particular experience in connecting young people through her work investing in many Chinese internet startups."

Cherie Blair is also close to Deng, once presenting her with a copy of her memoirs containing a handwritten dedication that read: "Dear Wendi, thank you for all you have done for me + all you do for women of the world."
Cherie has also attended the Important Dinner for Women event, which was started at Davos in 2008 and is co-hosted by Deng.

The Blairs' supporters could point out their close relationship with the Murdochs is not unusual. Gordon Brown's wife, Sarah, invited Deng, Murdoch's daughter Elisabeth, and Rebekah Brooks, former chief executive of News International, to her birthday party at Chequers and has also attended the Important Dinner for Women. Gordon Brown also invited Murdoch and his wife to his official country retreat for a weekend visit.

Cameron courted Murdoch in 2008 when he flew out to Greece to hold talks on the mogul's yacht. Murdoch revealed he had been invited to No 10 shortly after the last election for a "cup of tea" with Cameron, to thank him for his support. But, as the hacking scandal unfolded, Brown has turned on the mogul, claiming News International was part of a "criminal-media nexus". Cameron, too, has distanced himself from both Murdoch and his son James, claiming the latter still "had questions to answer".

But Blair's reluctance to join in with the condemnation of a man who, it was reported in 2006, offered him a senior role in his media company once he stood down from office, has been noticeable.
Blair has instead used the scandal to call for a wide investigation into the role of the media. "Both Ed Miliband and David Cameron are right to say that this is not just News International," Blair told one interviewer.

Dan Hodges, commissioning editor of the Labour Uncut website, and a commentator on the party, said he was not surprised Blair was reluctant to wade into the row.

"A lot of Labour party members will find what comes out at the official inquiry [into the role of the press] about New Labour's relationship with News International quite hard to take," Hodges said. "Revelations about the depth of the relationship as it existed under both Brown and Blair are going to be uncomfortable for the party." Indeed, Brooks confirmed to parliament that it "was under Labour prime ministers that I was a regular visitor to Downing Street and not the current administration".

Blair in particular has enjoyed a relationship with the tycoon that stretches beyond the political to the personal, continuing to socialise with the Murdochs after leaving office.
This month it was alleged Blair urged Brown to persuade Tom Watson, the Labour MP who led the efforts to expose phone-hacking at the NoW, to back off. The claims were denied by Blair. More difficult for Blair to deny have been claims he owes a debt to Murdoch for his newspapers' support during the Iraq war. Freedom of information requests have confirmed the men spoke three times on the telephone shortly before the invasion started. A new play, Loyalty, showing at Hampstead Theatre and written by the journalist Sarah Helm, wife of Blair's chief of staff, Jonathan Powell, hints at what the two men may have talked about.
In one scene, Murdoch rings Blair to tell him he has been speaking to the US secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld. Murdoch says: "Don's boys need [the UK military base] Diego Garcia, Tony."

Blair signs off: "Right, thanks Rupert." Although the play is a fictionalised memoir, Whitehall insiders say it has the ring of authenticity.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/ju ... ine-blairs

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CNN Host and Ex-Tabloid Editor Is Reluctantly Dragged Into Phone Scandal
By DON VAN NATTA Jr. and RAVI SOMAIYA
Published: July 23, 2011

LONDON — It was perhaps inevitable that the phone hacking accusations in Britain would cross the Atlantic and reach Piers Morgan, the flamboyant former Fleet Street editor who is now the host of “Piers Morgan Tonight” on CNN.

James Hipwell, a former journalist at The Daily Mirror, a tabloid edited by Mr. Morgan until 2004, now says that phone hacking was “endemic” at the paper. “Piers was extremely hands-on as an editor,” Mr. Hipwell, 45, told the British newspaper The Independent in an interview published Saturday. “I can’t say 100 percent that he knew about it. But it was inconceivable he didn’t.”

In an e-mail interview, Mr. Morgan struck back at that allegation and other suggestions by members of Parliament and a widely read political blog that his reporters had landed scoops at The Daily Mirror based on phone hacking. Members of Parliament have also said that Mr. Morgan should be questioned.

“I have never hacked a phone, told anyone to hack a phone, nor to my knowledge published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone,” Mr. Morgan said. “I am not aware, and have never seen evidence to suggest otherwise, that any Mirror story published during my tenure was obtained from phone hacking.”

Mr. Morgan challenged Mr. Hipwell’s credibility, pointing to the fact that he is a convicted felon who went to jail in 2006 for 59 days for buying stock in companies before touting them in a Daily Mirror column, then selling the shares when the prices rose. Mr. Morgan himself was accused of profiting from the sale of one company’s stock based on the column, but said he “was cleared by both internal inquiry and external legal investigation.” Mr. Hipwell “lied repeatedly during the various investigations into the scandal — both about me and about other colleagues,” Mr. Morgan said. “He is not a credible witness.”

In an e-mail, Mr. Hipwell replied that his lawyers thought his case and Mr. Morgan's had been "identical" and that they were surprised that Mr. Morgan was cleared. "No one has got to the bottom of why this happened," he wrote.

A spokesman for Trinity Mirror, the publisher of The Daily Mirror, denied Mr. Hipwell’s allegations about hacking.

Asked if CNN had pressed him for assurances that he was not involved in phone hacking, Mr. Morgan replied, “My unequivocal statements on this matter speak for themselves.”

A CNN spokeswoman said on Saturday that Mr. Morgan had been asked about the accusations and “denied involvement in phone hacking both publicly and privately.”

In 2007, Mr. Morgan was quoted in GQ magazine as saying that the former News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, who went to jail for hacking phones of members of the royal household, had been made “a scapegoat for a widespread practice.” (The News of the World is the newspaper that has been at the heart of the hacking scandal.) Mr. Morgan said on Saturday that he had heard rumors about phone hacking in tabloid newsrooms for years, and “it would now appear those rumors were correct.”

Mr. Hipwell’s accusations are the latest in a series of charges against Mr. Morgan; the newspaper he edited, The Daily Mirror; and its sister tabloids The People and The Sunday Mirror.

This month, Adrian Sanders, a member of Parliament, accused Mr. Morgan’s old newspaper of obtaining a 2002 scoop — that the former England soccer manager Sven-Goran Eriksson had had an affair with a television personality, Ulrika Jonsson — by means of phone hacking. British lawmakers are protected from libel lawsuits while speaking in Parliament.

Last Tuesday, during the questioning of James and Rupert Murdoch as part of the parliamentary committee, Louise Mensch, a Conservative member of Parliament, used the same protection to wonder aloud why lawmakers had not questioned Mr. Morgan. She then suggested — incorrectly, as it turned out — that Mr. Morgan had admitted in a book he wrote that phone hacking had produced big scoops for The Daily Mirror. She appeared to conflate a passage from his book with several posts by the widely read British political blogger Guido Fawkes.

Later that day on CNN, an audibly angry Mr. Morgan confronted Ms. Mensch to deny the accusations. Ms. Mensch, he said, was “a coward” for refusing to repeat her claims outside of Parliament, where she would not be covered by the immunity protections. He challenged her to “repeat what you said about it and then maybe go and buy a copy of my book.”

In the e-mail interview, Mr. Morgan said he intended to write a letter to John Whittingdale, the Conservative chairman of Parliament’s culture, media and sport select committee, to demand a correction and apology from Ms. Mensch.

“Ms. Mensch accused me of personal criminal activity,” Mr. Morgan said, “and I never broke the law as an editor.” Ms. Mensch did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Mr. Morgan said he was gratified to see that Tom Watson, the Labour lawmaker who led the parliamentary questioning of the Murdochs on Tuesday, had said Saturday on Twitter: “I’ve not seen any evidence linking @PiersMorgan to hacking. And I’ve seen a lot of documentation these last 2 years.”

Mr. Morgan was dismissed as editor of The Daily Mirror after it printed photographs, purporting to show British soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners, that were revealed to be fake. He had also served as an editor at The News of the World in 1994 and 1995.

“I left the News of the World in 1995, at least five years before anyone has suggested phone hacking started at the newspaper,” he said, “and before cellphones were even in widespread use in the U.K.”

Mr. Morgan was asked about his longtime friendships with Rebekah Brooks, the former chief of The News of the World’s parent company who was arrested a week ago, and Andy Coulson, the former News of the World editor who was also arrested in connection with phone hacking and the bribery of police officers. The Fleet Street adventures of Ms. Brooks and Mr. Coulson are featured in Mr. Morgan’s book “The Insider.”

“I have offered them both my support as a friend,” he said.

Mr. Morgan was also a friend and colleague of Sean Hoare, the first former News of the World reporter to link Mr. Coulson to phone hacking. Mr. Hoare died at the age of 47 on Monday. The police have said Mr. Hoare’s death was not suspicious. The outcome of toxicology reports are pending.

“I was shocked and saddened to hear of Sean Hoare’s death,” Mr. Morgan said.
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/24/world ... ted=1&_r=1
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Metric Pringle » Mon Jul 25, 2011 12:09 pm

Thought I'd share this youtube channel I found -

"NOTWPhoneHacking is the internet's leading up to date video channel on the phone hacking scandal, and every day I provide the latest breaking news from around the internet and deliver it here at the YouTube community for you to watch."

http://www.youtube.com/user/NOTWPhoneHacking#p/u


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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jul 25, 2011 1:37 pm

News Corp. Legal Team in Turmoil
Recent departure of general counsel means added pressure By Katie Feola

Image

Joel Klein | Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images

At a time when Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. is facing the worst legal quagmire in its history, it finds itself with a legal team in turmoil. The company’s top lawyer, a man close to Murdoch, left only recently, and his replacement is, for now at least, just temporary. It’s a situation the company may not be able to afford.

On June 8—less than a month before the phone hacking scandal reached critical levels—News Corp. general counsel Lawrence “Lon” Jacobs announced his departure. Jacobs had been a part of Murdoch’s most trusted circle of advisors—his “praetorian guard”—for years, working for Murdoch’s longtime outside firm, Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Sheinfeld, before coming in house, and playing an especially crucial role in Murdoch’s 2007 takeover of Dow Jones & Company and The Wall Street Journal. By some accounts, Jacobs was forced out as part of the James Murdoch-inspired putsch that has seen the exit of COO Peter Chernin and communications and marketing chief Gary Ginsberg, the team

Shortly after Jacobs left, News Corp. announced that Janet Nova would replace him, at least temporarily. Nova certainly seems to be taking her responsibility to protect her bosses seriously; when Murdoch was attacked by a protester wielding a shaving cream pie, it was Nova—not Wendi Murdoch—who blocked the pie. But even if that move helps make her new title permanent, she may never be able to have the kind of influence that Jacobs exerted. Murdoch prefers not to have women too close to him, telling intimates “they talk too much.”

Nova, 46, is the daughter of Sidney Lapidus, a former SEC attorney turned managing director of private equity investment firm Warburg Pincus LLC. Lapidus retired in 2007 and now spends his time serving on the boards of major corporations, including Neiman Marcus and Knoll, and cultural organizations such as the New York Historical Society and the American Jewish Historical Society. Nova followed closely in her father’s footsteps, attending both of his alma maters, Princeton University and Columbia University School of Law. After graduating from law school in 1992, Nova worked as an associate at white shoe law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP. She left Simpson Thacher in 1997 for News Corp., where she served as associate general counsel of News America, a U.S. News Corp. subsidiary.

Meanwhile, only seven months before Lon Jacobs left the legal future of News Corp. hanging in the balance, Murdoch became enamored with powerhouse attorney cum New York City schools chancellor Joel Klein and hired him as an executive vice president. Klein signed up for the role primarily to advise the media mogul on News Corp.’s new venture into the educational marketplace. But the hacking mess has forced him to take on different responsibilities. On July 18, News Corp. announced that it had established a management and standards committee, an independent body outside of News International authorized to cooperate with investigations and inquiries, and that the committee would report directly to Klein.

It was a logical move. With what News Corp. is facing now, leaving Klein only to work on education issues would have been a waste, given his legal experience. His career in the field began in the early 1970s, when he graduated from Harvard Law School magna cum laude and scored coveted clerkships, including one with U.S. Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell. He spent time in private practice as a litigator and started his own firm, specializing in health and constitutional law litigation on both the trial and appellate levels and arguing a number of cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. During the Clinton administration, he served as deputy White House counsel, and then, in 1997, was made an assistant attorney general, overseeing the Justice Department’s antitrust division, where he took on Microsoft.

What Klein lacks is business experience. Aside from a brief period he spent running U.S. operations for media corporation Bertelsmann, Klein has never worked in the business sector. However, lack of experience isn’t the kind of thing that deters Klein. Before he took over the largest public school system in the country, his background in education was limited to four months he spent teaching sixth grade math while on leave from Harvard Law in 1969.

Still, Klein’s influence on News Corp. may already be showing. It was clear during Rupert Murdoch’s parliamentary testimony that he had been coached by a litigator, and a good one. For all of the apologetic statements prepared by public relations professionals for Murdoch to reiterate during the proceedings, the constant denials of knowledge or responsibility came straight from the arsenal of a lawyer with Klein’s extensive background. And with his old colleagues at the Justice Department now reportedly preparing subpoenas, he may need to draw on more of that experience very soon.





How Would Murdoch’s Downfall Affect Israel? Don’t Ask the US Media
23Jul11

by James M. Wall

JTA columnist Ron Kampeas has been a lone voice in sounding the alarm to his Jewish readers:

“Pro-Israel leaders in the United States, Britain and Australia are warily watching the unfolding of the phone-hacking scandal that is threatening to engulf the media empire of Rupert Murdoch.”

The Murdoch scandal has been extensively reported as a telephone hacking police story. Only in the JTA, the Global News Service of the Jewish People, has coverage of the Murdoch News Corp story sounded the traditional Jewish mother’s alarm: “uh oh, this will not be good for the Jewish people”.

Kampeas assumes, correctly I am sure, that his readers do have a strong interest in Murdoch’s “sudden massive reversal of fortune”. They have reason to be alarmed.

Without Daddy Murdoch’s formidable pro-Israel presence, that pesky UN September vote could tilt toward the Palestinians. After that, Israel-Palestinian border negotiations might find a disgraced Murdoch-controlled British government eager to prove its independence. Without Murdoch, Fox News will have lost its most reliable news producer.

Thus far, the Murdoch “hacking scandal” has reached ten former staffers and News Corp executives who have been arrested by British police. They are accused of “hacking into the phones of public figures and a murdered schoolgirl, and paying off the police and journalists.”

These allegations threaten to severely weaken Murdoch’s media empire, an empire the Australian built which now includes The Wall Street Journal, the Times of London and The Australian. Murdoch also owns two major tabloids, The Sun in Britain and the New York Post. In the US, Murdoch owns and virtually writes the scripts for the Fox News Channel. Until he recently sold it, Murdoch also owned The Weekly Standard, the neo conservative magazine he created in 1995.

Admirers of Murdoch’s aggressive take-over of news outlets have praised him for revitalizing the news industry. What they overlook is that his “revitalizing” has also lowered the standards of the journalism profession. It is the Murdoch style to view the world through black and white lens, “West good, Muslim East bad”.

For the Murdoch media empire, accuracy is never as important as racist sensationalism. Glenn Greenwald reports in his Salon column this week-end how both the New York Times and the Washington Post incorrectly blamed “Muslim extremists” for the Oslo, Norway, attacks, retaining on line, false racist accusations later shown to be incorrect.

The Post’s Jennifer Rubin cited The Weekly Standard as a source for her false reporting, a dive into the Murdoch pool of sleeze for which the Atlantic’s James Fallows calls her to task.

Before the hacking scandal broke, Murdoch had expanded his empire into the Middle East, choosing, as no surprise, to connect with a Saudi prince Aljazeera recently described as “ the 26th wealthiest person on the planet, as well as the richest man in Saudi Arabia, billionaire Prince Walid bin Talal bin Abdelaziz Al-Saud, a nephew of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia”.

Forbes magazine reports that Prince Walid has a net worth estimated to be at least $19.6bn.

Aljazeera also reports that the Prince is the second largest shareholder (at seven per cent) in News Corp, second only to Murdoch. How close are the two men?

During a recent interview on his yacht with the BBC’s Newsnight, Prince Walid declared himself to be a “good friend” of Rupert Murdoch and his son James, and staunchly defended the men amid the ongoing News Corp scandal.

It is noteworthy that, while Prince Walid is the second largest shareholder in News Corp, Murdoch is also a major shareholder (ten per cent) in Prince Walid’s Rotana Media Group based in the Middle East. As recently as this May, Murdoch’s conglomerate took a significant stake in Prince Walid’s film, TV, and music business, a move that deepened the financial relationship between the two men.

The Saudi connection, however, will be of little help in Murdoch’s dealing with the British and possibly, the American, legal systems.

Kampeas writes that “Jewish leaders” fear that any reduction in Murdoch’s media influence could “mute the strongly pro-Israel voice of many of the publications he owns.” Those “Jewish leaders” rely on Murdoch to reassure them that all is well in the world of political Zionism.

His publications and media have proven to be fairer on the issue of Israel than the rest of the media,” said Malcolm Hoenlein, the executive vice-chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. “I hope that won’t be impacted.”

These comments suggests that what happens to Murdoch in the future is significant to supporters of Israel not primarily because of the alleged immoral or illegal violations of the public good, but because of the potential impact on the pro-Israel voice of Murdoch’s media empire.

If there are US media outlets, other than JTA, which have included Murdoch’s Zionist zealotry in their hacking scandal stories. I have been unable to locate them.

The Big Three PEPs, (Progressive Except for Palestine) Maddow, Matthew, and O’Donnell, are progressive voices on MSNBC-TV, but they will absolutely not touch the sins of Israel, the third rail of American politics.

Rachel Maddow, my favorite of the Big Three, appeared uncharacteristically oblivious of what she was saying in her recent interview with Bill Moyers.

Writing on Consortium News, Marquette Theology Professor Daniel C. Maguire offered a list of Israel-related issues where “Rachel Maddow Dares Not Tread”. He began with a gentle priestly admonition:

To MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow: On your show of July 14, you spoke of your complete freedom to say what you want on your show and Bill Moyers gently demurred, speaking of restricting forces that hover over journalists. Bill Moyers was correct. I cannot believe you don’t care, but you are not free to address on your show the political influence of the Israeli lobby (which is far broader than AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee).

For Maguire’s complete list, click here.

The Big Three constantly feast off the right wing shallowness of Fox news readers and commentators, but they do not venture even close to the linkage between Murdoch’s strong pro-Israel bias, and his threatened downfall.

Kampeas, on the other hand, is quite forthright about the linkage and its potential damage to Israel. Note how eager Kampeas is to cast Murdoch in a favorable light by citing “Jewish leaders”.

Jewish leaders said that Murdoch’s view of Israel’s dealings with the Palestinians and with its Arab neighbors seemed both knowledgeable and sensitive to the Jewish state’s self-perception as beleaguered and isolated.

Murdoch has visited Israel many times, always meeting, of course, with Israeli leaders. He is equally well received by “Jewish leaders” in the US. In 2009 he was honored by the American Jewish Committee.

On October 13, 2010, Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League (shown at right in this picture with Murdoch) hosted a dinner in Murdoch’s honor.

At that dinner, Murdoch said,

My own perspective is simple: We live in a world where there is an ongoing war against the Jews,” Murdoch said last October at an Anti-Defamation League dinner in his honor. “When Americans think of anti-Semitism, we tend to think of the vulgar caricatures and attacks of the first part of the 20th century. Now it seems that the most virulent strains come from the left. Often this new anti-Semitism dresses itself up as legitimate disagreement with Israel.

Murdoch is popular with conservatives in the US but highly unpopular with the progressive community, as the Nation magazine’s John Nichols was eager to demonstrate in his recent story on the scandal.

Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch has manipulated not just the news but the news landscape of the United States for decades. He has done so by pressuring the Federal Communications Commission and Congress to alter the laws of the land and regulatory standards in order to give his media conglomerate an unfair advantage in “competition” with more locally focused, more engaged and more responsible media.

It’s an old story: while Murdoch’s Fox News hosts prattle on and on about their enthusiasm for the free market, they work for a firm that seeks to game the system so Murdoch’s “properties” are best positioned to monopolize the discourse.

Even with such a strong progressive as Nichols, there is still no mention of Murdoch’s strong Zionist passions in his story of the scandal.

When he testified before the House Judiciary Committee in May of 2003, Murdoch was seeking to secure ownership of the nation’s largest satellite television company. Nichols writes that Murdoch was pressing for FCC rule changes that would allow him to own newspapers and broadcast outlets in the same cities. His goal was to ease controls so that “one corporation could dominate television viewership nationally”.

At that appearance before the House Judiciary Commitee, Murdoch’s reception, according to reports at the time, were “just short of fawning.”

Wisconsin Republican James Sensenbrenner, who was, at the time, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, greeted Murdoch by thanking the media executive for developing the Fox News network. The chairman added: “When my wife doesn’t get a good dose of Fox News every day she gets grumpy. So there are some of us who appreciate what you are doing.”

Progressive writers like Nichols want to make it clear that the right wing Republican party has a deep affection for a strong man like Murdoch whose media empire is dedicated not only to making money but to the promotion of a conservative ideology.

Joe Nocera was equally disdainful of Murdoch in his July 18 New York Times column:

You have to love the fact that when John Yates resigned on Monday as the assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police in London — a k a Scotland Yard — he complained about the “huge amount of inaccurate, ill-informed and, on occasion, downright malicious gossip” that had finally forced his hand. . . .

When the writers and editors of the late, unlamented News of the World were busy bribing Mr. Yates’s police officers, what they wanted in return was — gosh! — malicious gossip. When they were hacking the phones of royal family members and murdered teenagers, they were seeking, you know, malicious gossip.

When the recently arrested Rebekah Brooks called Gordon Brown, the former prime minister, to tell him that Rupert Murdoch’s Sun, which she then edited, was about to reveal that his infant child had cystic fibrosis — information that Brown is convinced came from a hacked phone message — she was telling him the paper was going to print a piece of gossip that a more humane institution would have let pass. She might not have viewed this as malicious, but the Brown family certainly did. . . . .

Laura Barnett‘s recent story in the London Guardian, describes Rupert Murdoch’s 102-year old mother Elisabeth Murdoch (shown at top with her son) as a mother who frequently stands in “firm maternal opposition to Rupert, 80, the second of her four children.”

In her native Australia, “Elisabeth is held in high esteem as one of the country’s most beneficent philanthropists,” a sharp contrast to the “sullied reputations of Rupert, and her grandson James”, both now under intense police scrutiny.

When Elisabeth’s husband Rupert, Senior, died from cancer in 1952, she turned her attention to charity work. She became life governor of the Royal Women’s Hospital in Melbourne and helped to set up the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute.

Consistently, however, she has expressed strong disagreement with the policies of News Corp. Nine years ago, for example, she told Julie Browning, author of A Winning Streak: The Murdochs, that her son’s purchase of the News of the World, “nearly killed me”.

In the US, Fox News, and more recently, the once highly respected conservative Wall Street Journal, have emerged as “house organs” for right wing Israeli governments.

If Murdoch self destructs, Israel will have lost a major weapon in its hasbara (propaganda) arsenal. Whether that is “good for the Jewish people”, depends entirely on your definition of “good”.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jul 25, 2011 4:11 pm

News Corp's UK political meetings to be published
By Olesya Dmitracova

LONDON | Mon Jul 25, 2011 12:52pm EDT

(Reuters) - Ministers in Britain's coalition government, criticized for being too close to Rupert Murdoch's scandal-hit News Corp, face more scrutiny this week when details of their meetings with the company's executives are published.

News Corp executive James Murdoch is also under pressure over his handling of a phone-hacking scandal that has hit the Murdoch family's media empire and could jeopardize his own position at the company.

British police are considering a request from opposition Labor politician Tom Watson to investigate claims that the 38-year-old son of News Corp head Rupert Murdoch gave "mistaken" testimony to a parliamentary hearing last week.

Another Labor lawmaker, Chris Bryant, has written to News Corp's independent directors calling on them to suspend both James and his 80-year-old father for failing to exercise proper corporate control.

The scandal, centered on the now defunct News of the World newspaper, has led to the resignation of senior executives at News Corp and also cost two of London's top policemen their jobs after they were accused of getting too close to the company.

Prime Minister David Cameron has also faced the worst crisis of his 15 months in charge, his judgment questioned after he hired former News of the World editor Andy Coulson as his communications chief.

Finance minister George Osborne echoed Monday Cameron's regret over the appointment of Coulson, who quit his government post in January and was arrested earlier this month.

"Knowing what we know now, we regret the decision (to hire Coulson) and I suspect Andy Coulson wouldn't have taken the job knowing what he knows now as well," Osborne told reporters after meeting his Indian counterpart Pranab Mukherjee.

The government will publish details of ministerial meetings with News Corp executives, seeking to dispel claims that the company was wielding undue influence when the government was deciding on its $12 billion bid for full control of pay TV company BSkyB.

"When it comes to my meetings with the proprietors and editors of all newspapers, we are very shortly going to publish the details of my meetings and the meetings of other members of the government," Osborne added. Cameron has already given details of his own such meetings.

FOCUS TURNS TO BSKYB

News Corp dropped its BSkyB bid and closed down the 168-year-old News of the World to try to defuse the scandal after allegations the newspaper had listened in to voicemails of crime victims included a murdered schoolgirl.

The scandal has shaken the company that Rupert Murdoch turned into a global media after starting out with an Australian newspaper.

James Murdoch is expected to retain the support of investors and independent directors of BSkyB -- which he chairs and in which News Corp holds a 39 percent stake -- when the company announces its financial results Friday.

James and his father appeared before parliament's media committee last Tuesday to answer questions on phone-hacking.

News Corp's British arm News International had long maintained that hacking at the News of the World was the work of a lone "rogue reporter."

However, two former senior figures at its British newspaper arm disputed Friday James Murdoch's claim at the committee hearing that he had been unaware in 2008 of an e-mail that suggested such wrongdoing was more widespread.

The email related to a 700,000 pound ($1.1 million) out-of-court settlement paid to the head of English soccer's players union and signed off by James Murdoch in 2008, shortly after he took charge of News Corp's European operations.

In a letter to the media committee's chairman, James Murdoch said he had answered questions in parliament truthfully.

But legislators may now contact the men disputing his account, ex-News of the World editor Colin Myler and the newspaper group's top legal officer Tom Crone, to hear their version of events.

"James Murdoch is in a precarious position," said media analyst Steve Hewlett. "If it emerges that he knew the details of what he was signing, then he's in trouble."

"But if he knew absolutely nothing about why he was signing away so much money, then another question arises, as to whether he is competent to run the business, and whether he is a worthy successor to his father."
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jul 25, 2011 7:19 pm

DPP was warned hacking was rife at Murdoch paper

By Oliver Wright, Whitehall Editor

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

The former Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Lord Macdonald was warned by his own employees as far back as 2006 that there were a "vast array" of News of the World phone-hacking victims. Lord Macdonald, who has since been hired by the newspaper's owner, Rupert Murdoch, was sent a memo nearly six months before the reporter Clive Goodman and the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were convicted, revealing that the charges they were facing related to just a fraction of the potential victims.

However, the hacking investigation was never widened despite pressure on the police and Lord Macdonald, the head of the Crown Prosecution Service at the time, to do so.

In a letter released yesterday, the former Attorney General Lord Goldsmith revealed: "The Director [of Public Prosecutions] and I were aware that the particular cases referred to were not isolated examples." Lord Goldsmith said protocol prevented him from speaking to the police, but this did not apply to the Crown Prosecution Service, which Lord Macdonald led at the time, and whose lawyers briefed him on other victims of hacking.
Related articles

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Search the news archive for more stories

The Met had to reopen its inquiries into criminality by the NOTW in January this year when it became apparent that police and prosecutors had failed to fully investigate the widespread phone hacking by the newspaper five years ago.

The revelation is embarrassing for Lord Macdonald because when he examined emails held by News Corp as part of his new job assisting the company's internal investigation earlier this year, he took "three to five minutes" to decide that the material constituted evidence of criminality and needed to be passed to police.

He told the Home Affairs Select Committee last week: "The material I saw was so blindingly obvious that trying to argue that it should not be given to the police would have been a hard task. It was evidence of serious criminal offences."

He added that a police probe into alleged illegal payments to officers could have been launched as far back as 2007.

The memo came to light yesterday in a letter written to the Home Affairs Select Committee by the former Attorney General Lord Goldsmith. In it he said that he had consulted files held by his former department and confirmed that he had been sent a memorandum, prepared by CPS lawyers for both him and the DPP, explaining that there were a "vast array" of other victims of phone hacking in May 2006.

Lord Goldsmith revealed that the memo said the other phone-hacking allegations uncovered could be followed up and that it concluded: "These may be the subject of wider investigation in due course. A number of targets have been informed."

He wrote: "I have no knowledge of why that wider investigation of those other cases may in the result not have proceeded. The committee will need to address such questions to the DPP and the MPS [Metropolitan Police Service].

"My role was not to direct either an investigation or the prosecution."

Meanwhile, the law firm Harbottle & Lewis – which was given access to a large number of NOTW internal emails in 2007 from the accounts of six people, including Goodman and the former editor Andy Coulson – has written to the Commons Culture Committee outlining its role. Its letter could be published as soon as Friday.

The Chancellor, George Osborne, who advised David Cameron to hire Mr Coulson as his spin doctor after he resigned as the NOTW's editor over the scandal, said yesterday that he regretted the appointment.

So, who should have acted on the evidence?

THE DPP...?

As head of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP – in this case Lord Macdonald) is responsible for deciding whether there is enough evidence for bringing cases to court in England and Wales, writes Nigel Morris, Deputy Political Editor. Police investigating suspected criminal acts submit their conclusions to the CPS, which then judges whether there is a good chance of securing a conviction. High-profile cases, such as allegations of phone hacking, would be referred to the director personally for a decision. Lord Goldsmith's memo confirms that CPS lawyers had considered the allegations in detail. The DPP is constitutionally required to act independently of the Government.

... OR THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL?

The Attorney-General (in this case Lord Goldsmith) is a non-Cabinet minister whose main duty is to act as the Government's chief legal adviser. The role's significance was highlighted in 2003 when Lord Goldsmith finally concluded the planned invasion of Iraq was lawful. The Attorney is also responsible for supervising the Crown Prosecution Service. That means that the Attorney can be "copied in" to the progress in cases considered to be of public concern – but in such instances the Attorney has to act independently of the Government and not share the information with other ministers. All decisions on initiating prosecutions, such as in the phone hacking investigation, are made by the DPP.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
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Pressure on Piers Morgan as Daily Mirror phone-hacking...

Postby MinM » Tue Jul 26, 2011 9:02 am

2012 Countdown wrote:Image

CNN Host and Ex-Tabloid Editor Is Reluctantly Dragged Into Phone Scandal
By DON VAN NATTA Jr. and RAVI SOMAIYA
Published: July 23, 2011

LONDON — It was perhaps inevitable that the phone hacking accusations in Britain would cross the Atlantic and reach Piers Morgan, the flamboyant former Fleet Street editor who is now the host of “Piers Morgan Tonight” on CNN...

Image
Piers Morgan with Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson
Piers Morgan is facing questions on both sides of the Atlantic as a former employee claimed that phone hacking had taken place while he was editor of the Daily Mirror.

By Raf Sanchez
12:29PM BST 26 Jul 2011


The CNN presenter has repeatedly denied allegations made in both the British and US media that he presided over a culture of illegal activity during his nine-year stint at the paper.

James Hipwell, a former Daily Mirror journalist, claimed on Saturday that phone hacking was "endemic" under Mr Morgan's editorship and that he would be prepared to testify to the judicial inquiry into the scandal.

"Piers was extremely hands-on as an editor. He was on the [newsroom] floor every day, walking up and down behind journalists, looking over their shoulders. I can't say 100 per cent that he knew about it. But it was inconceivable he didn't," he told the Independent.

Mr Hipwell was jailed in 2006 for conspiracy to breach the Financial Services Act as part of the "City Slickers" share tipping scandal.

Claims made by Conservative MP Louise Mensch that Mr Morgan knew about phone hacking at the paper have also received widespread coverage in Britain and the US.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... -grow.html
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Re: Pressure on Piers Morgan as Daily Mirror phone-hacking..

Postby Harvey » Tue Jul 26, 2011 9:08 am

[quote="MinM"][/quote]

Everyone loves to hate Piers, and, well, they're right. He's extremely unlikable.

The probability that he didn't know? Roughly 0%.
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 seemslikeadream » Tue Jul 26, 2011 11:46 am

George Osborne has met News Corps executives 16 times as Chancellor
George Osborne, the Chancellor, has met executives of News Corporation companies on 16 occasions since the coalition Government took power, it has been disclosed.
George Osborne has refused to say whether he discussed BSkyB when he met Rupert Murdoch just before Christmas.


4:11PM BST 26 Jul 2011

Details of the meetings were released as the Government published records of all ministerial contacts with senior media executives, in the wake of the controversy over phone-hacking at the News Corp-owned News of the World and Mr Murdoch's ditched bid to take over BSkyB.

It also emerged that Rupert Murdoch, the News Corp chairman, was the first senior media figure to meet Jeremy Hunt after he was appointed Culture Secretary in May last year – though this was before Mr Hunt was given responsibility for deciding on the BSkyB bid.

Mr Osborne met Rupert Murdoch twice, once for what was described as a "general discussion" shortly after taking office in May and the second time in December.

He met former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and Mr Murdoch's son James – News Corp's chief executive in Europe – on five different occasions each.

The Chancellor has also had one-to-ones with editors of News International papers James Harding of The Times, John Witherow of the Sunday Times and Colin Myler of the News of the World.

The first senior media figure that Jeremy Hunt met on becoming Culture Secretary in May last year was Rupert Murdoch at an evening reception and dinner.

The following month he met James Murdoch for a general discussion.

Following his assumption of responsibility for the BSkyB takeover bid in December, he had two further meetings with James Murdoch in January this year to set out the process around the proposed merger.

Business Secretary Vince Cable, who was stripped of responsibility for ruling on whether the BSkyB bid should go ahead after boasting in December that he had "declared war on Rupert Murdoch", did not have as much contact as some of his colleagues with News Corp figures.

Mr Cable met Times editor James Harding in December, though it is unclear whether this was before or after he was stripped of his responsibilities for the BSkyB bid. He also attended a Sunday Times business lunch last April.

The publication of ministers' contacts with media figures was ordered earlier this month by Prime Minister David Cameron, who revealed then that he had himself met News Corp executives on 26 occasions since entering 10 Downing Street.

Today's release also revealed that Education Secretary Michael Gove has met News Corp executives 11 times since the general election in May 2010.

Mr Gove, a former journalist for The Times, met Rupert Murdoch seven times and former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks eight times at events including lunches, dinners and social gatherings.

A spokesman for Mr Gove said: "Michael worked for the BBC and News International and his wife works for News International now.

"He's known Rupert Murdoch for over a decade. He did not discuss the BSkyB deal with the Murdochs and isn't at all embarrassed about his meetings, most of which have been about education which is his job."
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Jul 26, 2011 6:52 pm

Piers Morgan caught on tape?

.....

But now Staines/Fawkes claims he has a tape that contradicts Morgan's denials. What does the tape say? How was it acquired - legally or illegally? And why is Staines/Fawkes so obsessed with Morgan anyway? Staines/Fawkes isn't saying yet, emailing from London that more "will break (Wednesday) and all will be revealed." Morgan has gone to ground, is no longer commenting, says his rep.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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Don’t forget that.
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Re: Pressure on Piers Morgan as Daily Mirror phone-hacking..

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Jul 26, 2011 7:52 pm

Harvey wrote:Everyone loves to hate Piers, and, well, they're right. He's extremely unlikable.


I know, right? What a dick. And I only ever watched one show (Jesse Ventura). This scandal is very rewarding to those of us in the Schadenfreude-starved public.

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Plutonia » Tue Jul 26, 2011 8:09 pm

Frontline Club discussion vid from today:

Phone hacking - ethics and tabloid journalism

The closure of the News of the World following further revelations that schoolgirl Milly Dowler's phone was allegedly hacked by private investigators has failed to draw a line under the growing crisis.

The print media has long defended its freedom from outside regulation. Is there a future for statutory regulation of the press or is it time for the Press Complaints Commission to be scrapped as has been called for by actor and recent privacy crusader, Hugh Grant?

The scandal poses massive questions -- and not just for journalists. With Rupert Murdoch's takeover bid for BSkyB in tatters, for instance, where do the events of the past two weeks leave Murdoch's empire? And as more allegations surface concerning former NotW editor Andy Coulson, are Labour backbenchers right to call for prime minister David Cameron -- who employed Coulson as his communications chief -- to resign?

Join us at the Frontline Club with an expert panel to discuss this ever-deepening scandal, as we consider what 'hackgate' might mean for the future of journalism, politics and power in Britain.

Chaired by Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow.

With:

David Banks, former editor of the Daily Mirror and editorial director of Mirror Group Newspapers. Worked in London, New York and Sydney over a thirteen-year career with Rupert Murdoch's News Corp during which he edited two papers in Australia. Now a columnist and regular broadcaster.

Jane Martinson, women's editor of the Guardian and former media editor;

Martin Moore, director of the Media Standards Trust, an independent charity that looks for ways to foster high standards in news and a founder of the Hacked Off campaign;

Toby Young, freelance journalist and associate editor of The Spectator, where he writes a weekly column. He also blogs for the Daily Telegraph and is the author of How to Lose Friends & Alienate People and The Sound of No Hands Clapping.


http://www.livestream.com/frontlineclub ... m=ui-thumb
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‘Heartbreaking’ McCartney voicemail comes back to haunt Pier

Postby MinM » Thu Jul 28, 2011 9:45 am

Image
Paul McCartney and then-wife Heather Mills in 2002. In a 2006 column, Piers Morgan recounted being played a tape of a message the ex-Beatle left for Mills. "It was heartbreaking. The couple had clearly had a tiff, Heather had fled to India, and Paul was pleading with her to come back.”


Former tabloid editor Piers Morgan is defending himself from an admission in a two-year-old radio interview and a five-year-old piece about Paul McCartney that connect him to phone hacking.

“I don’t mind being wrongly smeared with all this #Hackgate stuff, I’d just rather it wasn’t done by liars, druggie ex-bankrupts and conmen,” the CNN interviewer said via Twitter. Then, later, “I’ll be making no further comment on this #Hackgate nonsense.”

Morgan, former editor of the British tabloids News of the World and The Daily Mirror, has resolutely denied any connection to the phone-hacking scandal that has ripped through the government and media.

“I have never hacked a phone, told anyone to hack a phone, nor to my knowledge published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone,” Morgan has said. “I am not aware, and have never seen evidence to suggest otherwise, that any Mirror story published during my tenure was obtained from phone hacking.”

That hasn’t stopped his own words from coming back to haunt him.

In a 2006 column in the Daily Mail, Morgan wrote: “I was played a tape of a message Paul (McCartney) had left for Heather (his estranged wife Heather Mills) on her mobile phone. It was heartbreaking. The couple had clearly had a tiff, Heather had fled to India, and Paul was pleading with her to come back.”

Morgan was apologizing to the former Beatle for introducing him to Mills. McCartney is on a a North American tour, playing the second of two nights in Montreal on Wednesday.

And in a 45-minute, 2009 interview with the BBC Radio program Desert Island Discs, Morgan responds to a question about being part of a tabloid world of “people who rake through bins, tap people’s phones, take secret photographs.”

Morgan replied: “Not a lot of that went on. A lot of that was done by third parties. That’s not to defend it, obviously you were running the results of their work. I make no pretense about the stuff we used to do. The net of people doing it was very wide and certainly encompassed the high and low” of newspapers.

Contacted Tuesday night by the website The Daily Beast about the BBC interview, Morgan pressed his denial.

“Millions of people heard these comments when I first made them in 2009 on one of the BBC’s longest running radio shows, and none deduced that I was admitting to, or condoning illegal reporting activity,” he said.

“My answer was a general observation about tabloid newspaper reporters and private investigators. As I have said before, I have never hacked a phone, told anyone to hack a phone, nor to my knowledge published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone.”

In 2007, Morgan was quoted in GQ magazine as saying that former News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, jailed for tapping phones of the royal family, was “a scapegoat for a widespread practice.”

http://www.timeslive.co.za/entertainmen ... ing-denial
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Re: ‘Heartbreaking’ McCartney voicemail comes back to haunt

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jul 28, 2011 10:14 am

“I don’t mind being wrongly smeared with all this #Hackgate stuff, I’d just rather it wasn’t done by liars, druggie ex-bankrupts and conmen,” the CNN interviewer said via Twitter. Then, later, “I’ll be making no further comment on this #Hackgate nonsense.”


If only my accusers had more class. Dreadful!

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

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The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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