Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby kenoma » Thu Jul 28, 2011 6:27 pm

And Lenin of the tomb transcribes this from the latest Private Eye:

"One of the most glowing encomia in the final edition of the News of the World came from Sara Payne, mother of Sarah, whose murder in 2000 kicked off the paper's 'Name and Shame' campaign that made Rebekah Brooks' reputation.
"As well as announcing, in the manner of a defendant at one of Stalin's show trials, that 'rumours turned out to be untrue that I and my fellow charity chiefs had our phones hacked,' Payne heaped praise on the paper's staff. 'The News of the World and more importantly the people there became my very good and trusted friends. And like all good friends they have stuck with me through the good and the bad.'
"This is true. In fact, so concerned were several of Payne's genuine friends on the paper at her appearance when she limped into the office - she suffered a devastating stroke just over 18 months ago, walks with a stick and remains both physically and mentally frail - that they tried to persuade her to turn around and be driven straight back home again on the grounds that she was too poorly to be there.
"Payne, however, insisted that she must stay because 'Rebekah phoned me and told me to come in. She said she was calling in her favour.'"


Which is... well actually, I don't really know what to call that.
Expectation calibration and expectation management is essential at home and internationally. - Obama foreign policy advisor Samantha Power, February 21, 2008
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby blanc » Fri Jul 29, 2011 7:33 am

"I don't really know what to call that."

the mark of dedicated journalism?
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Searcher08 » Fri Jul 29, 2011 10:16 am

Years ago I remember talking with journalist friends about Murdoch and they said he was driven by wanting to be 'part of the club' - he was kind of an Anti-John Pilger who has been a sort of uncompremised John the Baptist alone in the wilderness. The Digger wanted to be 'in the Club' and know what everyone was doing.

The Murdoch model of organisation is fascinating - somewhere there will have to be an explicit "Get this info and dont tell me how" meme infecting the culture. It is a very destructive meme as it will lead to increasingly extreme actions (snowball --> avalanche effects) going down the 'hierarchy'; the people at the top who give the 'nod and a wink' will not be able to control it because their personality is fundamentally cowardly and self-interested.
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 29, 2011 12:20 pm

Parliament not done with News Corp.'s James Murdoch
July 29, 2011 | 9:03 am

News Corp. Deputy Chief Operating Officer James Murdoch has been called to give more information on the extent of his knowledge of phone hacking by journalists at the company's now-shuttered London tabloid News of the World and its other British papers.

In a closed meeting Friday, Britain’s parliamentary committee on Culture, Media and Sports decided to call Murdoch -- who is also over News International, the unit that houses the company's British newspapers -- and other former News International employees. Murdoch will provide written replies to questions, but has not been asked to again appear before Parliament.

At issue are remarks from former News International lawyer Tom Crone and a former News of the World editor Colin Myler as well as Jon Chapman, ex-legal affairs director. All three have offered up information that contradicts what Murdoch told Parliament earlier this month in regard to the extent of his knowledge about phone hacking being done by News of the World. The tabloid has been found to have hacked into voice mail accounts of not only public figures, but also victims of crime and terrorism. The extent of the hacking has outraged much of Britain and given News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch and his family a black eye.

The news that Parliament wants more answers from Murdoch comes just a day after the board of British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB) held a meeting and did not make a move to push James Murdoch out as its chairman. News Corp owns 39% of BSkyB but had its plans to buy the rest derailed by the News of the World debacle.

In a new development Friday, Peta Buscombe, chairwoman of independent media watchdog Press Complaints Commission, announced her resignation after fierce criticism on her handling of the complaints about tabloid phone hacking over recent years. The PCC failed to act against the News of the World in 2009 when complaints emerged of phone hacking by reporters on the paper.

-- Janet Stobart, reporting from London
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jul 31, 2011 11:02 am

British police expand Murdoch investigation to computer hacking
Ravi Somaiya, London
August 1, 2011

SCOTLAND Yard will expand its investigation of News of the World, adding a new inquiry into possible instances of computer intrusion to the accusations of phone hacking and payments to police officers.

The new investigation was opened after an examination of ''a number of allegations regarding breach of privacy'' received since the Metropolitan Police reopened inquiries in January into possible crimes by newspaper employees, a police statement said.

A police spokesman declined to answer further questions. But former British Army intelligence officer Ian Hurst said in a statement that he had been contacted by investigators over allegations that he had made ''in regards to my family's computer being illegally accessed over a sustained period during 2006.''
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Mr Hurst had worked in Northern Ireland, running undercover operations. The BBC reported this year that his computer had been hacked and sensitive emails had been provided to News of the World. A spokeswoman for News International refused to comment on the new inquiry.

The investigation opens a new front for News International, the British arm of Rupert Murdoch's media empire, already shaken by a scandal that has seen the 168-year-old paper shuttered on a few days' notice and the resignations of two of Britain's top police officers.

Dozens of civil lawsuits have been filed over allegations of phone hacking. And 10 former employees, including the newspaper's former editor, Andy Coulson, and the former News International chief executive, Rebekah Brooks, have been arrested in relation to two criminal investigations into the hacking and payments to police officers for information.

The United States Department of Justice and the FBI have also announced preliminary investigations into whether the wrongdoing had tainted Mr Murdoch's American interests.

Conservative MP John Whittingdale, chairman of the culture, media and sport select committee, rejected a bid for an immediate fresh hearing but indicated a second examination was likely to be held soon.

Jon Chapman, the former head of corporate and legal affairs at News International, reportedly claimed that there were ''serious inaccuracies'' in James Murdoch's statements to MPs. Mr Murdoch told the committee this month that he had no knowledge of more widespread wrongdoing at News of the World when he approved a $US1.1 million legal settlement, with a confidentiality agreement, in the first lawsuit brought over phone hacking in 2007. Senior colleagues have since disputed that account. NEW YORK TIMES
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: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Aug 03, 2011 11:23 am


http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011 ... ne-hacking

Tom Watson: 'Phone hacking is only the start. There's a lot more to come out'

The Labour MP has won the admiration of fellow politicians for doggedly investigating the phone-hacking scandal. What has the experience taught him, how has it changed his life – and what revelations are still to come?

John Harris
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 2 August 2011 19.59 BST

Image
Tom Watson in Westminster: 'There's a sense of relief' Photograph: David Levene

A month ago, Tom Watson received word that the Guardian was about to expose the hacking of Milly Dowler's phone by the News of the World. With 72 hours to go, he cleared his diary; a few days later, he was averaging three hours sleep a night, as he and his staff picked through leaked documents, newspaper archives, personal testimony from phone-hacking victims, and more. As the MP who had been obsessively trying to cut through the murk surrounding News International for two years, he well knew that the most dramatic chapter in the two-year phone-hacking saga had arrived – and the imperative now was to work harder than ever.

So how have the last few weeks been? "Sleep-deprived, totally crazy," he says, sitting in his parliamentary office during what seems to be a rare moment of calm. "But also, there's been a great sense of relief. I think I said something to David Cameron about a month before: that there were powerful forces trying to cover this story up. At some points over the last two years, I thought it might blow. But I've also thought that the lid could be welded back on. But when Nick Davies broke the Milly Dowler story, that was the point where I knew they'd never get the lid back on."

And has he been surprised by what's happened since?

"Yeah. I guess two years ago, I felt that all this would probably cost Rebekah Brooks her job. I thought the scale of wrongdoing was so great that somebody on the UK side of the company would have to take responsibility. And I was absolutely convinced that there was a cover-up. But I didn't know that it would all travel abroad. I didn't know it would get to America and Australia, and everywhere that it has." The closure of the News of the World, he says, came as "a genuine shock" to him, but he says that the same applied to News International: "There was a huge consumer boycott, there was going to be no advertising . . . I don't think they had a choice."

Raised in Kidderminster in a family split between communists and passionate Labour supporters, Watson has been the MP for West Bromwich East since 2001. In the eyes of his parliamentary colleagues, he has undoubtedly been one of the heroes of the phone-hacking story – so much so, that when he speaks on the subject in the House of Commons, he is now greeted with a reverential hush. But three or four years ago, his reputation was very different: he was routinely described as a "bruiser", and known as one of a small circle of insiders that linked Gordon Brown's coterie to some of the most powerful elements in the trade unions.

In 2006, he was a junior defence minister, but resigned as part of the so-called "curry-house plot": the attempt at toppling Tony Blair that placed fatal cracks in his premiership, and led to his departure the following year. Six months after Gordon Brown's arrival in Downing Street, Watson became a minister in the cabinet office with a focus on "digital engagement", though this phase of his progress did not last long. In 2009, he was falsely accused of involvement in the infamous plan to set up an unseemly website for anti-Tory political gossip known as "Red Rag", and returned from a trip to Cornwall to find his next-door neighbour upset after the latter's bins had been rooted through. This, he says, was time of "constant anxiety" and "sleepless nights": he considered standing down as an MP, but settled for returning to the backbenches.

In response to the Red Rag accusations, he took legal action against the Sun and the Mail on Sunday. In short order, the Mail on Sunday apologised for the Red Rag story and paid him damages (the Sun soon followed suit), Watson joined the culture, media and sport select committee, and the Guardian broke the first stories about phone hacking at the News of the World running wider than a "rogue reporter", and big pay-offs to victims – all of which fed into a watershed select committee hearing on 21 July 2009.

That day, Watson and his colleagues interviewed four key people: Stuart Kuttner, who had just resigned as managing editor of the News of the World (and who yesterday became the latest NI figure to be arrested as part of Operation Weeting), former editor Andy Coulson (by then Cameron's head of communications), the then News of the World editor Colin Myler, and the company's legal head Tom Crone (who left the company three weeks ago). The latter had tried to have Watson excluded from the hearing on account of his legal action against the Sun, which gave the proceedings an additional charge. Watson's key questions focused on the £700,000 payment NI had made to Gordon Taylor, chief executive of footballers' union the PFA, though by his own admission, he wasn't quite sure what he was doing.

"When Myler and Crone first turned up, my knowledge was novice-level," he says. "I knew about three facts. But what I knew was that in any great scandal, you've got to follow the money. They were hick, amateur questions: I think I opened with: 'When did you tell Rupert Murdoch [about the payment]?' I thought that you might as well start at the top.

"They said: 'Oh no – we didn't tell Rupert Murdoch.' Then it was, 'Well, who did you tell? Who authorised it?' Myler got frustrated me with me, because I came back to this four or five times. He ranted. And don't forget: Crone had already tried to get me off the committee. So at that point, I thought: 'You're rude, you've tried to remove me from this committee, you've put me under extreme pressure for a number of years – there's more to this, and I'm getting to the bottom of it.' "When Myler was so over the top . . . it was like there was a big neon light behind his head, saying, 'Dig here.'"

So began two years of dogged work. In the build-up to last year's general election, the select committee's drive to investigate hacking temporarily faded – but Watson was already talking to hacking victims, dealing with "one killer insider at News International" who was secretly sending him material, and piecing together evidence already in the public domain. At one point, he and his staff went through five years of News of the World back-issues. ("You learn a lot about Kerry Katona," he says.) He was also liaising with his fellow Labour MP – and phone-hacking victim – Chris Bryant, and a small handful of journalists.

There is one fascinating subtext to the whole story: Watson's claim that Brooks has long been driven to damage him, which he says dates back to his move against Blair. "I had one particular chilling conversation in 2006," he says, "when I was told that she would never forgive me for doing what I did to 'her Tony'. When I was made an assistant whip under Brown, the Sun did a story saying it was an outrageous I'd been awarded a job. Whenever I moved, there was a dig. It's painful and it's not easy, but that's the job, and the culture we operated in. It's when it's scaled up that those attack pieces take on a greater significance."

How was it scaled up?

"Well, there was the Red Rag week, where they ran stories for six or seven days, accusing me of lying and worse, on the basis of a story that wasn't true. And then things like . . . people coming back to me, reporting conversations. Bob Ainsworth [then Labour defence secretary] met Brooks for a lunch and said she spent 15 minutes slagging me off before they could talk about defence policy. Those things end up coming back to you."

Of late, there have been reports that she told Labour insiders she would pursue Watson "for the rest of his life" – a story he dates to the Labour party conference of 2006. When the Red Rag story broke, he claims Brooks texted Labour cabinet ministers, demanding that he was sacked.

At one point, he says, a senior editor at the Sun made a point of sending him a message via another Labour MP: "Tell that fat bastard Watson we know about his little planning matter." This, he says, was a reference to his application to put a conservatory on his family home in the Midlands: a typical "non-newsy, low-level thing" that played its part in making him "start to think like a conspiracy theorist".

From a credible source, he has just discovered that in 2009, all of this turned completely pantomimic. "There were always people outside my flat, and I felt pursued," he says. "But then last Thursday, the home affairs correspondent of the BBC told me they had a story that they [the News of the World] hired private investigators to follow me around Labour party conference in 2009, when we were right in the middle of the first select committee enquiry.

"I laughed at that, because they'd have basically followed me around drinking Guinness with a load of fat blokes. If you're an ex-minister, it's a bit of a holiday. It wouldn't have been very productive. But in all seriousness, at that point the pressure was immense. There were little conversations with people: 'We've had News International on the phone, how aggressive are you going to be on this committee? What are you going to ask?'"

Who was asking that?

"People who worked at No 10. People I'd worked with before. In conversations, these things were dropped in."

On 10 July, his old friends at the Mail on Sunday ran a story claiming that Tony Blair had urged Brown to get him to back off News International. How much truth does he think there is in that?

"Er . . . They've both denied it. But if Rupert Murdoch were to phone Blair to ask him to get me to back off, it wouldn't surprise me. They're very close."

What does that mean? That he may well have done?

"Well, he's denied it. Two or three people in the party have told me that happened, but I can't stand it up."

Two weeks ago, Watson played his part in the select committee's questioning of James Murdoch, Rupert Murdoch and Brooks, which was followed by Myler and Crone's claim that a crucial part of James Murdoch's evidence had been "mistaken". Watson pushed for him to be issued with an immediate summons to return and give evidence, but was outvoted: the committee has now written to James Murdoch seeking further explanation, and its chairman, the Tory MP John Whittingdale, says it's "very likely" that he will eventually be recalled in person. Meanwhile, the story about the targeting of Sara Payne has broken ("I didn't think it could get any lower, and it has," he tells me), there are regular stories about the Metropolitan police (their reputation, says Watson, is "in tatters") and new information about the deletion of thousands of News International emails. So how much more is there to come?

"I think we're probably only about halfway through the number of revelations. I'm pretty certain there will be quite detailed stuff on other uses of covert surveillance. I suspect that emails will be the next scandal. And devices that track people moving around. That's just starting to come out."

Does he expect confirmation of the targeting of 9/11 victims?

"I don't know that. I want the prime minister to put pressure on as far as that's concerned, because it's internationally significant. What we know from the evidence we took in 2009 is that Glenn Mulcaire worked exclusively for the News of the World from 2001. He was on a £10,000-a-month contract. So if he was prepared to hack Milly Dowler's phone . . . you know . . . it's entirely conceivable that he would have been told to hack the phones of victims, and families of victims, of 9/11. What we need is certainty, so people can move on from there."

What other things will become public?

"People who aren't household names, but who are associated with people who have been the victims of high-profile crimes . . . I think there's a lot more of them to come out. Ordinary people whose lives have been turned inside out."

Ten days ago, Watson said he had seen no evidence that implicated any newspaper group other than News International in phone hacking – since when, there has been news of prospective cases against Trinity Mirror, the publisher of titles including the Sunday Mirror – and the barrage of accusation and denial surrounding Piers Morgan. A copy of Morgan's diaries, I notice, is sitting on the coffee table in front of us.

"I'm doing my research now," he says. "There are a lot of people on Twitter who are raising different points of fact with me. The good that I want to come from this is the industry recognising that it's got to reform and change. Everyone's got to play their role in that. And that probably requires other media groups, if there was wrongdoing, to get it out there and be honest about it."

Hanging over just about everything we talk about is a slightly awkward implied presence: the politician Watson used to be, a man happy enough to play his part in New Labour's often moronic dances with the Murdoch press, and issue shrill messages either aimed at, or inspired by, the red-tops. Not for the first time, he says he's "totally ashamed" about an occasion in 2001 when he called for Kate Adie to be sacked by the BBC after she was alleged to have revealed the details of a trip by Blair to Middle East: his quote was given at the behest of Downing Street and used for a characteristic BBC-bashing splash in the Sun.

He acknowledges the Blair and Brown governments' neurotic focus on "media management", and their cynical fondness for dishing out "populist messages to the newspapers". On the latter count, he again has form: in 2004, he ran Labour's infamous by-election campaign in the Birmingham seat of Hodge Hill, among whose choicest messages was: "Labour is on your side – the Lib Dems are on the side of failed asylum seekers."

That sounds, I tell him, like the kind of rhetoric that Labour copied from the tabloids. "It's not a great line," he says. "I don't think I'd write that again." By way of underlining another kind of repentance, he reminds me that though he voted for the Iraq war in 2003, he recently abstained when it came to the UK intervention in Libya, "because I'd never again vote for a war on the promise of a prime minister."

So, he has changed. "I have changed. This has been a profoundly life-changing event for me, in many ways. It's certainly changed my politics. When I was first elected, I was a completely naive and gauche politician. You look at the pillars of the state: politics, the media, police, lawyers – they've all got their formal role, and then nestling above that is that power elite who are networked in through soft, social links, that are actually running the show. Why didn't I know that 10 years ago, and why didn't I rail against it? Why did I become part of it? I was 34. I'm 44 now. I was naive. But I'll never let that happen again."

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2011

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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Harvey » Wed Aug 03, 2011 1:34 pm

JackRiddler wrote:So, he has changed. "I have changed. This has been a profoundly life-changing event for me, in many ways. It's certainly changed my politics. When I was first elected, I was a completely naive and gauche politician. You look at the pillars of the state: politics, the media, police, lawyers – they've all got their formal role, and then nestling above that is that power elite who are networked in through soft, social links, that are actually running the show. Why didn't I know that 10 years ago, and why didn't I rail against it? Why did I become part of it? I was 34. I'm 44 now. I was naive. But I'll never let that happen again."


He's basically saying that for some time knew much more than he was telling.
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 Byrne » Wed Aug 03, 2011 2:04 pm

Tom Watson: 'Phone hacking is only the start. There's a lot more to come out'


Aye, it's all about the timing...

(Searching on +soft power elite+ brings up this very interesting essay:
Walking between the raindrops — Dennis Stevenson

Introduction

C. Wright Mills (1956:6) identified two key sociological questions: what varieties of men and women prevail in the society under study? And, in what ways are they selected and formed, liberated and repressed? A sociological biography with a focus on Lord Dennis Stevenson is presented here as a means of addressing the primary questions that Mills encouraged social scientist to tackle relating to the examination of the problems of biography, of history and of their intersection within a society.

Further to previous writing and seminar work, I wanted to engage in this specific focus to examine Stevenson’s background milieu. Put simply, this essay tries to echo Mills methodologically and uses a variety of sources to place Lord Stevenson within what, drawing on Nye (2004), could be termed the ‘soft power’ elite. This explores what the convergence and collision of public relations, political lobbying, public diplomacy, covert propaganda agencies within organisations such as ‘think tanks’ might indicate by what they suppress and promote, how they have operated over specific timescales and what continuities there are in who and what prevails.

In a letter to the ‘New Left’ shortly before his death Mills detected the beginning of a large-scale propaganda operation at the behest of the ‘power elite’ that was directed at social enquiry itself: a ‘secret programme of cultural propaganda in western Europe’ (Saunders, 1999:1). He never lived to explore it, although some of the protagonists were also based at Columbia University where he worked.

I have tried to relate these very hidden components of our society through a synthesis of available literature on the trajectory of propaganda projects that Mills anticipated.
.....

More at:
http://pinkindustry.wordpress.com/lord-stevenson/
)
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby hanshan » Wed Aug 03, 2011 3:02 pm

...

@ Byrne: - tx so much for the essay/link.

excerpt (last but for one 3 paras.):


Mills stated that as far as explicit organization — conspiratorial or not — is concerned, the power elite, by its very nature, is more likely to use existing organizations, working within and between them, than to set up explicit organizations whose membership is strictly limited to its own members (Dandaneau, 2006). But if there is no machinery in existence to ensure their aims they will invent such machinery. Mills example of this was the US National Security Council itself, the elite organisation from which most of the Atlanticist organisations mentioned here stem. I would argue that there is an evidence base for arguing that Stevenson was a key part of this network.

Dandaneau (2006) argues that if the power elite do exist then a social science of political power—in this society, at this point in its historical development—would be left looking for what ever skimpy evidence of such machinations is available. History is full with examples of the exceedingly powerful making mistakes, even the so-called power elite must necessarily leave traces, and reveal its workings. Elite structure, like all social structure, is in constant need of reproduction such as the example of BAP and the creation of a “Successor Generation.”

In ‘Propaganda’ (1978:47) Bernays tells us that the “conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses” is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate the “unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power.” We are governed, our “minds moulded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested largely by men we have never heard of.”

out of context; interesting observation:

The pure interest of the bureaucracy in power, however, is efficacious far beyond those areas where purely functional interests make for secrecy. The concept of the “official secret” is the specific invention of bureaucracy, and nothing is so fanatically defended by the bureaucracy as this attitude, which cannot be substantially justified beyond these specifically qualified areas. In facing a parliament, the bureaucracy, out of a sure power instinct, fights every attempt of the parliament to gain knowledge by means of its own experts or from interest groups. The so-called right of parliamentary investigation is one of the means by which parliament seeks such knowledge. Bureaucracy naturally welcomes a poorly informed and hence a powerless parliament—at least in so far as ignorance somehow agrees with the bureaucracy’s interests. (Weber, 1922:233-34)




...
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby Stephen Morgan » Thu Aug 04, 2011 8:40 am

An interesting story about this in Private Eye, after the pages about the Mirror being involved in phone hacking, the story of a man who found himself, back in the 90s, outside Vodafone's reception area, phoning customer services from a payphone. They talked him through hacking into his own voice-mail, so he could hear his messages without using his phone. He noticed that this was a security breach, so he went to the Mirror. They were astonished by it. They paid him £100 and told him it would be a big story, but never published anything. So he went to the Sun. They were also surprised by the hole in security and said it'd be on the front page within 48 hours. Nothing. He did get a story in his local paper and was interviewed about it on Fi Glover's Radio 5 programme, but was always confused about why the tabloids never covered it.

ETA: Also, he wrote to MI% about it.
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia
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Re: Report: UK tabloid hacked into voicemails

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Aug 05, 2011 7:51 am

Piers Morgan in the Middle of Phone Hacking Inquiries

By SHEILA MARIKAR (@SheilaYM)
Aug. 5, 2011

VIDEO: CNN anchor is accused of knowing about hacking when he worked for Murdoch.
ABCNEWS.com

The newsman has become the news.

Amid the phone-hacking scandal surrounding Rupert Murdoch's News of the World, the name of Piers Morgan, the CNN host, "America's Got Talent" judge and former editor of the Daily Mirror and News of the World, has once again come into the conversation.

The latest: This week, Heather Mills told the BBC that a reporter for the Mirror's parent company told her in 2001 that the paper hacked into her voicemail account and listened to a message left by her ex-husband, Paul McCartney, after the couple had a fight. Morgan admitted to listening to that voicemail message in 2007.

Now, British lawmaker Harriet Harman is saying Morgan "has got to answer" questions about phone hacking at the Mirror during the 1995-2004 period that he was editor, and John Whittingdale, the chair of the parliamentary phone hacking inquiry, has said he would like Morgan to return to England for questioning.

But Whittingdale can't make Morgan do that -- yet.

"I would like to see Mr. Morgan come back to this country and answer what are some very serious questions," he told reporters Thursday. "Now, he may return to the U.K., I hope he will return to the U.K., and I imagine that there will be some questions which will be put to him, possibly by the police on the basis of the evidence that has emerged. But at the moment, we can't do that."

In the meantime, a couple of fights have emerged:
1.
Ring one: Morgan vs. Mills
Part of the Mills story is old news: Morgan wrote a column for Britain's Mail on Sunday five years ago saying that he had once been played a message left by Mills' ex-husband (at that time, her boyfriend) on her mobile phone. He said the former "Beatle" sounded "lonely, miserable and desperate".

Now that Mills has opened up about that voicemail, he's gone on the defensive. Late Wednesday, after being confronted by requests to elucidate how he knew about the voicemail, Morgan put out a statement through CNN saying he had no knowledge of phone hacking at the Mirror.

"Heather Mills has made unsubstantiated claims about a conversation she may or may not have had with a senior executive from a Trinity Mirror newspaper in 2001," he said. "I have no knowledge of any conversation any executive from other newspapers at Trinity Mirror may or may not have had with Heather Mills."

He added: "What I can say and have knowledge of is that Sir Paul McCartney asserted that Heather Mills illegally intercepted his telephones, and leaked confidential material to the media. This is well documented, and was stated in their divorce case."

2.
Ring two: Morgan vs. British lawmakers
Morgan has mocked the calls for him to return home for questioning. After Conservative Party politician Louise Mensch tweeted "However charismatic, likable and star-powered one former editor is (and he is) - there's a much bigger issue here," Morgan re-tweeted the message Aug. 3, 2011, with a "Mwah x." Soon after, he tweeted, "So heart-warming that everyone in UK's missing me so much they want me to come home. #swoon."

Twitter fights make Morgan tick (he infamously got involved in a heated one with a New York City cable news anchor before his CNN show debuted). If past performance is any indication, he'll pound out many more 140-character hits before agreeing to undergo questioning in the U.K.
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 seemslikeadream » Fri Aug 05, 2011 12:58 pm

Murdoch accused of operating illegal US air force


Image

Microdrone black ops threaten democracy

By Lester Haines • Get more from this author

Posted in SPB, 5th August 2011 10:09 GMT

Rupert Murdoch may soon have his front door kicked in by the US's Federal Aviation Administration, amid accusations that News Corporation has been operating an illegal air force.

According to this report down at Forbes, the media magnate's fondleslab-friendly e-rag The Daily is flying a md4-1000 microdrone (pictured), which back in May captured some aerial footage of storm-wracked Alabama.

The md4-1000

Nice vid, but The Daily may be in breach of FAA regs regarding "operations of unmanned aircraft in the National Airspace System". As Forbes notes, the FAA requires wannabe drone pilots to have an airworthiness certificate for their "Unmanned Aircraft System" (UAS) and an "experimental certificate" which limits them to "research and development, marketing surveys, or crew training".

The FAA notes: "UAS issued experimental certificates may not be used for compensation or hire."

The FAA's Les Dorr told Forbes: "Currently, 18 of those experimental certificates are active. An experimental certificate allows the holder to do tests, training and demos but not for-hire operations. Ops also must be conducted away from populated areas."

He later added: "We are examining The Daily's use of a small unmanned aircraft to see if it was in accordance with FAA policies."

The md4-1000 has a ceiling of 1,000 metres, and can operate within a radius of 1,000 metres (3,280 feet) via radio control for up to 70 minutes. Its maximum payload is 1,200g (2.64lb), meaning it can easily lift a camera and an electronics package such as that carried by the Wireless Aerial Surveillance Platform aircraft, aka WASP.

The WASP's compact computer may of particular interest to News Corporation since it is capable of sniffing Wi-Fi networks and intercepting mobile phone calls. ®
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 seemslikeadream » Mon Aug 08, 2011 12:27 pm

How Bad Is News Corp.?
Michael Wolff on the state of the Murdoch empire and its Mob-like structure

August 08 2011

In my biography of Rupert Murdoch, I referred to News Corporation as Mafia-like, provoking the annoyance of my publisher’s libel lawyers. I explained to them that I did not mean to suggest this was an organized crime family, but instead was using “mafia” as a metaphor to imply that News Corp. saw itself as a state within a state, and that the company was built on a basic notion of extended family bonds and loyalty.

But just because it’s a metaphor doesn’t mean it isn’t the real thing, too.

Well-sourced information coming out of the Department of Justice and the FBI suggests a debate is going on that could result in the recently launched investigations of News Corp. falling under the RICO statutes.

RICO, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, establishes a way to prosecute the leaders of organizations—and strike at the organizations themselves—for crimes company leaders may not have directly committed, but which were otherwise countenanced by the organization. Any two of a series of crimes that can be proven to have occurred within a 10-year period by members of the organization can establish a pattern of racketeering and result in draconian remedies. In 1990, following the indictment of Michael Milken for insider trading, Drexel Burnham Lambert, the firm that employed him, collapsed in the face of a RICO investigation.

Among the areas that the FBI is said to be looking at in its investigation of News Corp. are charges that one of its subsidiaries, News America Marketing, illegally hacked the computer system of a competitor, Floorgraphics, and then, using the information it had gleaned, tried to extort it into selling out to News Corp.; allegations that relationships the New York Post has maintained with New York City police officers may have involved exchanges of favors and possibly money for information; and accusations that Fox chief Roger Ailes sought to have an executive in the company, the book publisher Judith Regan, lie to investigators about details of her relationship with New York police commissioner Bernie Kerik in order to protect the political interests of Rudy Giuliani, then a presidential prospect.

The U.S. is in an awkward if not downright ridiculous position in terms of the maelstrom that has engulfed News Corp. in Britain.

While News Corp. does most of its business in the U.S., prosecutors here have no jurisdiction over the phone hacking crimes that were committed in the U.K. And it’s quite possible, because of differences in news gathering operations in the U.S., and in cell phone protocols, that no hacking was committed here. And while hacking may have taken place by British reporters against targets in the U.S.—as alleged in Jude Law’s suit—that remains to be proven.

And yet, what has happened in the U.K. is far from mere rogue behavior in a remote foreign division. Rather, News International is a division that has long been one of the core components of the company, both in terms of revenue and brand, and one that has reported to the highest echelons of the company: Rupert Murdoch himself, his closest confidants, and, more recently, his son, James.

Still, it could well be that even with its U.K. operation shuttered or sold, its executives put on trial, and with the opprobrium of the British government and public heaped on it, the company can continue with its same ethos and methods of operation in the U.S. (Indeed, given the declining growth of the newspaper business, the share price of the company might well go up without them. The shareholders would have benefited from News Corp.’s crimes.)

Here is where the RICO logic comes in. The usual path of a criminal investigation follows the crimes back to the source—that’s what happened to News Corp. in the U.K. when the royal family discovered that its voice mail messages were appearing in the press. But in a RICO investigation, you are really following the ethos and methods of operation of a group or organization to the crime. In other words, criminal activity is not seen as an isolated or particular event—as News Corp. has desperately and unsuccessfully tried to portray the crimes that occurred in the U.K.—but as an established pattern of conduct.

As it happens, much of this pattern of conduct at News Corp. has long been hiding in plain sight. How the company has gotten away with such behavior is, in fact, a subtext of the investigations that are now unfolding.

Partly, the company has escaped legal scrutiny because this is a boys-will-be-boys sort of story. News Corp.’s by-any-means aggressiveness has become so much a part of its identity that it seemed almost redundant to find fault with it. Everybody knew but nobody—for both reasons of fear and profit—did anything about it; hence its behavior has become, however unpleasant, accepted.

And partly, it’s because the fundamental currency of the company has always been reward and punishment. Both the New York Post and Fox News maintain enemy lists. Almost anyone who has directly crossed these organizations, or who has made trouble for their parent company, will have felt the sting here. That sting involves regular taunting and, often, lies—Obama is a Muslim. (Or, if not outright lies, radical remakes of reality.) Threats pervade the company’s basic view of the world. “We have stuff on him,” Murdoch would mutter about various individuals who I mentioned during my interviews with him. “We have pictures.”

Similarly, the Post and Fox News heap praise and favors on partisans, who in turn do them favors (the police, in New York as well as London, receive and return the favors).

This reward and punishment has translated into substantial political power, both in terms of regulatory advantages and, too, in the ability of the company to shield itself from the kind of scrutiny that it has taken a perfect storm of events to have it now receive.

Then, too, as one of the largest media organizations, it has insured a hands-off attitude (if not policy) from other media organizations—those which have business with it, or whose executives want to protect their prospects of working for it, or that extend courtesies in the hope they will be extended back.

There’s also the money. Ultimately, if you have the goods or the savvy with which to damage the company, you get paid off. In London, that’s how News Corp. thought it could contain the hacking scandal, with big cash payments to and confidentiality agreements with the hacking victims. In the U.S., Floorgraphics, the company that News America Marketing tried to extort, was bought for far more than its value when it persisted in its suit against News Corp. Judith Regan received an outsize settlement when she pushed her claim that Ailes had pressured her to lie about her relationship with Kerick.

A former News International executive of my acquaintance reminds me of a detail I have forgotten: There are rat traps throughout News International’s headquarters in Wapping, the old distillery and warehouses where Rupert Murdoch moved his British papers in the late 1980s as a way to break the print unions. There are rat traps even in Murdoch’s own office. And the rats there are very large.

Beyond the obvious metaphor that the freely running rats suggest, there’s another. News Corp. has never had anything more than a thin skin of an orderly, well-resourced, highly regulated corporation. Underneath the first layer is a kind of unreconstructed, even Dickensian, do-anything-to-survive world. Indeed, in some ways it is a culture in rebellion against the decorous and straightlaced world. News Corp. revels in its anti-establishment view. If it has a central philosophy, it’s against regulation and, in a sense, even modernity. When I was beginning my book, just after the company acquired Dow Jones, Murdoch was being encouraged to think about a new branding campaign for the company (“branding” is a modern concept Murdoch would otherwise sneer at)—the notion he fastened on and had to be talked out of involved making the symbol of the company a pirate ship.

Just as this conversation was going on so was a conversation about the editorial oversight board Murdoch had agreed to as a condition of buying the Wall Street Journal. He thought it was a joke. He thought the people who believed that he would take such a board seriously and honor its terms were a joke. Of course, he wouldn’t be bound by his agreement! (And, indeed, he promptly cast it aside, supplanting the paper’s editor, which he had expressly committed not to do.)

News Corp. protects, too, its reprobates, its pirates, seeing them as, somehow, the soul of the company.

There is the inexplicable story of Richard Johnson, the Post’s Page Six editor who admitted to taking payoffs from sources that wanted favorable coverage. He has continued to thrive in the company. There’s the executive at News America Marketing, Paul Carlucci, who despite the apparent and costly illegalities that occurred under his management, was promoted within News Corp. And there’s Bill O’Reilly: well-documented charges of sexual harassment have not in the least dimmed his career at Fox News.

It’s all about the organization. It’s an organization all about doing what Rupert wants you to do, or doing what you imagine Rupert wants you to do, or doing what you imagine your boss imagines Rupert wants done. There are few companies as large as News Corp. that are so devoted and in thrall to one man. There are few companies which, over so long, have so assiduously hired the kind of people who would be in thrall to one man. Indeed, News Corp. can be quite a disorganized and scattered company, and yet its driving premise, what unites and motivates this oft-times gang-that-couldn’t-shoot-straight enterprise, is to do as Rupert would have you do.

It’s a superior and blind kind of loyalty. “Can you…?” Murdoch says to several executives visiting with him on his boat (this is the old boat—much smaller than the grander one he has now) when he receives a phone call that he needs to take in private. The executives jump in the water and swim around the boat until the call is done (and this story is not apocryphal).

The most direct method of undoing this sort of enterprise is undoing this sort of loyalty.

In London, there have now been 10 arrests. While British law does not provide for the kind of U.S.-style plea bargaining that can easily flip a co-conspirator, there is, ever-more apparently, no where else to turn. There will be no News International safe haven in terms of cash or comfort. While the company continues to pay legal fees, and, in the case of Rebekah Brooks, apparently continues to keep her on the payroll (despite representations otherwise), this is a last gasp of the company’s ability to buy dedication. There are too many questions now. In other words, the value of loyalty is fast running out. In the end, it will be a human drama, as all scandals are, about lives and careers upended and the necessity to save yourself.

In the U.S., curiously, the company has, for the last few years, been undoing its own loyalty program. Arguably, the hacking scandal has unfolded not just because the organization is, at its heart, antipathetic to reasonable community standards, but because the organization itself is in turmoil. James Murdoch has been the manager of this scandal, and James is simply not as cunning, or perhaps even as cutthroat, a pirate as his father. The coterie that has long surrounded Murdoch, executives who have carefully managed and tempered him, which included Peter Chernin, the COO, Gary Ginsberg, his chief communications lieutenant, and Lon Jacobs, the general counsel, have been systematically parted from the company, not least of all because James Murdoch has been consolidating his influence over his father by dispatching the men who might have competing influence. Although each of these men has been paid bountiful amounts to maintain a minimum loyalty, the truth is they are embittered, too—and they know everything.

“You don’t get it,” Rupert’s son-in-law, Matthew Freud, the infamous London PR man, told me almost a year ago. “If there was a conspiracy in the company, the conspiracy was to keep Rupert from knowing.”

Freud’s convoluted formulation answered a question I hadn’t asked and suggests that 10 months before the Milly Dowler revelations and the bottom falling out of the scandal, Murdoch intimates were sensing how close this could come to the center and essence of their lives. Indeed, it’s not clear why you would have to conspire to keep someone from knowing what he did not know, nor why you would, unprompted, make admitting to a cover-up a main thesis of your defense.

You wouldn’t—except if you understood (and Freud is one of the people within the company to have a gimlet-eyed understanding of it) that everything that happens at News Corp. is systemic, that this is an organization predicated on a certain view of the world that fosters a certain behavior (that might turn weaker stomachs), that its nature runs from the top to bottom and bottom to top. And that the necessary and desperate and ultimate strategy has to be an effort to protect the man at the center of it all. Because there is nothing without him.
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 seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 09, 2011 1:23 pm

Hacked and Attacked: How Piers Morgan's Fabricated Story Almost Ruined This Reporter
Monday 8 August 2011
by: Greg Palast, Exclusive for Truthout/Buzzflash | News Analysis
Image
The September 29, 1998 cover of Piers Morgan's newspaper, the Mirror, targeted reporter Greg Palast.

I am not surprised that Piers Morgan has been outed for hacking phones (listening, in one case, to personal messages between Heather Mills and Paul McCartney.) I learned about the creepy antics of this one-man TV-host crime spree the hard way: as a victim of his crime-and-slime form of "journalism."

On September 29, 1998, Piers Morgan's Mirror ran a screaming full page headline: SEX SCANDAL ROCKS LABOUR CONFERENCE. His paper had caught a rival paper's reporter who'd broken into the hotel room of a comely, young, rising star of the Labour Party. The reporter was caught there half undressed.

I was that reporter.

And the story was a complete load of crap. But Morgan, "editor" of the Mirror, ran the report on Page One, and pages 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 - even though he knew it was fabricated. He knew because he had fabricated it.

Prime Minister Tony Blair's press chief personally thanked Morgan for running the bogus story.

This was not the first time Pirate Morgan had worked me over. Months earlier, on Page One again, he ran a full page photo of me (one that made me look bald!) under the words THE LIAR in letters bigger than the Mirror's headline, Hitler Defeated.
[youtube]http://www.truth-out.org/sites/default/files/palast080911.jpg[/youtube]
(Private Eye, the Onion of Britain, ran a response - a photo of me under the headline, IS THIS THE MOST EVIL MAN IN THE WORLD? by "Piers Moron.")
Image
O.K., I'm bald. But I am not a liar. I was in that hotel room to get a story, not get the young lady's panties. But I did not break in. That's what Morgan would do. A sworn affidavit by the hotel clerk said the female in question had left me a key with instructions to meet her in her room.

In other words, I was set up like a bowling pin.

As an investigator, it is quite embarrassing to have fallen so easily into a honey trap, but the honey was quite something: I was lusting after information about her mentor, the man known in England as The Prince of Darkness, Peter Mandelson, or I should say, the Right Honorable Lord Mandelson.

I'd already busted open a story about how Mandelson, Blair's claw, Blair's Karl Rove, had aided a "cash-for-access" scheme by his lobbyist cronies. He helped fiddle a bid for a contract to run Britain's National Lottery to give the deal to the guys who ran the Texas Lottery. (If you smell George Bush's connection, you'd be right.)

The story I wrote for The Observer (The Guardian's Sunday paper), "Lobbygate: Cash For Access" won my co-writer Antony Barnett and I the British equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize - and nearly won me time in a lock-up: The Daily Mirror encouraged Mandelson's gal to file charges against me with the constabulary for breaking into her room - though they knew she left me the key.

This is not just fun and games. Piers' phony file on me was used by Reliant Corporation of Houston to attempt to discredit my investigative reports on their frighteningly dangerous operation of nuclear plants. (A judge in Holland threw the book at them.)

Maybe you don't care, but you should. Reliant is the company, under a new corporate alias, which has just been approved to receive the first multi-billion-dollar loan guarantee from the Obama administration to build a new nuclear plant. (Reliant's partner, by the way, is Tokyo Electric Power.)

Obviously, there's a hell of a lot more to this story. I could write a book - and I am. I've decided that, in the public interest, I will add a chapter to the book about Pus Moron, the nuclear hucksters of Houston and why it was that I was half undressed. (There really is an innocent, or nearly innocent, explanation, I promise you.)

Of course, by the time my book comes out in November, Piers may no longer be prancing about on CNN, but breaking rocks on a chain gang. However, CNN is reported as concluding that Morgan's fibs and fabrications - this is Morgan's third run-in with the law - would have "no effect" on his hosting on their network. This only confirms my experience with US television executives that when they need a new on-air journalist, they just wait for a toilet to overflow.
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 Byrne » Wed Aug 10, 2011 5:08 pm

Byrne wrote:The Met police PR man was Dick Fedorcio . Fedorcio received an OBE in the Queens Birthday Honour list of June 2006, despite the Met's news-management skills being described as 'anal' in the news a week before his OBE was announced.

Fedorcio also has some questions to answer to the Home Affairs Committee, tomorrow:
Home Affairs inquiry into Unauthorised tapping or hacking of mobile communications
15 July 2011


Mr Dick Fedorcio OBE, Director of Public Affairs and Internal Communication at the Metropolitan Police, has replied to a letter sent yesterday by the Chairman of the Home Affairs Committee.

The Chairman had written to him to clarify evidence given to the committee by senior members of the Metropolitan Police when they gave evidence on Tuesday. Since then the issue of Mr Neil Wallis’ employment with the Metropolitan Police has been raised. The letter is copied below.

As result of this letter Mr Fedorcio has been asked to give evidence to the committee on Tuesday July 19th 2011 at 12:45 pm. The only other witness on Tuesday will be Sir Paul Stephenson the Metropolitan Police Commissioner.

Committee Chairman, Rt Hon Keith Vaz MP, said:

“Mr Fedorcio’s letter throws new light on these matters and we hope to explore these with him at the meeting on Tuesday.”

(1) Letter from the Chairman to Mr Dick Fedorcio OBE, Director of Public Affairs and Internal Communication at the Metropolitan Police

The Home Affairs Committee is in the process of obtaining final pieces of evidence in order to conclude its inquiry into the unauthorised tapping and hacking of mobile communication.

During our evidence session with Mr Andy Hayman on Tuesday, he stated that he had discussed with you his decision to accept hospitality from News International while they were under investigation by the Metropolitan Police.

To assist us in our inquiry, please could you tell us in writing what advice you gave Mr Hayman on this occasion
.

I would be grateful to receive a response by noon on Friday 15 July 2011.



(2) Reply from Dick Fedorcio OBE Director of Public Affairs of the Metropolitan Police to Chairman:

I am responding to your letter of 14 July 2011 asking me to comment upon an element of the evidence given by Mr Hayman to your Committee on 12 July 2011.

I first became aware of the investigation into phone hacking upon my return from a period of leave in August 2006.

To the best of my knowledge and recollection, the only dinner that I attended with Mr Hayman and News International staff was on 25 April 2006, some three months previously. The dinner was entered in the Specialist Operations Directorate Hospitality Register.

Therefore, I did not discuss with, or give advice to, Mr Hayman on any question relating to attending this dinner whilst the investigation was in progress. Furthermore, I did not have any conversation with Mr Hayman about phone hacking more generally at that time.

Code: Select all
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/home-affairs-committee/news/110715-phone-hacking/


Dodgy geezers, the lot of 'em



Phone-hacking enquiry: Dick Fedorcio put on leave

Metropolitan police's director of public affairs put on extended leave until police hacking enquiry is over
James Robinson
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 10 August 2011 19.27 BST

Image
Dick Fedorcio giving evidence to the Home Affairs Select Committee in the House of Commons. Photograph: Pa

Dick Fedorcio
, the Met's director of public affairs and internal communication, has been put on extended leave pending the result of an investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) into his conduct, it has emerged.

The IPCC said last month it would begin an inquiry into Fedorcio's dealings with Neil Wallis, a former News of the World assistant editor who was arrested in July as part of Scotland Yard's investigation into phone hacking.

That followed the revelation that Fedorcio had handed Wallis a two-day-a-month contract to assist the Met's press office in October 2009.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "To allow Mr Fedorcio to prepare for the IPCC investigation it has been agreed that he can work from home on a period of extended leave until the matter is resolved."

It is unclear why he has just been told to return home now rather than last month, when the IPCC inquiry was announced.

Wallis has been working in a PR capacity since leaving the paper in July 2009.

Fedorcio told the Home Affairs select committee that he would not have hired Wallis had he known he was to be arrested.

He also said he had not asked Wallis about phone-hacking at the paper before hiring him.

The close ties between News International, which owned the title until it was shut down in July, and the Met, have prompted concerns about the intimacy of the relationship between the two organisations.

Scotland Yard sources have said the hacking investigation is likely to run into next year.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/au ... k-fedorcio



In other news...:

Phone hacking: former News of the World news editor Greg Miskiw arrested

Greg Miskiw, a former news editor at the News of the World, has been arrested on suspicion of phone hacking.

2:32PM BST 10 Aug 2011

Scotland Yard said the 61-year-old remained in custody after visiting a London police station by appointment at midday.

Miskiw left Britain for the US after being alleged to have repeatedly authorised illegal voicemail hacking.

Last month he told The Daily Telegraph outside his home in Florida that his solicitors had been talking to officers from the Metropolitan Police “for some time”, and that he planned to return to this country.

The arrest by Operation Weeting detectives comes a week after Stuart Kuttner, the former managing editor of the News of the World, was held on suspicion of phone hacking and inappropriate payments to police.

Miskiw is the 12th person to be arrested since Scotland Yard's fresh investigation into phone hacking was launched in January.

These include a series of high-profile figures, including former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and ex-Downing Street communications chief Andy Coulson.

The scandal has already caused the closure of the News of the World after 168 years and the resignation of two top police officers, Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson and Assistant Commissioner John Yates.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "At approximately midday today a 61-year-old man was arrested by appointment at a London police station by officers from Operation Weeting and is currently in custody.

"He was arrested on suspicion of unlawful interception of communications ... It would be inappropriate to discuss any further details regarding these cases at this time."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... ested.html
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