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Opening a new front in legal issues for News International and its UK publishing subsidiary, News Corp., Britain's Serious Fraud Office is pondering an investigation into the six-figure settlements News Corp. has made with its hacking victims. It is not clear whether police bribes and £8.5 million in gag-order payouts to former execs are to be investigated.

A crusading MP has asked the SFO to do so. No confirmation or denial, per usual practice, from the SFO that it will.

Since James Murdoch's only admitted role in the phone-hacking scandal is signing off on a six-figure settlement to one hacking victim, a query into whether or not News Corp. was misallocating its funds would target James, as well as apparently making shareholders of News International victims of the fraud. Britain's Channel 4 finance dude Faisal Islam also asserts that the Serious Fraud Office would be the agent in Britain of any U.S. Department of Justice investigation.
http://www.channel4.com/news/preliminary-inquiry-into-news-international-by-fraud-office



FYI, here's the link to the magisterial 10/10 NYT Mag piece on the whole scandal -- the forest and the trees of the last 10 days' narrative. It is alleged to be the cannonade across the SS Rupe's bow by the NYT, targeted by Rupe as a rival and an enemy of his Manhattan sinecure, the Wall Street Journal.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/05/magazine/05hacking-t.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&ref=global-home
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/blog/2011/jul/17/phone-hacking-live-blog?commentpage=last#end-of-comments


If, as seems likely, her arrest prevents her from giving public evidence on Tuesday to MPs on the culture, media and sport Commons committee, her many friends in high places may be slightly relieved.

In the current climate of criticism of News International, there will be quite a few powerful people who would be pleased if the brightest possible media light isn't shone on their close and personal relationship with Mrs Brooks.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14179390
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Sir Paul has been outed accepting a free $17,000 stay at a spa whose PR guy is the newly arrested former NotW editor, Wallis, that Sir Paul hired as Scotland Yard's media consultant on the NotW phone hacking inquiry.

Various stories say Scotland Yard paid the spa fee and others say it didn't. The spa owner disputes there was any connection between the PR guy and Sir Paul's alleged freebie.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/met-chiefs-spa-stay-not-a-jolly-2315248.html

A Met [Scotland Yard] spokesman confirmed last night that the Commissioner had stayed for free at Champneys while recovering from the fracture. The medical treatment he received there was paid for by Scotland Yard. But the spokesman denied any suggestion of impropriety.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8643325/Phone-hacking-Sir-Paul-Stephenson-has-serious-questions-to-answer-says-Nick-Clegg.html

Sir Paul is scheduled for questioning at the same House of Commons inquiry to which the Murdochs and Rebekah Brooks have been summonsed. Boneheadedness and cop petulance seem to be the defense. Yates and another clown testified before the Commons last week that they hadn't pursued the hacking inquiry because NotW wouldn't cooperate. Despite the MPs -- and the world's -- laughter, this defense is still being mounted by Scotland Yard:

On the same day, Sir Paul Stephenson, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, will be grilled by the home affairs select committee on the police’s failure to fully investigate the hacking in 2005 and 2006 and again in 2009.
He will be asked why he employed Neil Wallis, the former deputy editor of the News of the World who was arrested last week, as a media adviser. Sources have told The Sunday Telegraph that Sir Paul’s job as Britain’s most senior police officer is now under threat and his performance at the committee could be the deciding factor in whether he survives. Last night, Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, and Theresa May, the Home Secretary, offered him only lukewarm support.
Senior officers at Scotland Yard are furious that they are taking a large share of the blame when News International blocked inquiries. The source said News International had given assurances that they were co-operating fully in the initial investigation and that, as a result, it was impossible for police to obtain court orders allowing them to seize further material that would have proved a wider conspiracy.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8642786/Phone-hacking-New-body-blows-for-Rupert-Murdoch.html

I say Sir Paul will not be arrested but will be fired. Or his assistants, Yates and...(TK) will be.

James? Will be fired from his BSkyB chairmanship, from his News Corp. positions, and will be arrested on inconclusive evidence (nevertheless persuasive to me) around his paying hush money to one phone hacking victim. As this payout case apparently also involves NotW legal manager Tom Crone (who resigned with a £1.5 million payout pegged to a gag order), I'm looking to see some kind of legal action there, like Crone selling James out for immunity.

This just in:
A senior Scotland Yard officer has told The Sunday Telegraph that News International executives – including Mr Murdoch’s son James – are being investigated for any alleged role in covering up the extent of “industrial scale” phone hacking.
The Metropolitan Police want to know why a series of emails, dating back to 2006, were only made available to detectives in January, prompting the current inquiry that has led in the past two weeks to the closure of the News of the World, the resignations of executives Rebekah Brooks and Les Hinton, the arrest of Andy Coulson and the scrapping of News Corporation’s proposed takeover of BSkyB.
The source said: “News International appears to have covered up this scandal. That is potentially a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. It would have to be proved that James Murdoch, Rebekah Brooks or any other senior executive knew the information handed over in 2011 was actually in the system in 2006 and suppressed it.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8642786/Phone-hacking-New-body-blows-for-Rupert-Murdoch.html

I think this, former British treasury minister Lord Myners calling for James' ouster from BSkyB, was the kiss of death for James -- the analog of Prince Saud's call for the ouster of Brooks. Pretty much all I want to know is whether or not Lord Myners allowed himself to be filmed making the announcement on his yacht at Cannes, fingering his worry beads.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/16/myners-james-murdoch-oust-bskyb

The flame-haired editrix got £3.5 million pay out/gag order (reportedly except for criminal investigations); it'll be interesting to see if she cops a plea. I say she won't, in hopes of additional future payouts from News Corp.

£3.5 million doesn't go far when you have to arrive at Elisabeth Murdoch power parties in your own copter.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2015563/Elisabeth-Murdoch-threw-party-Camerons-cronies-hours-beofre-Milly-Dowler-scandal.html

Nice.
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Jude Law claims NotW hacked his phone while he was in America. That opens the Murdochs up for possible prosecution here.

Brian Kabateck, a Los Angeles lawyer who has represented victims of phone hacking in the U.S. told the Daily Telegraph: 'If phones or messages were hacked while these individuals were here in the US, this would clearly be a criminal offence under the federal wiretap acts.
'The authorities take this very seriously here. As well as being an offence under federal status, the victims would also have the right to bring a civil damages case.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2015624/Rupert-Murdoch-face-US-court-Jude-Law-phone-hacking-NY-claim.html#ixzz1SO58nlYF


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8642624/Jude-Law-claims-he-was-victim-of-News-of-the-World-phone-hacking-in-US.html
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/17/rebekah-brooks-arrested-phone-hacking-allegations

Keith Vaz, chairman of Commons committee which summonsed her to testify Tuesday, says the arrest will make it impossible for her to answer substantive questions.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/18/world/europe/18hacking.html?_r=1&ref=global-home

Labour MP Chris Bryant, who led a recent House of Commons debate on phone hacking, questioned whether her arrest was a 'ruse' ahead of the committee hearing.
He told Sky News: 'I don't want to overstress that argument but it's unusual to be arrested on Sunday by appointment - why couldn't that have happened tomorrow or Wednesday or whenever?'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2015677/Rebekah-Brooks-arrested-phone-hacking-scandal-News-International.html#ixzz1SNulf62b
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Jay Rock can convene his own hearings. FCC license holders must be of "good character".

Mr Rockefeller heads the Senate commerce committee and is considering opening his own hearings.
Congressional investigators have powerful rights to subpoena individuals and documents.
If they turned up any evidence of transatlantic collusion with criminal activities in the UK, which could simply be email exchanges, phone records or financial book-keeping, then the fall-out would be explosive. US law requires that holders of broadcast licences issued by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) be of "good character".

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8642597/Phone-hacking-show-goes-on-at-Fox-News-but-for-how-long.html
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It's encouraging to me that Jay Rockefeller, of all obscure, non-grandstanding, liberals, chairman of the U.S. Senate commerce committee, should be the first to jump on the Murdoch scandal when Ed Miliband, Britain's Labour party leader, is staking his entire career, and apparently the bringdown of the Conservative-led coalition government, on dismantling the entire Murdoch empire.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/jul/16/rupert-murdoch-ed-miliband-phone-hacking

There's other great stories out there about how James Murdoch's days are numbered as a master of the universe, mainly due to a shareholders' suit against the evil empire. No dancing on graves yet, Roger Ailes is said to have been strengthened by the implosion in Britain and the shakiness of James' future.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/16/rupert-murdoch-news-corp-profits

I am beginning to believe the Parliamentary hearings Tuesday, with arrogant, angry testimony or maudlin apologies from Rupe, the fixer James, and the hack queen Brooks -- y'all bought Scotland Yard! -- will be disastrous for the Murdochs in a way PR doesn't really account for. They'll be toast. I think it's basically because while Rupe thought he had friends in high places, he does not, because not even David Cameron, who now appears to be a BJ master, can condone the hack of a dead child's voice messages.

There's a suggestion Tuesday's testimony will be James Murdoch's exit interview as chair of BSkyB's board.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8642754/James-Murdochs-future-at-BSkyB-under-review.html

Unusually, the parliamentary committee the Murdochs and Brooks have been summonsed to speak to, is considering putting the three of them under oath.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/16/elisabeth-james-murdoch-family-crisis

The bending of Scotland Yard is truly grievous.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/16/scotland-yard-collusion-john-yates-neil-wallis

What I think a poor public performance in the hearings will do here in America is sharpen the liberals' taste for blood and hopefully result in political will for the SEC and FBI investigations to lead to the restoration of real enforcement and oversight of the financial universe here, which still operates with impunity. I'm a dreamer, I know. But the disappearance of the Fairness Doctrine and any kind of SEC enforcement really has resulted in the enthronement of thugs. I think also digital trading has contributed the rise of a peculiarly lizard-like investor, of which James Murdoch seems to be the avatar du jour.

I'd like to know how the Republicans in the budget/debt ceiling debates are feeling about possibly not having Murdoch/Fox News to back them up any more. That's a good story, actually. The Guardian is sort of semi on it.

There's a tea leaf of a hint that Obama is paying attention, as well he should:
At the same time John Podesta, a former Clinton chief of staff who is close to Obama, has come out swinging against News Corp. In an interview in Canada this week, he attacked Fox News and declared that the company might have broken US laws if it paid bribes to police in Britain. "This is not one rogue editor. This is an empire that was built on a set of journalistic ethics that's beginning to explode and unravel," he said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/16/newscorp-scandal-splits-american-politicians

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/editorials/obama-confidant-on-murdochs-misdeeds/article2096366/

I bet Obama's watching to see if Miliband can win his political prize by staking everything on Rupe. And I bet Hill and Bill are doing vast-right-wing-conspiracy happy dances around this, which will be very influential.

I think he's going down. I think the FBI and the SEC will dig up something, perhaps without actual substance, but enough for hearings here. That will be very, very interesting indeed.
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[Unknown site tag]


Murdoch’s Watergate?
His anything-goes approach has spread through journalism like a contagion. Now it threatens to undermine the influence he so covets.
by Carl BernsteinJuly 11, 2011

The hacking scandal currently shaking Rupert Murdoch’s empire will surprise only those who have willfully blinded themselves to that empire’s pernicious influence on journalism in the English-speaking world. Too many of us have winked in amusement at the salaciousness without considering the larger corruption of journalism and politics promulgated by Murdoch Culture on both sides of the Atlantic.

The facts of the case are astonishing in their scope. Thousands of private phone messages hacked, presumably by people affiliated with the Murdoch-owned News of the World newspaper, with the violated parties ranging from Prince William and actor Hugh Grant to murder victims and families of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. The arrest of Andy Coulson, former press chief to Prime Minister David Cameron, for his role in the scandal during his tenure as the paper’s editor. The arrest (for the second time) of Clive Goodman, the paper’s former royals editor. The shocking July 7 announcement that the paper would cease publication three days later, putting hundreds of employees out of work. Murdoch’s bid to acquire full control of cable-news company BSkyB placed in jeopardy. Allegations of bribery, wiretapping, and other forms of lawbreaking—not to mention the charge that emails were deleted by the millions in order to thwart Scotland Yard’s investigation.

All of this surrounding a man and a media empire with no serious rivals for political influence in Britain—especially, but not exclusively, among the conservative Tories who currently run the country. Almost every prime minister since the Harold Wilson era of the 1960s and ’70s has paid obeisance to Murdoch and his unmatched power. When Murdoch threw his annual London summer party for the United Kingdom’s political, journalistic, and social elite at the Orangery in Kensington Gardens on June 16, Prime Minister Cameron and his wife, Sam, were there, as were Labour leader Ed Miliband and assorted other cabinet ministers.

Murdoch associates, present and former—and his biographers—have said that one of his greatest long-term ambitions has been to replicate that political and cultural power in the United States. For a long time his vehicle was the New York Post—not profitable, but useful for increasing his eminence and working a wholesale change not only in American journalism but in the broader culture as well. Page Six, emblematic in its carelessness about accuracy or truth or context—but oh-so-readable—became the model for the gossipization of an American press previously resistant to even considering publishing its like. (Murdoch accomplished a similar debasement of the airwaves in the 1990s with the—tame by today’s far-lower standards—tabloid television show A Current Affair.)

Then came the unfair and imbalanced politicized “news” of the Fox News Channel—showing (again) Murdoch’s genius at building an empire on the basis of an ever-descending lowest journalistic denominator. It, too, rests on a foundation that has little or nothing to do with the best traditions and values of real reporting and responsible journalism: the best obtainable version of the truth. In place of this journalistic ideal, the enduring Murdoch ethic substitutes gossip, sensationalism, and manufactured controversy.

And finally, in 2007 The Wall Street Journal’s squabbling family owners succumbed to his acumen, willpower, and money, fulfilling Murdoch’s dream of owning an American newspaper to match the influence and prestige of his U.K. holding, The Times of London—one that really mattered, at the topmost tier of journalism.

Between the Post, Fox News, and the Journal, it’s hard to think of any other individual who has had a greater impact on American political and media culture in the past half century.

But now the empire is shaking, and there’s no telling when it will stop. My conversations with British journalists and politicians—all of them insistent on speaking anonymously to protect themselves from retribution by the still-enormously powerful mogul—make evident that the shuttering of News of the World, and the official inquiries announced by the British government, are the beginning, not the end, of the seismic event.

News International, the British arm of Murdoch’s media empire, “has always worked on the principle of omertà: ‘Do not say anything to anybody outside the family, and we will look after you,’ ” notes a former Murdoch editor who knows the system well. “Now they are hanging people out to dry. The moment you do that, the omertà is gone, and people are going to talk. It looks like a circular firing squad.”

News of the World was always Murdoch’s “baby,” one of the largest newspapers in the English-speaking world, with 2.6 million readers. As anyone in the business will tell you, the standards and culture of a journalistic institution are set from the top down, by its owner, publisher, and top editors. Reporters and editors do not routinely break the law, bribe policemen, wiretap, and generally conduct themselves like thugs unless it is a matter of recognized and understood policy. Private detectives and phone hackers do not become the primary sources of a newspaper’s information without the tacit knowledge and approval of the people at the top, all the more so in the case of newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch, according to those who know him best.

As one of his former top executives—once a close aide—told me, “This scandal and all its implications could not have happened anywhere else. Only in Murdoch’s orbit. The hacking at News of the World was done on an industrial scale. More than anyone, Murdoch invented and established this culture in the newsroom, where you do whatever it takes to get the story, take no prisoners, destroy the competition, and the end will justify the means.”

“In the end, what you sow is what you reap,” said this same executive. “Now Murdoch is a victim of the culture that he created. It is a logical conclusion, and it is his people at the top who encouraged lawbreaking and hacking phones and condoned it.”

Could Murdoch eventually be criminally charged? He has always surrounded himself with trusted subordinates and family members, so perhaps it is unlikely. Though Murdoch has strenuously denied any knowledge at all of the hacking and bribery, it’s hard to believe that his top deputies at the paper didn’t think they had a green light from him to use such untraditional reportorial methods. Investigators are already assembling voluminous records that demonstrate the systemic lawbreaking at News of the World, and Scotland Yard seems to believe what was happening in the newsroom was endemic at the highest levels at the paper and evident within the corporate structure. Checks have been found showing tens of thousands of dollars of payments at a time.

For this reporter, it is impossible not to consider these facts through the prism of Watergate. When Bob Woodward and I came up against difficult ethical questions, such as whether to approach grand jurors for information (which we did, and perhaps shouldn’t have), we sought executive editor Ben Bradlee’s counsel, and he in turn called in the company lawyers, who gave the go-ahead and outlined the legal issues in full. Publisher Katharine Graham was informed. Likewise, Bradlee was aware when I obtained private telephone and credit-card records of one of the Watergate figures.

All institutions have lapses, even great ones, especially by individual rogue employees—famously in recent years at The Washington Post, The New York Times, and the three original TV networks. But can anyone who knows and understands the journalistic process imagine the kind of tactics regularly employed by the Murdoch press, especially at News of the World, being condoned at the Post or the Times?

And then there’s the other inevitable Watergate comparison. The circumstances of the alleged lawbreaking within News Corp. suggest more than a passing resemblance to Richard Nixon presiding over a criminal conspiracy in which he insulated himself from specific knowledge of numerous individual criminal acts while being himself responsible for and authorizing general policies that routinely resulted in lawbreaking and unconstitutional conduct. Not to mention his role in the cover-up. It will remain for British authorities and, presumably, disgusted and/or legally squeezed News Corp. executives and editors to reveal exactly where the rot came from at News of the World, and whether Rupert Murdoch enabled, approved, or opposed the obvious corruption that infected his underlings.

None of this is to deny Murdoch’s competitive genius, his superior understanding of the modern media marketplace, or his dead-on reading of popular culture. He has made occasionally dull newspapers fun to read and TV news broadcasts fun to watch, and few of us would deny there are days when we love it. He’s been at his best when he’s come in from the outside: starting Sky News, which shook up a complacent British broadcasting establishment; contradicting conventional American media wisdom that a fourth TV network (Fox) could never get off the ground; reducing the power of Britain’s printing trade unions that were exercising a stranglehold on the U.K. press.

But Murdoch and his global media empire have a lot to answer for. He has not merely encouraged the metastasis of cutthroat tabloid journalism on both sides of the Atlantic. But perhaps just as troubling, authorities in Britain may respond to popular outrage at the scandal by imposing the kind of regulations that cannot help but undermine a truly free press.

The events of recent days are a watershed for Britain, for the United States, and for Rupert Murdoch. Tabloid journalism—and our tabloid culture—may never be the same.

Bernstein’s most recent book is A Woman in Charge: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Correction: An earlier version of this article described the weekly News of the World as a daily paper and stated that Murdoch had a role in the TV show Hard Copy. In fact, Murdoch's show was A Current Affair.

In other news, the Guardian asserts Hinton was let go because he is the one person who could have been sued in the US under the Foreign Corrupt Pracrices Act:

Hinton was ditched because he was the crucial link between Murdoch's valuable US businesses and the tainted operation in Britain. He was at the helm of NI – the holding company for his UK newspapers including the News of the World and the Times – when it seemed that everyone who was in sniffing distance of a significant news story found their phones being hacked.

Questions were being raised about what Hinton knew about corrupt payments to London police officers: if he was shown to have been aware of them, that would be a felony in the US under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/15/les-hinton-news-corp

I think not. I think James and Rupe both can be sued here. Me being a lawyer and all.
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So here's the fronts:

  • Cameron's Government:
    Prime Minister David Cameron's corruption by Murdoch, News of the World, his appointment of NotW editor Coulson as Conservative Party communications director, and 26 meetings in one year with Murdoch execs.

    World economic and political malfeasance:
    Did Cameron cover up the corruption of Scotland Yard and the British police by Murdoch and the phone hacking scandals? Are there other Murdoch malfeasances, for example, the takeover by Murdoch of the BSkyB satellite TV corp, that Cameron enabled or condoned? Are there electoral dirty tricks, or intimidation by Murdoch of police and/or political enemies, like the hacking into Gordon Brown's bank account and perhaps the medical records of his sick baby, that Cameron ordered, covered up, or condoned?

  • Wholesale corruption of Scotland Yard and British police:
    The corruption of Scotland Yard by the hiring of former NotW exec Wallis during the time Scotland Yard was making a decision not to re-open the phone hacking inquiry. The corruption of Scotland Yard execs and detecs all the way back to the beginning by Murdoch threats their private lives would be exposed; their phones too were hacked.

  • Murdoch coverup from the top down of political/police/economic corruption:
    What did
  • former Cameron spokesmodel/NotW editor Coulson, recently arrested
  • former News International chair Brooks
  • former NotW lawyer Crone
  • former Dow Jones prexy Hinton
  • James Murdoch, who signed off on a £700,000 payoff to one News of the World hacking victim
know and when did they know it?

Strikes me there's open-and-shut evidence of a coverup in the James payoff story here:
http://blog.itv.com/news/keirsimmons/2011/07/phone-hacking…-what-did-news-international-know/

  • Possible corruption by Murdoch of U.S. politics/police/economics:

    Did NotW hack into the 9/11 vics voice mail, and is there enough evidence to prosecute Murdoch in the US for briberies committed in Britain?

  • Has Roger Ailes at Fox committed similar crimes?


Have you got suggestions to add to the list? Big pic, pliss.

I will observe with pleasure the takeover of Murdoch's publishing unit News International by Mockridge, their Sky Italia guy, a veteran of Berlusconi, a hardass New Zealander passed by for the top BskyB job when James Murdoch was given it in 2003. You survive bunga bunga, your hands are entirely clean. Capisce? Capisce?

It will be interesting to see if Mockridge and Rupe's new PR people, who are apparently behind all this -- today's massacre/apologies/Rupe meeting with hacked murder victim family/agreements to show up at the Parliamentary hearing Tuesday -- can get rid of James. Stockholders apparently are agitating for this.

Then, maybe, Wendi nee Deng Wenge, will leave Rupe.


The Murdochs and the Browns, while Rupe was hacking into the Browns' baby's medical records.


Man, this just gets better and better.
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With thanks to [personal profile] fj:

“[James and Rupe] won’t say anything [in parliamentary hearings to which they were summonsed Tuesday] but they [the Committee] will be asking questions, which will be almost as good,” [former NotW lawyer Tom] Crone told the Londoner this morning. He said he did not want to say anything “explosive” but admitted he might talk “if they completely screw me over”. Crone, who gave the green light for numerous scoops on the News of the World and The Sun for 26 years, yesterday suggested to the Standard that he did not jump but had been pushed.

http://londonersdiary.standard.co.uk/2011/07/crone-cant-wait-to-see-his-old-bosses-squirm.html
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/16/world/europe/16hacking.html?ref=global-home

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/15/rebekah-brooks-resigns-phone-hacking-scandal

...as Murdoch's daughter and NI's major shareholder attack her.

Trix's resignation -- reportedly tendered for the third time -- appears to have been accepted after News Corp's biggest shareholder, Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal Al Saud, told the BBC's "Newsnight" Thursday night she needed to be gone.



On Thursday, the 80-year-old media tycoon had come out all guns blazing, telling his Wall Street Journal he would get over the crisis and insisting his company had handled the phone-hacking scandal "extremely well".

But later that day the corporate death knell was sounded for Brooks after the second largest shareholder in News Corporation, Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal Alsaud, said that if there was evidence of Brooks's "explicit" involvement in the alleged illegal activity, "for sure she has to go, you bet she has to go".

"Ethics to me are very important. I will not deal with a lady or a man that has any sliver of doubt on her or his integrity."

Worse, the friendship Brooks so carefully nurtured with Murdoch's second eldest daughter, Elisabeth, over the past 10 years appeared to have crumbled.

The Daily Telegraph reported that the 42-year-old TV executive had told friends that Brooks had "fucked the company".

However, a source close to Elisabeth Murdoch said: "The Telegraph story was a gross lie placed by someone with an agenda. Liz in no way holds Rebekah responsible."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/15/rebekah-brooks-news-international

Riiiiiiiight.

The Conservative prime minister, the leadership of Britain's coalition government (Labour's Miliband and Lib Dems' Clegg) have all called for Brooks' resignation one way or another in the past 10 days, blandishments she seems to have weathered. I think Saud's oily threat is the only one these thugs take seriously.

Murdoch apologizes in full page ads, over his signature, purchased in newspapers all over Britain.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/blog/2011/jul/15/phone-hacking-live-coverage#block-69
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/14/phone-hacking-apologise-national

In further evidence for NI's bad reputation for nepotism among investors, a syndrome they call "the Murdoch discount", Rupe's daughter Elisabeth, a former TV exec for Murdoch slated for a News International board seat, has made "a furious attack" on the flame-haired editrix, according to the Daily Telegraph. They are the same age and apparently rivals in Daddy's business.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/phone-hacking/8639163/Phone-Hacking-Rupert-Murdochs-daughter-in-furious-attack-on-Rebekah-Brooks.html

Meanwhile, it is revealed the prime minister entertained the former News of the World exec he hired as Conservative party spokesmodel months after Coulson, who was arrested last week in the NotW phone hacking investigation, resigned in disgrace.

Haven't gleaned the full deets, the method in the madness, or the theory of the case. I don't believe the spread stateside of the scandal (Jay Rock and others calling for investigation of the 9/11 vics phone hacking, possible prosecution here in the US of News International for crimes committed in Britain) has any substance.

I think what does have substance over here is the story about how the Bancroft family, sellers of the Wall Street Journal, who made a big effort to fire vault the integrity of same, would today not have sold it to Murdoch had they known about the phone hacking. The Bancroft sellers' remorse story was co-published by ProPublica and the Guardian.

This has the seeds of real action, my nose for news tells me. What they are I can't suss out right now. It has everything to do with Roger Ailes' Fox news "brain room", whatever shredding and terabyte deletion Roger Ailes is up to this minute, the curious Murdoch-generated toothlessness of the WSJ integrity committee and the firing of editor Brauchli, and James Murdoch's move to New York.
http://www.thenation.com/blog/162016/has-roger-ailes-hacked-american-phones-fox-news
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Wow. Scotland Yard and the British police are totally bent. Scotland Yard employed a former News of the World exec, arrested today, as an advisor to the commissioner and the detective in charge of the NotW phone hacking inquiry, during the time Scotland Yard decided not to re-open the inquiry. This decision was termed "crap" in Parliamentary hearings last week by the man who made it.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/14/phone-hacking-60-year-old-arrested

As Rupe engages a PR firm and lets go NI/NotW's legal manager of many years, Rupe, James and the flame-haired editrix are volunteering to go before a House of Commons committee hearing Tuesday. Flame-haired editrix Brooks stepped up first as Rupe and James claimed they could not be available. Summonsed by the committee, Rupe and James appear to be reconsidering.

MPs have dispatched the deputy serjeant at arms of the House of Commons to Wapping to deliver a summons in person to Rupert Murdoch and his son James to insist they turn up to give evidence to a select committee over the phone- hacking scandal.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/14/phone-hacking-rupert-murdoch-summonsed-appear-mps


I suspect they will talk shit worse than the aforementioned Scotland Yard detectives -- whose testimony actually made hardened parliamentarians laugh.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/14/rebekah-brooks-face-mps-phone-hacking

Brooks, the chief executive of News of the World publisher News International, agreed on Thursday morning to attend and face MPs at the session, though she warned in a letter to the committee that the police investigation into "illegal voicemail interception" meant it would not be appropriate to discuss the details with MPs to avoid prejudicing the inquiry.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/14/phone-hacking-murdochs-commons

[Murdoch] said he wanted to address "some of the things that have been said in parliament, some of which are total lies."

The summons was issued after Murdoch said he would not give evidence to the committee until after having appeared before the public inquiry chaired by Lord Justice Leveson.

Murdoch, who will join his younger son James and News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks at the hearing, added: "We think it's important to absolutely establish our integrity in the eyes of the public."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/15/rupert-murdoch-gordon-brown-interview

I shall be very very interested to see where Tom Crone, the NotW former lawyer, winds up. I wonder if his termination means he can now speak freely outside the atty-client priv, if that exists in Britain, or whether he has been bought off. A significant departure, I'd say, with News International spokespersons declining to say whether he'd resigned or been fired.

And in further old Etonian brutality, prime minister Cameron has said his former spokesmodel, the NotW executive Coulson, recently arrested, should be prosecuted if he lied about the phone hacking. You hired him because he lied and ruined peoples' lives, Mr. Prime Minister. This reminds me of the time the Parker Bowles held the door open for Princess Diana to leave the room where she'd confronted her husband's mistress. And curtseyed as Diana fled.
purejuice: (Default)
I've always thought that a certain kind of publisher -- Murdoch and Zuckerman spring to mind, Phil Graham, earlier generations of Sulzburgers and Chandlers -- was mostly about that invitation to the White House dinner.

I think Cameron's backing, and finally saying he would vote in, the essentially toothless House of Commons censure of the BSkyB takeover is what turned Rupe around: he must have that backdoor invite to 10 Downing Street.

His turnaround after apparently having been rebuffed by British society after publishing Christine Keeler's diaries a decade and a half after Profumo had been working to redeem himself, is detailed here, in very interesting archival footage from the Beeb.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/01/rupert_murdoch_-_a_portrait_of.html

This is a big day. Something big has happened.
purejuice: (Default)
The Church of England has a £3.76 million investment in Murdoch's News Corp and the CoE fund manager is apparently advising against getting rid of the investment.

Andreas Whittam Smith (pictured), First Church Estates Commissioner, said it was possible that Rupert Murdoch could sell his British newspapers in the future.
'I feel that a premature sale of News Corp and BSkyB might just be simply very bad timing,' he told members of the Church of England's national assembly meeting in York.

'I don't argue with anything that anybody is saying about them but I think it must be possible that News Corp will get rid of its entire British holdings, of newspapers that is, and that if it is to do so, first of all the problem would have vanished if you like from the point of view of the parent company and for us as investors, and the shares will certainly bounce up again, and so it is a ticklish area.'

Mr Whittam Smith's remarks came after the Church of England's Ethical Investment Advisory Group (EIAG) warned it could pull £3.76million in shares out of News Corp if it fails to hold senior executives to account over the phone hacking scandal.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2013690/Rupert-Murdoch-meltdown-BSkyB-deal-shelved-shareholders-sue.html#ixzz1Rv1yLmC6


http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/b52ed046-522c-11df-8b09-00144feab49a.html#axzz1Rv5icdcr
purejuice: (Default)
If you were Rupert Murdoch, would you be inclined to fire somebody who is known for basically blackmailing people -- including prime ministers and Scotland Yard -- with illegally obtained information? Ie., the flame-haired editrix?

I am also looking forward to a rash of anti-Murdoch stories based on info gleaned from fired NotW reporters, who actually could bring Murdoch down if they wanted to. But then, who would they work for?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2013975/News-International-offer-new-jobs-majority-News-World-staff.html
purejuice: (Default)
The former PM's, Gordon Brown's, bank account, and the medical records of his sick baby, were hacked into and the info passed on to unnamed journoes.

An Exeter detective constable, Phil Diss, was covertly performing P[olice] N[ational] C[omputer] checks, which were subsequently sold on to private investigators in bulk, for as little as £40 or even £20 a time.

Gordon Brown's office were privately warned in 2003 at the time of discovery of the illegal data checks, according to sources familiar with the case. So too were [British pols] Nick Brown and Salter.

Diss, a popular and long-serving police officer, used his official access to the PNC to supply results to his former boss, a retired police inspector, who ran a commercial investigation agency in Exmouth, servicing other private detectives across the country.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/jul/11/evidence-data-checks-gordon-brown

Murdoch

Jul. 10th, 2011 11:09 pm
purejuice: (Default)
The Daily Mirror has a source claiming NotW tried to hire somebody to hack the phones of 9/11 victims.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/2011/07/11/phone-hacking-9-11-victims-may-have-had-mobiles-tapped-by-news-of-the-world-reporters-115875-23262694/

If this is true, we may have the beginning of something stateside.
purejuice: (Default)
Sounds like they're setting up Dow Jones chief exec Les Hinton -- who is the stateside piece of the Murdoch scandal -- as well as former News International exec and Rupert's longtime capo, to take the fall both for young James Murdoch and for the flame-haired editrix.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/10/phone-hacking-investigation-les-hinton

"The person that I think is most of a problem for Murdoch is Les Hinton," Peter Burden, author of a 2008 book about the News of the World, told Reuters.

"He was definitely around when it was going on and he's now running the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones, and for him to be seen to be mixed up in that whole tacky situation would be very, very damaging indeed."

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/10/newscorp-hacking-hinton-idUSL6E7I909A20110710

Still missing, the Roger Ailes/Fox News connection to similar tactics sanctioned and encouraged by Les Hinton and Rupert.

Here we have him encouraging his employee, raven-haired editrix Judith Regan to lie about the affair she had with Bernard Kerik during his brief unsuccessful nomination for homeland security czar. Just previous to his going to prison, as I recall.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/feb/24/fox-news-corporation-federal-investigators

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/25/nyregion/25roger-ailes.html?_r=3&hp


The raven-haired editrix.

Spumo

Jul. 10th, 2011 11:39 am
purejuice: (loaf-haired pats)
I love it when royalty meets Hollywood. I love the way the royals check the Wood out. One of my favorite all time photographs (of an event I covered) is of QEII grokking E. Taylor's gigantic diamond necklace, or perhaps it was her gigantic bosom, as E. Taylor politely maintains eye contact, and not with the gigantic diamonds and bosom of Her Madge.


July, 1976: This was the occasion but not the pic.


It was at that event Muhammad Ali himself told me he was now complete. He had met everybody. The Queen. She asked him about blood clots in his legs.

Oh yes.

And then the real deal arrived in a small motorcade to huge cheers and cries of "we love you". The remaining lingering stars were ushered inside for a reception, where they were told by Duncan Kenworthy, Bafta's Los Angeles president: "Please don't all rush over, be cool in this coolest of towns. Trust me, they will try and chat to all of you. You can call them whatever you want: sir, madam, Will and Kate. They are very relaxed, as I am sure you will be."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jul/10/william-kate-stars-los-angeles

(Btw, an American bows and curtsies to no one. And in the same spirit, one addresses them, I suspect, as Lt. and Mrs. Wales. Or Mountbatten-Windsor. Only the surname is in question.)

Below, find Streisand, the queen of Wood, who allegedly did not walk the red carpet with the rest of them because she can only now be photographed by her own photog. Whom she brought with. Seated at the head table with the even more Woody Kidman, who now approaches the tinge of formaldehyde, Streisand was blocked from seeing the royals, who were only interested in speaking to each other, by the tall lamp centerpieces (as every non-Wood host knows, centerpieces are to be low so guests can see one another).


Did the mutton show too much skin?


Please note the Duchess' goodies are covered up, including the diamond earrings lent by the Queen.


The lamentable decor of the event entailed bowler hats, Union Jacks and Edwardian coats on the waiters, as well as fish and chips hors d'oeuvres with malt vinegar spumo.

Aaaaaaanyway, one of the papers reports WillKat sitting down, ignoring the queen of Wood, who snakes her hand around the centerpiece to flap her hand to say hello.

Please note the queen of Wood is wearing the dress that probably comes closest to Waity's wedding dress of all the dresses worn by hardened scene-stealers in the place.

Of whom Rita Wilson, who is in every shot -- that is her shoulder, to the right of William -- rules.

Hello.



When they took their seats at the main table they appeared engrossed in their own company, despite the fact Streisand and Kidman were sat opposite.

The royals affectionately stroked each other and chatted away until Miss Kidman finally stuck her hand across the table by way of introduction. Camera-shy Miss Streisand also made the first move - but had to get past a large lamp to shake hands with the star couple.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2013092/Duchess-Cambridge-Kate-Middleton-Prince-William-Red-carpet-royals-Hollywood.html#ixzz1Rj4qwqNz

Curious that only dinosaurs and C-listers (J-Lo) were invited, with neither of the Wood's top two female earners, Angelina and Jen, with $30 mill apiece in 2010 revenues, according to Forbes, in attendance. Neither was classy young Wood, like Reese Witherspoon, represented. Jennifer Garner? What? Either these are the people the royals wanted to meet (Zooey Deschanel? Kristen Chenoweth? The Mad Men chick?) or this is who Nigel Lythgow, the relentlessly lowbrow president of BAFTA (producer of American Idol, which 'splains so very much), who hosted the party and of which William is patron, chose

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