Friday, July 10, 2009

Follow-up: Murdock Phone Tap Scandal

via Politics Daily... The Guardian broke a story revealing that Rupert Murdoch's News Group Newspapers has paid out more than 1 million pounds in court costs after its journalists were accused of involvement in phone tapping.

The journalists allegedly hired private investigators to hack into the mobile phones of public figures ranging from former deputy prime minister John Prescott to supermodel Elle McPherson, as well as numerous other politicians, sports stars and actors. The investigators allegedly
gained access to all sorts of confidential information about these people, including tax records, bank statements and social security files...

...one of Murdoch's former editors at the News of the World says that
this scandal constitutes one of the major media stories of modern times.

First, it suggests that such behavior -- if shown to be true -- was not the result of a few rogue reporters but
a systemic policy in the newsroom, opening the paper up to the possibility of a class-action lawsuit.

Second, the scandal also threatens to embroil the Metropolitan police -- who apparently did not alert all those whose phones were targeted -- as well as the Crown Prosecution Service, which did not pursue all possible charges against News Group personnel. Finally, even Conservative party leader David Cameron could be tainted by this one: The party's chief of communications,
Andy Coulson, was an editor at the News of the World when the alleged wire-tapping took place. Murdoch, for his part, maintains that he knew nothing about any of this.

This morning, the Commons Culture, Media and Sports Committee of the British Parliament announced it is launching an official investigation into
the use of illegal surveillance techniques. (more)