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  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    8:30am, EST

    Rupert Murdoch's papers, UK media condemned in phone-hacking report

    Senior judge Brian Leveson remarks on the findings of his yearlong inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal that shook up British media.

    By Carol Grisanti, Keir Simmons and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Updated at 10:35 a.m. ET: LONDON — Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers and other British media were reckless in the pursuit of sensational stories "almost irrespective of the harm" caused, according to a major report on Britain's phone-hacking scandal.

    The findings of the year-long Leveson Inquiry criticized a “failure of systems of management and compliance” at Murdoch’s News of the World (NoTW) tabloid, which was closed down as the full extent of their illegal actions became clear.

    Lord Justice Leveson said if Murdoch and his son James did not know about the extent of phone-hacking at the paper, then there had been a "determined cover-up" by unidentified staff.


    And if they had known then the Murdochs should have done something about it, he said. However, the judge added there was no evidence from which he could "safely infer" that Rupert Murdoch was aware of a wider problem.

    The report is being watched by American lawmakers amid concerns that U.S. laws may have been broken.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Leveson did not recommend state regulation of the media – or censorship in the eyes of some – as some victims of press intrusion had demanded, but did propose a new self-regulatory body enshrined in law.

    The inquiry was set up after it emerged that people working for the News of the World had hacked into messages on a phone belonging to Milly Dowler, 13, while she was a missing person in 2002. She had been abducted and was murdered.

    A string of other examples of phone-hacking and other examples of press intrusion then emerged.

    In its report on Britain's phone-hacking scandal, the Leveson Inquiry described a failure of management systems at newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others.

    Read the full Leveson Inquiry report

    Leveson said it was not just Murdoch’s newspapers that were at fault, adding that "outrageous" behavior by the press had "wreaked havoc with the lives of innocent people."

    “There has been a recklessness in prioritizing sensational stories almost irrespective of the harm that the stories may cause and the rights of those who would be affected (perhaps in a way that can never be remedied),” his report said.

    “Too many stories in too many newspapers are the subject of complaints from too many people,” it added.

    Related content:

    Key US lawmaker watching as Rupert Murdoch braces for phone-hacking report

    Judgment day looms for Rupert Murdoch, Piers Morgan and UK press

    Former UK PM accuses Murdoch of misleading inquiry into phone-hack scandal

    Rupert Murdoch not 'a fit person' to firm, UK lawmakers say 

    But Leveson was scathing about the Murdoch empire and the News of the World in particular. He said there was "a general lack of respect for individual privacy and dignity” at the paper.

    And the judge said there had been a “serious failure of governance” at the News of the World, News Corporation and its U.K. arm News International in dealing with the phone-hacking allegations.

    “There was a failure on the part of the management at the NoTW to take appropriate steps to investigate whether there was evidence of wrongdoing,” he said.

    Author J.K. Rowling and actress Sienna Miller testified at the Leveson inquiry, addressing the emotional pain they experience after having their privacy invaded by tabloid reporters. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    'Determined cover-up'
    Leveson said if Rupert Murdoch and his son James were kept in the dark then “one or more parts of the management at the NoTW was engaged in a determined cover-up to keep relevant information about potential criminal activity within the organisation from senior management within NI.”

    “… if James Murdoch had been the victim of a cover-up, or an attempt to minimise the gravity of the position, then the accountability and governance systems at NI would have to be considered to have broken down in an extremely serious respect,” he added.

    Leveson said there was “no evidence” from which he could “safely infer that Rupert Murdoch was aware of a wider problem.”

    But Leveson noted Rupert Murdoch did not appear to have followed up -- or arranged for his son James to follow up -- on the instructions Murdoch said he gave to Colin Myler, editor of the News of the World from 2007 to 2011, to “find out what the hell was going on.”

    Actor Hugh Grant took a starring role on Monday in a London courtroom, where he testified at a public hearing about alleged phone hacking by British tabloids. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    “If News Corporation management, and in particular Rupert Murdoch, were aware of the allegations, it is obvious that action should have been taken to investigate them,” Leveson said.

    The report noted evidence given to the inquiry that News International had been “obstructive” during an early police investigation into phone-hacking.

    “The approach taken by NI is far from what might be expected of a well-run corporation … An organisational culture that is founded on integrity and honesty would require not only full co-operation with law enforcement, but also a determination to expose behaviour that failed to comply with the law,” the report said.

    Leveson said that what was needed was a “genuinely independent and effective system of self-regulation.”

    The current Press Complaints Commission includes members of the media industry, but Leveson said his proposed new body should have no “serving editors or members of the House of Commons or government.” He also said that the new body should be recognized in law.

    He said he was “struck by the evidence of journalists who felt they might be put under pressure to do things that were unethical or against the [press standards] code.”

    To address this, he said there should be a new whistleblowing hotline and the new board should “encourage” media firms to include a “conscience clause” in their employment contracts.

    U.S. senator: 'Deplorable conduct'
    Senator Jay Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate commerce committee, earlier signaled he would be paying close attention to the findings of the report.

    In an emailed statement sent to NBC News before it was released, he called on investigators in the U.K. to hold media companies accountable for their “deplorable conduct.”

    The parents of murdered school girl Milly Dowler told the Leveson Inquiry how her phone had been hacked into when she went missing, giving them false hope that she may still be alive. ITV's Damon Green reports.

    Read more on this story from Britain's ITV News

    Rockefeller said that was "deeply concerned" that media companies "may have violated U.S. laws and injured U.S. citizens."

    He said he hoped Leveson’s report and other investigations would hold the media organizations involved “accountable for their deplorable conduct.”

    “While I understand that the main goal of this report is to make policy recommendations, the core of the inquiry remains the illegal and unethical practices of newspapers owned by the News Corporation,” Rockefeller said.

    Britain's former Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted he was very close to News International as Prime Minister - but he told the Leveson Inquiry it was a working relationship, not a close one. Testimony was briefly interrupted by a protestor who accused Blair of being a "war criminal." ITN's Tom Bradby reports. 

    Former top aide to UK PM David Cameron charged in perjury case

    Meanwhile, former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, who was later hired as U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron's chief media adviser, and Rebekah Brooks, the former CEO of News International, appeared in court Thursday to face charges related to allegations of corrupt payments made to public officials, ITV News reported. They were later released on bail.

    The Associated Press, Reuters and ITV News contributed to this report. ITV News is NBC News' U.K. partner.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Arafat's exhumation: Palestinians' desire for truth might be dashed again
    • Chinese paper falls for Onion 'sexiest man alive' spoof
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    102 comments

    Heck, anyone with average intelligence knows that news journalists have become truth terrorists. They are essentially the scum of human existence, lower than cockroaches.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, david-cameron, uk, featured, carol-grisanti, ian-johnston, keir-simmons, leveson-inquiry
  • 5
    Jul
    2012
    6:26am, EDT

    Europe's new tallest building: An 'iceberg' in heart of London or titanic $2.35B folly?

    The Shard, Europe's tallest building will be officially dedicated. The glass paneling and tapered design have already made it one of London's most iconic landmarks. ITV's Lewis Vaughan Jones reports. 

    By Carol Grisanti, NBC News

    LONDON -- Built at a cost of $2.35 billion in tough economic times, Europe's new tallest skyscraper has become a lightning rod for criticism even before it officially opens Thursday.

    Rising more than 1,000 feet above London's skyline with floor space equivalent to 31.4 acres -- or close to 15 football fields --  the Shard is Europe’s boldest and most extravagant building. It was funded by Qatar's royal family, who boast pockets as deep as the tower is high.


    But it’s more than just sheer size that gives the tower its swagger. The building’s design is already iconic. It’s crafted from 11,000 glass panels, which resemble shards of glass (hence, its name). They incline inwards as they rise to the top culminating in a sharp-angled jagged spire. The shards never touch and there are fissures along the way, which allow the entire structure to “breathe.”  

    'A vertical city' 
    It has has been compared to an "iceberg jutting out of the Thames River" -- not so much scraping the skyline rather cutting it through like a knife.

    PhotoBlog: Tallest building in Europe opened in London

    “It’s a vertical city,” said Renzo Piano, the acclaimed Italian architect who designed the building. A city featuring 28 floors of office space, three floors of restaurants, 10 luxury apartments spread out over 12 floors, a five-star hotel with 200 rooms and a viewing gallery on the 72nd  floor, which will be open to the public.  The finished structure suggests harmony, technical perfection and purity of design in architectural terms.

    But try telling that to its detractors -- who say it represents arrogance, power and money as Britain grapples with a double-dip recession and austerity cuts. Critics suspect mega-rich foreigners will be the only people wealthy enough to move in.

    Piano squares off with opponents of the project by arguing that he respected London’s history and inched the city’s skyline into the 21st century. “It’s on the south side of the river; it’s where London started from in the 2nd century.  We are bringing energy back to this part of the city.”

    Laser show
    He also shrugged off questions about the scale his creation at a press conference on Wednesday.  “Architects shouldn’t say too much, just as singers shouldn’t explain their song before they sing,” Piano said.

    As the world's 59th tallest building, there is plenty to boast about. It features 44 elevators, 306 flights of stairs and 72 occupiable floors. A further 15 levels make up its spire. The project was 12 years in the making and will be inaugurated Thursday night with great fanfare -- a spectacular light and laser show beaming across the tower to light up London’s night skies, all to the music of the London Philharmonic Orchestra. 

    From ITV News: Shard set for dramatic opening

    Piano put it this way: “You will feel the building, it has a soul. It’s never the same; it’s almost like a kaleidoscope, a mirror of London.”

    But will Londoners share his passion? Piano hopes people will learn to love his glass tower and adopt it as their own primarily because the building will be open to the public and won’t shut down at 6 p.m. “It will be full of life,” he said.

    Critics allege that the Shard has destroyed London’s historic skyline. It dwarfs views of the Tower of London, Parliament Square and St. Paul’s Cathedral, they say. 

    PhotoBlog: London's tallest building takes shape amid recession fears

    Reuters reported that it will open with 26 floors of vacant office space.

    Sheik Abdullah al Thani, governor of Qatar’s central bank, was not worried. He said the Shard project is part of Qatar’s portfolio of London investments. Recouping their investment is not the oil-rich royal family's first priority.

    “This is part of our relationship and our confidence about the London market," he explained. "To recover our investment is a minus thing for us at this moment and we look forward to recoup sometime in the future but it’s not important.”

    Just one tenant
    The building’s backers expect the tower to be fully rented by the end of 2014 but there is still only one committed tenant, the Shangri-La Hotel.

    With stakes so high, the developers are counting on the Shard becoming a major tourist attraction like the Empire State Building and the Eiffel Tower. It’s no accident that the tower was completed just in time for the opening of Olympic Games.

    Piano is confident he got the project right. The Shard’s backers agree. They are convinced it is the right building at the right time in the right city.  

    Londoners will hope they are right. As Piano points out: ”When you do something like this wrong, you are wrong for centuries.”

    Twelve years after its conception, London's tallest building officially opens Thursday. Msnbc.com's Richard Lui reports.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Syrian groups come to blows while seeking peace
    • 'Catastrophe': Journalist behind the lines in Syria sees no end to war
    • From soft power to drone attacks: What the world thinks of US
    • Kids cross border alone, fleeing drugs and gangs
    • East London: From gangland haven to Olympic showcase

     

     

    177 comments

    I cant actually say that this is the single ugliest building I've seen, but It has to be close...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, london, uk, featured, shard, carol-grisanti, commentid-featured

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