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  • 5
    Jun
    2013
    1:03pm, EDT

    Ex-Murdoch editor Brooks denies phone hacking charges

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    Former Murdoch executive Rebekah Brooks leaves a court in London, Wednesday.

    By Michael Holden and Kate Holton, Reuters

    LONDON - Rebekah Brooks, a former executive to Rupert Murdoch and a close friend of British Prime Minister David Cameron, pleaded not guilty in a London court on Wednesday to charges related to phone hacking during her time running two national tabloids. 

    Brooks denied the charges as she stood in the dock at a packed Southwark Crown Court alongside her husband and other senior journalists from the now-defunct News of the World Sunday tabloid.

    She is due to stand trial in September.

    Brooks pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to hack phones and two counts of conspiracy to commit misconduct in a public office. Wearing a black jacket and trousers and speaking loudly and clearly, the 45-year-old also pleaded not guilty to two counts of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

    Other senior staff, including the tabloid's former managing editor Stuart Kuttner and former assistant news editor James Weatherup, also pleaded not guilty to charges related to phone hacking, while her husband and her personal assistant pleaded not guilty to perverting the course of justice.

    The former editor of the News of the World and the Sun who went on to run the whole of Murdoch's British newspaper arm, Brooks was arrested in July 2011 along with other members of staff over charges related to the unlawful interception of mobile phone messages to generate front-page news stories.

    The scandal, which prompted the closure of the mass-selling News of the World and a year-long public inquiry, sent shockwaves through the British establishment as it revealed the close ties between the country's media, police and politicians. 

    Related: Ex-Murdoch editor Brooks, five others, charged over phone-hacking scandal

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    6:25pm, EST

    Leveson report on Rupert Murdoch, son: Evidence 'suggests a cover-up by somebody'

    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.

    By Keir Simmons, NBC News

    LONDON -- The phone hacking scandal at Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World involved more than just allegations that journalists on the paper illegally listened to people’s cell phone messages. As is often the case with major scandals, there were also allegations of a cover-up. It is these claims that have caused the biggest headache for senior people at News Corporation.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Dig down into Thursday’s inquiry report and it is the possibility of a cover-up that is the focus. From page 348, the report, overseen by Lord Justice Brian Leveson, accuses Rupert Murdoch, his son James and News Corporation of either failing to address allegations of "widespread criminality within the organization” or — if they didn’t know about it — being guilty of a "significant failure in corporate governance."

    These are words that will concern lawmakers in the United States, where News Corporation has many media arms, including Fox News and 20th Century Fox, and recently announced that it is buying a 49 percent stake in the Yankees Entertainment and Sports Network.

    The Leveson report refers to a series of e-mails and meetings in 2008 when James Murdoch signed off on a substantial payment to a phone hacking victim. He was then head of News Corporation's UK arm, News International. The question during the inquiry was this: How much was James Murdoch told about phone hacking at the News of the World when he signed that check. Those involved said they couldn’t remember.


    "If the explanation of James and Rupert Murdoch is correct," the report concludes, then "One or more parts of the management… was engaged in a determined cover-up to keep relevant information about potential criminality within the organization from senior management."

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

    The official inquiry into the practices and standards British newspapers, prompted by the phone hacking scandal is out. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    Leveson does not appear convinced that this was the way events actually unfolded, writing that managers had "no reason or motive to conceal relevant facts" from James Murdoch. He goes no further — acknowledging there is an ongoing criminal investigation of what happened at News of the World. But he says again and again, if people at News Corporation didn't know what was going on, that itself is a significant failure.

    "In truth, at no stage, did anybody drill down into the facts to answer the myriad of questions that could have been asked and which could be encompassed by the all embracing question 'what the hell was going on'?" Leveson says. "On any showing, these questions were there to be asked and simple denials should not have been considered sufficient. This suggests a cover up by somebody and at more than one level."

    Earlier in the report, on page 305, Leveson considers the integrity of Rupert Murdoch’s company. "An organizational culture that is founded on integrity and honesty would require not only full co-operation with law enforcement, but also a determination to expose behavior that failed to comply with the law," Leveson says.

    "What happened at the (News of the World) in relation to voicemail interception in this context is particularly informative about the culture that pertained both within the corporate and editorial operation," he concludes.

    News Corporation has cooperated closely with British police in the last two years, authorities have said.

    None of this reveals any new information, but it does tell us what an independent and experienced British judge makes of it. The British criminal investigation is still underway and the potential trials of former senior Murdoch executives, Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson, may bring new details of what went on inside of Murdoch’s businesses. When those trials are over, likely sometime next year, Leveson will write another report that should provide more conclusive analysis.

    Olivia Harris / Reuters

    Chris Bryant, a member of the British parliament, leaves Queen Elizabeth hall carrying copies of a report by Lord Justice Brian Leveson's on media practices, in London on Thursday. The far-reaching inquiry into British newspapers called for a new independent watchdog enshrined in law to regulate the press and prevent the type of excesses which led to a phone hacking scandal within Rupert Murdoch's News of the World tabloid.

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    27 comments

    They don't call them Fox Lies for nothing. Never seen such poor and one sided reporting in all of my life. O'really, BECKerhead, Hannity and those sorry A$$ broads that say they are newswomen are also a joke. They should all be shut down. Oh no, then what news agency will Lie for the republicans the …

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  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    7:40am, EST

    Murdoch ex-editor in UK to be charged over payments for royal details

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP, file

    Rebekah Brooks, the former chief of News Corp.'s British operations, seen here outside a London court in September, was told Tuesday that she would be charged with making illegal payments to defense officials.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Rupert Murdoch's former British newspaper boss and Prime Minister David Cameron's former media chief will be charged with conspiring to pay public officials for information including contact details for the royal family, prosecutors said Tuesday. 

    The charges stem from a wider investigation into the British press that was sparked by revelations that journalists at Murdoch's now-defunct News of the World, had hacked into phones to secure salacious stories.

    Andy Coulson was editor of the News of the World from 2003 to 2007 before he took over as Cameron's spokesman from 2007 to 2011, and the latest charges are likely to pose yet more difficult questions for Cameron over his judgment in hiring Coulson in the first place.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "We have concluded, following a careful review of the evidence, that Clive Goodman and Andy Coulson should be charged with two conspiracies," Alison Levitt of the Director of Public Prosecutions said, referring to former royal reporter Goodman.

    Ex-Murdoch editor Brooks, five others, charged over phone-hacking scandal

    "The allegations relate to the request and authorization of payments to public officials in exchange for information, including a Palace phone directory known as the 'Green Book' containing contact details for the royal family and members of the household."

    Carl Court / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Former News of the World editor and Prime Minister David Cameron's ex-media chief Andy Coulson, seen here in September, will be charged along with former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks for making illegal payments in exchange for information.

    Rebekah Brooks, who served as editor of both The News of the World and The Sun, as well as chief executive of News International, will be charged along with John Kay, who was chief reporter at The Sun between 1990 and 2011, and Bettina Jordan-Barber, a Ministry of Defense employee, for “conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office between 1 January 2004 and 31 January 2012,” according to prosecutors.

    UK PM David Cameron grilled over links to Rupert Murdoch's empire

    “This conspiracy relates to information allegedly provided by Bettina Jordan-Barber for payment, which formed the basis of a series of news stories published by The Sun,” Levitt said. “It is alleged that approximately £100,000 was paid to Bettina Jordan Barber between 2004 and 2011.”

    David Cameron testified at the Leveson Inquiry that there was never any 'overt or covert' agreement with News International. The Prime Minister admits relations between the press and politicians have become too close, but denied any deal was made between the two. ITN's political correspondent Alex Forrest reports.

    Brooks and Coulson have already been charged in connection with phone-hacking offences - the original crime that sent shockwaves through the British political establishment and exposed the close ties between government and sections of the media.

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

    Brooks has also been charged along with her husband and staff over allegations that she sought to interfere with the police investigation.

    British police began investigating the conduct of the press last year after it emerged that News of the World staff had hacked into phones on an industrial scale.

    Rupert Murdoch not 'a fit person' to run major company, UK lawmakers say

    Facing a public backlash, Murdoch closed the mass-selling Sunday title last year and formed an internal committee to cooperate with the police.

    Police have since arrested 52 people in connection with making payments to public officials, including staff from The Sun newspaper, the police and a member of the armed forces.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    8 comments

    "charged with making illegal payments to defense officials."

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  • 14
    Jun
    2012
    5:59am, EDT

    UK PM David Cameron grilled over links to Rupert Murdoch's empire

    David Cameron testified at the Leveson Inquiry that there was never any 'overt or covert' agreement with News International. The Prime Minister admits relations between the press and politicians have become too close, but denied any deal was made between the two. ITN's political correspondent Alex Forrest reports.

    By ITV News and msnbc.com news services

    LONDON -- British Prime Minister David Cameron, under fire for courting an exclusive media clique led by Rupert Murdoch, appeared before a judicial inquiry on Thursday to try to neuter claims his ministers tailored policy to further Murdoch's interests.

    Cameron's once-cozy ties with Murdoch's inner circle mean he is under pressure to pull off a virtuoso performance at the inquiry, which has sharpened the perception that Britain has been run for years by an elite that fawned on the News Corp chairman.

    The coalition government has divided along party lines over Cameron's backing for a minister accused of doing Murdoch's bidding when responsible for impartial oversight, as he struggles with an economy in recession and growing unease about his leadership within his own party.


    Cameron, 45, who set up the Leveson inquiry into media ethics himself last year after a newspaper phone-hacking scandal erupted, is due to be questioned for at least five hours, streamed live on television.

    Read more on this story from Britain's ITV News

    Early in the session, Cameron characterized the relationship between Britain's media and politicians as "bad."

    "I think a lot of politicians think the press always get it wrong... a lot of the press think politicians are in it for themselves," ITV News quoted Cameron as saying. 

    Vanity Fair's Sarah Ellison joins NOW w/ Alex Wagner to share her coverage on Rupert Murdoch's media empire that has been marred by investigations into a widespread hacking scandal.

    Cameron used to sign his frequent text messages to News Corp executive Rebekah Brooks with an affectionate "LOL" -- which he admitted he thought meant "lots of love" -- and employed another Murdoch editor, Andy Coulson, as his trusted spokesman.

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

    Cameron ordered the inquiry after the News of the World, the Sunday tabloid newspaper both Brooks and Coulson had once edited, was found to have hacked into the voicemail of, among others, a murdered schoolgirl to get stories.

    'Lapses of judgment'
    The Conservative prime minister has said politicians from both his party and the opposition Labour Party were too close to the Murdoch media empire and has vowed to resolve the problem, no matter how messy the process.

    But if Cameron had hoped the inquiry might take some heat out of the phone-hacking scandal, it has done the opposite; week after week of revelations have been served up casting British politicians as courtiers to king Murdoch.

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

    "He did not foresee that it would morph into a form of war crimes tribunal," Max Hastings, one of Britain's most influential journalists, wrote in the Financial Times. "Revelations about his lapses of judgment weaken his authority to lead Britain."

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair testified this morning about his close ties to media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who's News of the World tabloid is in the middle of a phone-hacking scandal. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    The prime minister has been embarrassed by his association with the so-called "Chipping Norton" set, a high-powered social scene centered around the picturesque market town in Oxfordshire. Cameron, Brooks and Murdoch's daughter Elisabeth were among the high-flying friends with luxurious country homes in the area.

    Reports: UK PM leaves 8-year-old daughter in the pub

    Brooks and her husband Charlie, an erstwhile horse-riding partner of Cameron, are now charged with perverting the course of justice by allegedly hiding evidence from police investigating phone-hacking.

    Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and her husband, Charlie Brooks, have been charged with perverting the course of justice during the U.K. phone hacking scandal. ITV's Keir Simmons reports.

    The spectacle of a prime minister questioned under oath by one of London's top barristers on live television is a daunting prospect for Cameron's supporters, who are already reeling from criticism that he is a lightweight politician out of touch with the voters.

    The prime minister's aides said he was doing "a lot of preparation" and is being briefed by lawyers ahead of his appearance at the inquiry, where he can afford few mistakes, given his party's slump in the polls in recent months.

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

    Cameron is under fire for shielding Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, a Conservative minister, who is accused by Labour of being far too helpful to News Corp while in charge of ruling on the company's bid for full ownership of BSkyB.


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    Hunt was meant to be an impartial overseer of the $12.5 billion bid for the pay-TV operator, but testimony by Murdoch's executive son James at the Leveson inquiry appeared to show that Hunt's office was in regular contact with News Corp and may have given it confidential information.

    Cameron's Liberal Democrat coalition partners abstained on Wednesday from a parliamentary vote on a motion calling for the prime minister to order an inquiry into Hunt's actions, underscoring the divide in the coalition.

    Hunt's special adviser resigned over the affair.

    'War criminal': Tony Blair heckled during inquiry into Murdoch scandal

    In a sign of the concern inside Number 10 Downing Street, aides circulated a letter from the prime minister saying that he would outline measures to increase transparency on special advisers' work and shed more light on decisions such as the one entrusted to Hunt over BSkyB.

    The prime minister is also likely to be questioned about Cameron's decision to appoint Coulson as his communications adviser, even though he had resigned as editor of the News of the World after a reporter there was jailed for phone-hacking.

    Coulson was charged with perjury last month for remarks he made in court over the hacking scandal.

    Reuters and ITV News contributed to this report. ITV News is NBC's British partner.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    34 comments

    rupert murrdoch and fox news, the most corrupt, most biased most untrue news in the world and yet they still claim its fair and unbiased? someone should sue them for slander

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  • 30
    May
    2012
    8:18am, EDT

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

    Facundo Arrizabalaga / EPA, file

    Andy Coulson, a former editor of Rupert Murdoch's now-defunct News of the World newspaper, later served as a spin doctor for British Prime Minister David Cameron.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 5:55 p.m. ET: LONDON -- A former spokesman for Britain’s prime minister was charged Wednesday with perjury during a high-profile court case in Scotland involving a politician -- a move that brings the Rupert Murdoch phone-hacking scandal closer to the heart of government.

    Andy Coulson, who worked as David Cameron's director of communications, was held in London by detectives investigating claims he committed perjury during the trial of a politician accused of taking part in adulterous, drug-fueled sex orgies at swingers' clubs.


    Coulson, 44, was transferred north from London to Glasgow, Scotland, for questioning on Wednesday, according to Britain’s Sky News.

    Strathclyde Police issued a statement that said: "Officers from Strathclyde Police's Operation Rubicon team detained a 44-year-old man in London this morning under section 14 of the Criminal Procedure Scotland Act 1995 on suspicion of committing perjury before the High Court in Glasgow."

    'War criminal': Tony Blair heckled while testifying about Murdoch links

    Coulson resigned from his job as the Cameron’s chief spin doctor in January 2011 amid growing public anger over the phone-hacking scandal.

    Prior to working for Cameron, he was editor of the News of the World, the now-defunct Murdoch Sunday tabloid. He resigned from that job in 2007 - also over phone hacking.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Now he is implicated in another long-running saga – that of Tommy Sheridan, a lawmaker and icon of left-wing Scottish politics.

    Britain's PM eats humble pie over snack tax

    Coulson gave evidence in a 2010 Glasgow High Court trial at which Sheridan was jailed for three years for lying under oath during his earlier defamation action against the News of the World in 2006, STV News reported.

    Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images, file

    Tommy Sheridan and his wife Gail make a statement outside the High Court in Glasgow, Scotland, on Dec. 23 2010.

    Sheridan had won £200,000 in damages over an article that said he had committed adultery, visited a swingers' club and taken part in drug-fueled orgies.

    Giving evidence at the 2010 trial, Coulson denied being involved in, or aware of, any illegal activities, including phone hacking, the BBC reported.

    Earlier this month, Coulson appeared in front of an ongoing inquiry into press standards where he revealed he still held shares in Murdoch’s News Corp. while working as working as Cameron’s director of communications.

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    6 comments

    I wish we weren't so tightly controlled by the Murdoch Mafia over here, I feel they are so deeply entrenched in our political system and so my Americans are hypnotized by Fox's propaganda that we will never break free from their evil grip. Those most affected by the propaganda are so far gone they a …

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  • 15
    May
    2012
    5:22am, EDT

    Ex-Murdoch editor Brooks, five others, charged over phone-hacking scandal

    Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks and her husband, Charlie Brooks, have been charged with perverting the course of justice during the U.K. phone hacking scandal. ITV's Keir Simmons reports.

    By msnbc.com and news services

    Updated at 11:05 a.m. ET: LONDON - Rebekah Brooks, a close confidante of Rupert Murdoch, was charged on Tuesday with interfering with a police investigation into a phone hacking scandal that has rocked the tycoon's empire and sent shockwaves through the British political establishment.

    "I have concluded ... there is sufficient evidence for there to be a realistic prospect of conviction," Alison Levitt, the principal legal adviser to Britain's Director of Public Prosecutions, said in a statement.  


    Brooks, 43, who quit as News International chief executive in July, faces three separate allegations of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.  If convicted she could face a prison sentence.

    Also charged were Brooks' race horse trainer husband, her secretary and other staff from News International, including her driver and security officials from the British newspaper arm of Murdoch's News Corp media empire.

    The news is a personal blow for Murdoch and also embarrassing for British Prime Minister David Cameron, who was close friends with Brooks, 43, and her husband, Charlie Brooks. 

    Former News International CEO Rebekah Brooks reveals details of sympathy messages received from British Prime Minister David Cameron after she was forced to resign over the phone hacking scandal. ITV's Lucy Manning reports.

    The action against the woman who was one of his most trusted lieutenants comes as Murdoch faces increasing pressure in Britain. He has been forced to close one newspaper, withdraw a major takeover bid for a lucrative TV group and been described in a parliamentary committee report as someone who is not fit to run a major international company. 

    She and others are accused of conspiring to "permanently ... remove seven boxes of material from the archive of News International" and to "conceal documents, computers and other electronic equipment from officers of the Metropolitan Police Service," according to the CPS. 

    All eyes on court as Murdoch confidante Rebekah Brooks lays bare ties to UK elite

    The criminal charges are the first to be filed since police launched a new inquiry into phone hacking in Jan. 2011. Previously, two people were jailed in 2007 for hacking the phones of members of the royal household.

    The offenses were all alleged to have taken place in the frantic days last July when Murdoch closed down the 168-year-old News of The World amid widespread public disgust over revelations that it had hacked the cell phone of a missing schoolgirl who was later found dead.

    For a detailed look at the charges against Brooks and the hacking scandal, see coverage by NBC News' British partner ITV News

    Murdoch announced his decision on July 7, 2011. Levitt said the alleged offenses took place between July 6 and July 19.

    Brooks and others will all appear in court in London on June 13.

    'Unprecedented posturing'
    Minutes before British police announced their decision, Brooks and her husband issued a statement, saying "we deplore this weak and unjust decision."

    "After the further unprecedented posturing of the (Crown Prosecution Service) we will respond later today after our return from the police station," the statement added. 

    MSNBC's Martin Bashir talks about the explosive testimony by Rebekah Brooks and how it will affect the inquiry into the British phone hacking scandal.

    Police re-launched an investigation in January last year into claims journalists at the tabloid routinely hacked into the phones of celebrities, politicians and victims of crime to generate front page stories. 

    They are also investigating whether staff hacked into computers and made illegal payments to public officials including the police to get ahead in their reporting. 

    More than 160 staff are now working on one of the biggest investigations ever carried out by London police and almost 50 people have been arrested. 

    Msnbc.com's F. Brinley Bruton, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


     

    208 comments

    Piece by piece, thread by thread, more will come out, more will be charged, but will they continue to protect Murdoch? Murdoch has made billions peddling scum, and the sheeple eat it up.

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  • 2
    May
    2012
    3:08pm, EDT

    News Corp.'s board has 'full confidence' in Murdoch

    Sang Tan / AP

    Rupert Murdoch, right, and his son James Murdoch, left, have come under fire for their handling of the hacking affair last year that resulted in the closure of the News of the World.

    By Roland Jones, NBC News

    News Corp.’s (NWS) board of directors said Wednesday it has “full confidence” in Rupert Murdoch’s fitness to continue to lead the international media company.

    The statement, which came days after a British House of Commons committee report called Murdoch “not a fit person” to head a major international company, followed a meeting of News Corp.’s board of directors.

    In its statement, the board said its decision was unanimous.

    “The Board based its vote of confidence on Rupert Murdoch's vision and leadership in building News Corporation, his ongoing performance as Chairman and CEO, and his demonstrated resolve to address the mistakes of the Company identified in the Select Committee's report,” the statement said.

    Rupert Murdoch and his son James have come under fire in recent months for their handling of the hacking affair last year that resulted in the closure of the News of the World tabloid.

    22 comments

    Of course the board has "full confidence" in Murdoch, he controls over half of the stock of the company. Any decision against him would swiftly result in the board members being replaced. There used to be a rule which prevented foreigners from owning the US press.

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  • 1
    May
    2012
    3:51am, EDT

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

    A panel of British lawmakers have declared media mogul Rupert Murdoch 'not a fit person' to run a major international company. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    By Keir Simmons, NBC News and Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 11:24 a.m. ET: LONDON -- Rupert Murdoch is  unfit to run a major international company, British lawmakers said on Tuesday, finding him responsible for a culture of illegal phone hacking that has convulsed his News Corporation media empire. 

    Pulling few punches, members of the House of Common listed failings of the 81-year-old News Corp chief, his son James and a company they said had showed "willful blindness" about the scale of hacking that existed at the company's News of the World tabloid.


    The cross-party parliamentary committee, which approved the report by a majority of six to four, also scolded News Corp's British newspaper arm for misleading the British parliament during its five year investigation into the hacking of the phones of celebrities, murder victims, politicians and soldiers. 

    But it split along party lines, with members from Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative Party voting against the final conclusions of the report, saying they did not agree with its view on Murdoch's fitness to run a company.

    Carl Court / AFP - Getty Images

    Opposition Labour member of parliament Tom Watson, center, speaks during the launch of the House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee report on Phone-Hacking.

    Cameron, who has acknowledged that Britain's political elite had been in thrall to the Murdochs for years, is facing criticism ahead of local elections this week that he was too close to the media tycoon. 

    The report, published only a week after Rupert Murdoch gave evidence at a separate public inquiry into UK media ethics, said there had been huge failures in corporate governance which raised questions about the competence of Rupert's 39-year-old son, James. 

    "News International and its parent News Corporation exhibited willful blindness, for which the companies' directors -including Rupert Murdoch and James Murdoch - should ultimately take responsibility," it said. 

    Olivia Harris / Reuters

    The report says News Corp's British subsidiary misled Parliament about the scale of phone hacking at its News of the World tabloid.

    It provides a devastating account of how employees of News Corp's UK arm became involved in illegal activity and how its executives then attempted to cover up the wrongdoing. Corporately, the firm's "instinct throughout, until it was too late, was to cover up rather than seek out wrongdoing," it said.

    "We conclude, therefore, that Rupert Murdoch is not a fit person to exercise the stewardship of a major international company," it wrote. 

    As so often in scandals, the attempted cover-up attracted the most criticism. The committee noted that, by June 2008, the chief executive of England's Professional Footballers Association, Gordon Taylor, had received a payment from News Corp's UK arm worth more than $1 million. The report says, this cash "was paid over a story which was never actually published and was clearly done to buy silence".

    The committee said it could not "come to a definitive conclusion" as to what James Murdoch knew when he agreed this payment. But it said it was "astonished" that James Murdoch did not seek more information before authorising this "not inconsequential" sum of money.  It concludes that, for James Murdoch, "this clearly raises questions of competence".

    Murdoch: Hacking scandal cost 'hundreds of millions'

    The hacking scandal has not affected most of Murdoch's global media empire, which includes the Wall Street Journal, 20th Century Fox and pay-TV operations around the world. 

    But it could persuade shareholders of News Corp that Australian-born Rupert Murdoch should step back from the helm of his $50 billion media empire. 

    Rupert and James Murdoch are severely criticized after investigations into phone-hacking allegations - and three of their senior executives are accused of misleading parliament. ITN's Juliet Bremner reports. 

    It has already forced James Murdoch to sever almost all his ties with Britain, although he still holds a directorship of Britain's biggest satellite TV firm BSkyB, which News Corp had sought to take over before the scandal. 

    British media regulator Ofcom is investigating whether BSkyB, which is 39 percent owned by News Corp, is a "fit and proper" owner of a broadcast license, which entails an examination of the company's officers and shareholders. 

    James Murdoch recently stepped down as chairman of BSkyB in response to the scrutiny the broadcaster is facing as a result of the hacking scandal. The regulator said on Tuesday it was reading the parliamentary report with interest. 

    The impact of the report may also be diminished by the fact it was split largely along party political lines. 

    "None of us were able to support the report and we all voted against it," Conservative lawmaker Louise Mensch said, referring to her party members. "It will be correctly seen as a partisan report and we've lost a very great deal of its credibility, which is an enormous shame." 

    Mensch said she would have supported the report if the reference to Rupert Murdoch being unfit to run a major international company had been removed. She said she supported the report's findings that three senior executives at News Corp's UK arm had misled parliament.

    James Murdoch was back at the Leveson inquiry, where he claimed he didn't know about phone-hacking at News Corp's U.K. unit,  and didn't remember being told about it. ITV's Juliet Bremner reports.

    Murdoch, who took London by storm in the 1960s before moving to New York on his quest to become the world's most powerful media tycoon, has apologized for the scandal. 

    He told a judicial inquiry into press ethics last week that senior staff at his British newspaper publisher had hidden the hacking scandal, saying he had been betrayed by minions. 

    News Corp said in a statement it was carefully reviewing the report, adding that it "fully acknowledges significant wrongdoing at News of the World and apologizes to everyone whose privacy was invaded". 

    Rupert Murdoch tells UK phone-hack inquiry: 'I'm not good at holding my tongue'

    Media regulator Ofcom will take the report's findings into consideration in its continuing assessment of whether BSkyB's owners and directors are "fit and proper" persons to hold a broadcast license.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    403 comments

    It really does not matter when the Murdochs found out about the hacking, they should have known what was going on.

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  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    5:45am, EDT

    Murdoch: Hacking scandal cost 'hundreds of millions'

    Rupert Mudoch told British lawmakers he "failed" and repeatedly apologized about the phone hacking scandal at his tabloid newspaper The News of the World. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By Stephanie Gosk, NBC News, and F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    Updated at 8:05 a.m. ET: Rupert Murdoch on Thursday said he had spent "hundreds of millions of dollars" to clean-up the legal and ethical mess caused by phone-hacking at the now-shuttered News of the World tabloid.

    "I pledged I would clean it up and I did. I have spent hundreds of millions of dollars … We had electronically examined 300 million emails … and anything that was faintly suspicious was passed to the police," he told a public inquiry into media ethics in Britain.


    The News of the World was the top-selling Sunday tabloid that rocked the British establishment after evidence emerged of police corruption and too-cozy links between the press and politicians.

    Murdoch admitted that he had failed to properly oversee the News of the World but deflected charges that he was aware that journalists there were involved with illegal and unethical activities.

    "I also have to say that I failed," he said. "I'm guilty of not having paid enough attention to the News of the World probably throughout all the time that we've owned it."

    Rupert Murdoch returned to the Leveson Inquiry to give evidence for a second day. ITV's Paul Davis reports.

    Murdoch shuttered the 168-year-old tabloid as the scandal spread last year and News International has been hit with over 100 lawsuits over phone hacking and dozens of reporters and media executives have been arrested.

    However, the 81-year-old media mogul said he was "misinformed and shielded" from illegal and unethical activity at the News of the World, and that others were to blame for hiding the extent of the scandal from top editors and executives.

    "I think from within the News of the World, there were one or two very strong characters there who I think had been there many, many, many years and were friends of the journalists, or the person I'm thinking of was a friend of the journalists and a drinking pal and a clever lawyer, and forbade them ... this person forbade people to go and report to (Rebekah) Brooks or to James (Murdoch)."

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    Rupert Murdoch, his wife Wendi Deng and son Lachlan (left) leave their London home on Wednesday.

    Brooks was chief executive of News International, the newspaper's publisher, editor of News of the World and a Murdoch favorite. Rupert Murdoch's son James, who stepped down this month as chairman of broadcaster BSkyB, appeared before the inquiry on Tuesday.

    Rupert Murdoch grilled at UK phone-hack inquiry

    During an exchange with a lawyer acting on behalf of the inquiry, Robert Jay, Murdoch admitted that he "panicked" when the Milly Dowler scandal broke. Revelations that News of the World journalists hacked into the missing 13-year-old's cellphone -- she was later found murdered -- provoked an enormous public outcry.

    The media baron also said the scandals involving the newspaper had hurt his legacy.

    "I think historically this whole business is a serious blot on my reputation," he said.

    Not a puppet master?
    On Wednesday, Murdoch denied charges that his media empire played puppet master to a succession of British prime ministers.

    "I have never asked a prime minister for anything," he said during the hearings into media ethics in London on Wednesday.

    The appearance before a judge by the world's most powerful media mogul has been a defining moment in a scandal that has laid bare collusion between ministers, police and Murdoch's News Corp., reigniting long-held concerns over the close ties between big money, the media and power in Britain. 

     U.S.-based News Corp.'s feet are being held to the fire at the hearings but it isn't the only challenge the company faces. There are three ongoing police investigations, dozens of people have been arrested.  Eleven of those arrested could soon be facing criminal charges.

    News Corp. is worth an estimated $60 billion and owns influential media companies including Fox Television and the Wall Street Journal.

    Meanwhile, the British minister accused of giving Murdoch special access during the media tycoon's bid to increase his hold on Britain's television industry on Wednesday labeled accusations against him as "laughable."

    Jeremy Hunt, the culture minister who was last year tasked with reviewing Murdoch's $12-billion plan to boost his stake in British pay TV operator BSkyB, is under immense pressure to resign after allegations emerged of his close contacts with News Corp.

    While testifying before the Leveson inquiry on media ethics, the media mogul responded to allegations that he had abused his power to influence the British government. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    On Tuesday, Murdoch's media executive son James said Hunt had given News Corp special treatment during talks surrounding the government's decision on whether to allow the TV deal to go ahead.

    "The idea I was backing this bid is laughable," a visibly flustered Hunt told parliament to roars of approval from his own Conservative Party and jeers of derision from the opposition Labour party, which has led calls for him to be sacked.

    The furor is the latest blow to Prime Minister David Cameron's government after a torrid month in which he has lurched from crisis to crisis, garnering an embarrassing slew of negative headlines and raising questions over his leadership.

    Chiara Francavilla, NBC News in London, and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    216 comments

    He sounds like the late Yankee owner George Steinbrenner and Jeff Skilling of Eron fame; "my failure was in entrusting other people." A real take responsibility type of guy. Basically, the buck stops anywhere but here. Corruption is a pervasive condition.

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    Explore related topics: britain, murdoch, inquiry, uk, hacking, featured, stephanie-gosk, phone-hacking, leveson, brinley-bruton
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    4:50am, EDT

    Rupert Murdoch tells UK phone-hack inquiry: 'I'm not good at holding my tongue'

    News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch and his son James are in the hot seat this week at a high-profile public inquiry in the U.K. about phone hacking by News Corp's British newspapers. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com and Stephanie Gosk, NBC News

    Updated 12:31 p.m. ET: LONDON - Rupert Murdoch was grilled at a high-profile public inquiry into media ethics on Wednesday, rejecting charges that he used his powerful British newspapers to influence politicians for the benefit of his business interests.

    He rejected accusations that he used his media empire to play puppet master to a succession of British prime ministers, electrifying a media inquiry that has shaken the government and unnerved much of the establishment. 

    What began with cases of voicemail interception at one of his U.K. tabloid newspapers has turned into a critique of how the British media operates -- and a deep look at the influence Murdochs's corporation, News Corp., has had on the highest echelons of government.


    Prime Minister David Cameron appointed judge Brian Leveson to examine Britain's press standards after journalists at Murdoch's weekly News of the World tabloid admitted hacking into phones on a massive scale to generate exclusives.

    After taking an oath, Murdoch said he was keen to put straight some myths about him. 

    "I have never asked a prime minister for anything," Murdoch said calmly when asked about his links to former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, one of his favorite British leaders. Murdoch also claimed he “never asked Tony Blair for anything” despite meeting that former Prime Minister 40 times in person.

    Some politicians had expected the 81-year-old - courted by prime ministers and presidents for decades - to come out fighting, having been on the back foot for almost a year over a newspaper phone hacking scandal that has convulsed his empire. 

    Leon Neal / AFP - Getty Images

    News Corp chief executive Rupert Murdoch and his wife Wendi Deng leave their London home on Wednesday.

    But Murdoch appeared calm and laconic, at times provoking chuckles from some of the 70 lawyers, family members and journalists packed into the Victorian gothic courtroom when he cracked jokes about the destruction of unions and a disgraced former British minister who lied in court. 

    The man who has for years portrayed himself as an underdog, said he had simply tried to shine a light on the country on the behalf of the working classes. 

    "I think that it is fair when people hold themselves up as iconic figures, or great actors, that they be looked at," he said. "I don't think they are entitled to the same privacy as the ordinary man on the street." 

    But he admitted that his opinion had been carried by newspaper The Sun, one of his favorites for years. "I'm not good at holding my tongue," he said. "If you want to judge my thinking, look at the Sun." 

    'Declare war' on News Corp.?
    He also shed some light on recent British political history, saying that then Prime Minister Gordon Brown had reacted to the news that the Sun newspaper would be withdrawing its support for the Labour party by threatening to "declare war" on News Corp.  "I did not think he was in a very balanced state of mind," Murdoch said. 

    Mr Brown later said Murdoch's claim was "wholly wrong".

    Asked if as reported he had initially found Cameron to be lightweight, Murdoch replied: "No. Not then." He had also not found it strange when Cameron took time out of his own private holiday to meet him on a yacht off a Greek island in 2008. 

    "I've explained that politicians go out of their way to impress people in the press," he said. 

    James Murdoch was at the Leveson inquiry on Tuesday, claiming he didn't know about phone-hacking at News Corp's UK newspapers. ITV's Juliet Bremner reports.

    He played down the influence of his newspapers on the outcome of elections, saying: "It is only natural for politicians to reach out to editors and sometimes proprietors, if they are available, to explain what they are doing and hoping that it makes an impression. But I was only one of several."

    Prosecutor Robert Jay asked: "Are you saying that you are completely oblivious to the impact of election outcomes on your commercial interests? Murdoch replied: "Absolutely. I never let my commercial interests, whatever they are, enter into any consideration of elections."

    Murdoch candidly described one of his own newspapers' most infamous front page headlines as "tasteless". After the Conservatives scraped a narrow win in the 1992 general election, The Sun, which had backed the party, declared: 'IT WAS THE SUN WOT WON IT'. "We don't have that kind of influence," Murdoch insisted, adding that he had been angry with then editor Kelvin McKenzie about the headline.

    He said the notion of his influence over politicians was "a myth", adding: "How I treat Mayor Bloomberg in New York - sends him crazy. But, we support him every time he runs for re-election."

    Rupert Murdoch will give further testimony on Thursday, when he is expected to face questions about phone hacking.

    'Appalled'
    However, in a written submission yesterday he said he was "appalled" to discover that lawyers for his newspaper The Times had misled the inquiry by earlier claiming claiming the title had never been involved in hacking, the Daily Telegraph reported.

    It later emerged a Times reporter had hacked into a policeman’s email account. Murdoch said in his witness statement to the inquiry on Wednesday: “I am appalled that the lawyer misled the court and disappointed that the editor published the story.”

    This is his second public grilling on the issue. The first was before parliament last July, supported by his son James and protected by his wife. This time he was alone -- although his other son, Lachlan, and wife Wendi Deng were watching from a distance in the public gallery.

    Shareholders in News Corp. will be looking very closely at his performance. His task at the inquiry is to defend the world’s second largest media company – and, with it, his own reputation.

    Evidence emerged last July that suggested multiple reporters at News of the World hacked into the voicemails of celebrities, the royal family and even a murdered young girl. Those revelations convulsed Murdoch's media empire and provoked a wave of public anger.

    More than 100 lawsuits have been filed in the U.K., and a lawyer for hacking victims intends says he intends to file three more in the U.S.  Three ongoing criminal cases in Britain have resulted in a series of arrests.

    Leveson Inquiry / AFP - Getty Images

    News Corp executive chairman James Murdoch swearing an oath holding a bible before giving evidence at the Leveson Inquiry into press standards at the High Court in London on Tuesday.

    Critics allege The Sun, endorsed Cameron during the 2010 election in return for support of News Corp’s deal to buy full control of broadcaster BskyB.

    Murdoch was the first newspaper boss to visit Cameron after he won the election -- entering via the back door -- and politicians from all parties have lived in fear for decades of his newspapers and what they might reveal about their personal lives.

    U.S.-based News Corp, owner of Fox Television and the Wall Street Journal, eventually pulled its bid to buy the 61 percent of satellite broadcaster BSkyB that it did not already own amid the intense political and public pressure over phone hacking.

    Opposition politician Chris Bryant, who accepted damages from Murdoch's British newspaper group after the paper admitted hacking his phone, said the media mogul had dominated the political landscape for decades.

    “You have only got to watch Rupert Murdoch's staff with him to see how his air of casual violence intimidates people," he told Reuters. "His presence in the British political scene has similarly intimidated people by offering favor to some and fear to all."

    Murdoch's relations with prime ministers goes back decades: papers released this year showed that he held a secret meeting with then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1981 to secure his acquisition of the Times of London.

    Tony Blair was godfather to one of Murdoch's daughters, Gordon Brown was a personal friend of the Australian-born businessman and Cameron employed as his personal spokesman a former Murdoch editor who was himself implicated in the hacking scandal.

    During a parliamentary hearing last year, memorable for the actions of a protester who hit Murdoch in the face with a foam pie, he sat alongside James and spoke often in monosyllables but on occasion hit the table with his fist in frustration at the line of questioning.

    Chiara Francavilla, NBC News in London, and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    89 comments

    Good for them. They shouldn't just grill the bastard, they should roast him too. The hell with Rupert and his empire of lies manipulation cheating and misinformation. There cannot be enough grilling for the sleaze weasel that Rupert Murdoch is.

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  • 24
    Apr
    2012
    4:28am, EDT

    James Murdoch: Subordinates' 'assurances' on phone hacking 'proved to be wrong'

    James Murdoch was back at the Leveson inquiry, where he claimed he didn't know about phone-hacking at News Corp's U.K. unit,  and didn't remember being told about it. ITV's Juliet Bremner reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    LONDON - James Murdoch defended his record at the head of his father's scandal-tarred British newspaper unit before a U.K. inquiry Tuesday, saying that subordinates prevented him from making a clean sweep at the now-defunct News of the World tabloid. 

    Speaking under oath at Lord Justice Brian Leveson's inquiry into media ethics, Murdoch repeated allegations that the tabloid's then-editor Colin Myler and the company's former in-house lawyer Tom Crone misled him about the scale of illegal behavior at the newspaper. 

    Leveson asked Murdoch: "Can you think of a reason why Mr. Myler or Mr. Crone should keep this information from you? Was your relationship with them such that they may think: 'Well we needn't bother him with that' or 'We better keep it from it because he'll ask to cut out the cancer'?" 


    "That must be it," Murdoch said. "I would say: 'Cut out the cancer,' and there was some desire to not do that." 

    The 39-year-old Murdoch said that at the time he had no reason to doubt his subordinates when he took over at News International, which published the News of the World, saying he had repeatedly been told that nothing was amiss. 

    "I was given assurances by them, which proved to be wrong," he said. 

    Revelations that reporters at the News of the World had hacked into the phones of hundreds of high-profile people, including a teenage murder victim, pushed Murdoch's father Rupert to close the 168-year-old newspaper, triggered three U.K. police investigations, led to more than 100 lawsuits, and launched Leveson's inquiry into media practices. 

    James Murdoch has found himself sucked into the center of scandal, with critics saying that he should have found out about the wrongdoing once he took over at News International in December 2007. 

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    A protestor wearing a mask depicting James Murdoch demonstrates outside London's High Court during his testimony.

    The uproar over illegal behavior at the News of the World has already scuttled Murdoch's multi-billion dollar bid for full control of satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC. He resigned from his post as chairman earlier this month "to avoid being a lightning rod," he said. 

    Murdoch's relationship with politicians also came under scrutiny. 

    The American-born News Corp. executive revealed that he'd told Conservative leader David Cameron that The Sun newspaper would endorse the Tories' election bid at a meeting at the George club in London on Sept. 10, 2009. 

    The top-selling paper's endorsement was a blow to Britain's Labour Party — and critics claim that it helped secure Tory approval for the potentially lucrative BSkyB bid after they won the election in 2010. 

    Murdoch denied the charge Tuesday. 

    "I would never have made that kind of a crass calculation," Murdoch said. "It just wouldn't occur to me." 

    Murdoch acknowledged talking to Cameron about it at a Christmas dinner in 2010 — after the Tory leader had been elected prime minister — but said it was "a tiny side conversation ahead of a dinner." 

    Judge slams Murdoch's Sky News for illegal email hacking

    "It wasn't really a discussion, if you will," Murdoch said. 

    Cameron, who won power two years ago, has been forced to play down his contacts with the Murdochs and with Rebecca Brooks, a neighbor and frequent guest at his home in the countryside.

    Rupert Murdoch, who is still chairman and chief executive of News International's parent company News Corp., is scheduled to appear before the inquiry on Wednesday. 

    U.S.-based News Corp, owner of Fox Television and the Wall Street Journal, was thwarted in its ambition last year to buy the 61 percent of BSkyB, a major British pay-TV provider, that it did not already own. Amid the fire storm of scandal at the News of the World, it withdrew the bid.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    96 comments

    And people actually believe that these arses provide news that's "Fair & Balanced." "Faux & Skewed" is more like it.

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  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    6:35am, EDT

    Criminal charges considered over newspaper phone hacking in UK

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

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Criminal charges against journalists and a police officer are being considered by British prosecutors after an investigation into alleged phone hacking by reporters at tabloid newspapers, it was reported Wednesday.

    The Crown Prosecution Service said police had handed it files on four cases, which include allegations that a reporter paid a police officer for information and that another attempted to pervert the course of justice, BBC News reported.


    The cases also include allegations of misconduct in a public office, witness intimidation and harassment. 

    Four journalists, one police officer and six others are reportedly involved. They have not been named and it is not clear if any are employees of the British subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

    The BBC said prosecutors had made a statement saying they would not disclose the identities of those involved, or give any estimate on when they might reach decisions in the cases.

    Phone hacking lawsuits to be filed in US courts

    On Friday it emerged that lawsuits over alleged phone hacking by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation are to be filed in U.S. courts for the first time.

    Mark Lewis, the lawyer who has been at the forefront of efforts to expose phone hacking at newspapers, expects to file civil lawsuits on behalf of three alleged victims.

    Timeline: Key developments in phone hacking scandal

    Earlier this year, former News Corp chief executive and News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks and her husband Charlie Brooks, a close friend of British Prime Minister David Cameron, were arrested as part of the hacking investigation. They were later released.

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    • Japanese island man lives as naked hermit

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    5 comments

    If corporations are people too. Then they need to start putting them in jail for crimes that they do. Not the scapegoats either. The owners and managers also.

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