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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    10:19am, EST

    First cop jailed in probe into ethics at Murdoch tabloid

    Alastair Grant / AP, file

    Detective Chief Inspector April Casburn of the London Metropolitan Police was jailed for offering to sell Rupert Murdoch's now-defunct News of the World information about an investigation into phone hacking.

    By Michael Holden, Reuters

    LONDON -- A senior British counterterrorism police officer was jailed on Friday after becoming the first person to be convicted following a massive police investigation into alleged phone-hacking centered on Rupert Murdoch's British newspapers.

    Detective Chief Inspector April Casburn, 53, was jailed for 15 months for misconduct in a public office after she was found guilty last month of offering to sell details about the phone-hacking inquiry to Murdoch's now-defunct News of the World tabloid.

    "It was ... a corrupt attempt to make money out of sensitive and potentially very damaging information," said Justice Adrian Fulford.

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



    Casburn called the News of the World on Sept. 11, 2010, when police were in the early stages of examining claims that journalists from the paper had illegally accessed the voicemails of mobile phones in a bid to find stories.

    Prosecutors said she phoned asking for money in an attempt to undermine the investigation because of her perception that she had been wronged and sidelined by police colleagues.

    She denied asking for payment and said her intention was to raise the alarm over what she viewed as a waste of counterterrorism resources on hacking, when they should have been concentrating on preventing attacks in the run-up to the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

    Casburn, head of a counterterrorism financial investigations unit at the time, testified that she had been incensed by the attitude of senior officers, who regarded the hacking probe as "a bit of a jolly" and a chance to interview celebrity hacking victims such as the actress Sienna Miller.

    The judge, however, said her actions could not be described as those of a whistle-blower, adding that if she were not in the process of adopting a child, he would have jailed her for three years.

    "If the News of the World had accepted her offer, it's clear, in my view, that Ms Casburn would have taken the money and, as a result, she posed a significant threat to the integrity of this important police investigation," Fulford said.

    Detectives are now not only investigating these allegations, but also whether journalists paid cash to public officials, including police officers, for information.

    Casburn is the first person to be convicted in a scandal that escalated into a much wider crisis embroiling the top echelons of the British establishment, media, and police, and led to Murdoch closing down the News of the World in July 2011.

    Related:

    Judgment day looms for Murdoch, Morgan, UK press

    Murdoch papers, UK media condemned in report

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    10 comments

    I agree with tracontech. The guys & gals at the top are the reason this culture exists in News corp. We go after the peons because they don't have the money to defend themselves. Meanwhile Rupert and his minions are laughing their buts off all the way to the bank...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, featured, news-international, detective-arrested, phone-hacking
  • 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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    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
  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    5:04am, EST

    Key US lawmaker watching as Rupert Murdoch, UK press brace for phone-hacking report

    Senior British judge Brian Leveson is set to release the findings of his yearlong inquiry into phone-hacking and media ethics by newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others.

    By Keir Simmons and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Updated at 8:15 a.m. ET: LONDON — The chairman of the Senate commerce committee signaled he will be paying close attention to the findings of a U.K. report into phone-hacking and media ethics by newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others, amid concern U.S. laws may have been broken.

    Senator Jay Rockefeller called on investigators in the U.K. to hold media companies accountable for their "deplorable conduct," ahead of the release of a report by the year-long Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practice and ethics of the press Thursday.


    It is expected to be "excoriating" about the wrongdoing of journalists.

    Numerous celebrities — including actor Hugh Grant and Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling — told the inquiry how they had been harassed, bullied, and traumatized by the press.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    But ordinary people, such as Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old girl who was abducted and murdered in 2002, were also subjected to invasion of privacy in the most shocking of circumstances.

    It emerged that while she was missing, employees of Rupert Murdoch's News of the World tabloid hacked into her telephone. Outrage over this case prompted Murdoch to shut down the tabloid and led U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron to commission the Leveson Inquiry.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images, file

    Rupert Murdoch is driven from The Royal Courts of Justice after giving evidence to The Leveson Inquiry on April 26.

    Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, who was later hired as Cameron's chief media adviser, and Rebekah Brooks, the former CEO of News Corporation’s U.K. arm 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.

    This probe has raised the specter of possible charges in the U.S. under the 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, whose anti-bribery provisions could ensnare executives if it is proved that payoffs were made to people such as British police officers.

    'Deeply concerned'
    Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, said in an emailed statement sent to NBC News that he feared that illegal journalistic practices may have been used on U.S. citizens.

    He said he hoped Leveson’s report and other investigations would "continue to clear the air" and 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.

    "I remain deeply concerned that these companies may have violated U.S. laws and injured U.S. citizens," he added.

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

    The Leveson report could have implications for CNN’s Piers Morgan, who was previously editor of the News of the World and the Mirror newspapers.

    In a 2006 article in the Daily Mail tabloid, Morgan said he was played a message left by former Beatle Paul McCartney on the phone of his then wife Heather Mills. Mills has said there's no way Morgan could have obtained the message honestly.

    At the Leveson Inquiry, Morgan refused to reveal how he was able to listen to the message, saying this would compromise a source.

    Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images, file

    CNN host Piers Morgan arrives at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in West Hollywood, California, in February. He previously was editor of two tabloid newspapers in the U.K.

    There have been calls from several victims of press intrusion for the government to regulate the media, an idea some have likened to state censorship in countries like China.

    Fear for free speech
    After retired teacher Christopher Jefferies, 67, of Bristol, was wrongly arrested for the murder of a young woman renting an apartment he owned, his character was picked over and savaged in the press and he later won substantial damages for defamation from eight newspapers.

    He told ITV News that the government had to introduce some form of statutory regulation of the press.

    UK PM's ex-aide, Murdoch protege face charges in phone-hacking scandal

    "I'm sure that I and many other people will continue to feel extremely angry unless the sort of action which I have been suggesting needs to be taken, is taken," he said.

    However, more than 80 politicians from all three main parties in the U.K. signed a letter published in the Guardian and Telegraph newspapers warning Cameron against state control of the media.

    "We believe in free speech and are opposed to the imposition of any form of statutory control," they wrote.

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

    Former News of the World journalist Tom Latham told ITV News that newspapers were already not running stories in the public interest in the wake of the Leveson Inquiry.

    "If you cede anything to the government it's a slippery slope and then you start to lose control of the freedom of the press,” he said.

    Prosecutors have filed criminal charges against former News of the World editor Andy Coulson and former News International executive Rebekah Brooks for their alleged involvement in Britain's phone-hacking scandal. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports from London.

    But, given the paper’s history, Leveson may be more sympathetic to the complaints of people like Hugh Grant.

    He has revealed that details of hospital visits he made were leaked to the press, his garbage was rifled through, his ex-girlfriend and his infant daughter harassed.

    Grant said articles in The Sun and the Daily Express about his visit to a hospital emergency room was a gross intrusion of privacy.

    "I think no one would expect their medical records to be made public or to be appropriated by newspapers for commercial profit," the actor said. "That is fundamental to our British sense of decency."

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

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    288 comments

    Makes you wonder how many criminal actions murdoch has done in the U.S.A.. Australia doesn't want him back,England has had their fill of him. When it comes to light of all the crimes he is responsible for in the U.S.,maybe some judge or official will grow a pair and prosecute the old ba$tard. Hell,h …

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    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, david-cameron, uk, ian-johnston, keir-simmons, leveson-inquiry
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    5:59am, EDT

    UK PM's ex-aide, Murdoch protege face charges in phone-hacking scandal

    Facundo Arrizabalaga / EPA, file

    Andy Coulson, one-time communications director for Prime Minister David Cameron and former editor of News of the World, is among those who face charges in the British phone-hacking scandal. He is shown here on May 10.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated at 11:55 a.m. ET: LONDON -- British authorities on Tuesday charged an ex-aide to the British prime minister, a former protege of media mogul Rupert Murdoch and six others in the ever-widening phone-hacking scandal. Prosecutors accused those charged of key roles in a lengthy campaign of illegal espionage that victimized hundreds, including top celebrities Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt.

    The announcement was a major development in a saga that has transfixed and at times horrified Britons and one that shows no signs of ending. A senior police official told The Associated Press earlier this week that her force was investigating more than 100 claims including computer hacking and illegal access to medical records stemming from the scandal.


    Prosecutors said Tuesday that Andy Coulson, Cameron's communications director for four years until 2011, and Rebekah Brooks, who oversaw Murdoch's News International, would face charges of conspiracy to intercept communications.

    The alleged offenses were committed between 2000 and 2006 when both served as editor of the News of the World, the salacious Sunday tabloid that Murdoch was forced to close a year ago amid public disgust at the phone-hacking revelations.

    Among the alleged victims were two former British home secretaries, former England soccer manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, Hollywood stars Jolie and Pitt, former Beatle Paul McCartney and a minor member of the royal family, Lord Frederick Windsor, the son of Prince and Princess Michael of Kent.

    Brooks and Coulson are also both accused of involvement in hacking the telephone of Milly Dowler, a missing teenage girl who was later found murdered in 2002.

    Coulson: 'I will fight these allegations'
    It was the revelation that News of the World journalists had hacked her phone that triggered a furor that engulfed Murdoch's News International and ultimately led to the closure of the 168-year-old tabloid.

    "I am extremely disappointed by the [prosecutors'] decision today. I will fight these allegations when they eventually get to court,” Coulson said in a statement quoted by Britain's The Guardian newspaper.

    "I would like to say one thing today about the Milly Dowler allegation. Anyone who knows me, or who worked with me, would know that I wouldn't, and more importantly that I didn't, do anything to damage the Milly Dowler investigation," the statement said.

    Brooks sounded a defiant tone.

    "I am not guilty of these charges," she said in a statement. "I did not authorize, nor was I aware of, phone hacking under my editorship.

    "The charge concerning Milly Dowler is particularly upsetting not only as it is untrue but also because I have spent my journalistic career campaigning for victims of crime. I will vigorously defend these allegations," her statement said.

    Others being charged are senior tabloid journalists Stuart Kuttner, Greg Miskiw, Neville Thurlbeck, James Weatherup and Ian Edmondson.

    Also being charged is private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, whose extensive notes have been at the center of the scandal since it was first unearthed.

    External link: Read the phone charges in full here

    The maximum sentence for the phone-hacking charges is two years in prison or a fine -- or both.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    'Astonishing development'
    The development is particularly embarrassing for Cameron because Coulson was also charged with hacking the phones of David Blunkett and Charles Clarke, two former home secretaries from the now-opposition Labour Party. The home secretary is Britain’s top law enforcement official, roughly akin to an American attorney general.

    "That is an astonishing development and I think that is almost inevitably going to rebound on Cameron," Steven Barnett, professor of communications at Westminster University, said. "That is going to pose some very, very awkward questions for the prime minister."

    Alison Levitt, Principal Legal Adviser to the Director of Public Prosecutions, said she had concluded there was sufficient evidence to charge the eight suspects with 19 offenses over the illegal accessing of voicemails on the cellphones belonging to politicians, celebrities and sports figures.

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

    News International had for years denied that phone hacking was widespread after the tabloid's former royal reporter and private detective were jailed in 2007 for the crime.

    Poor judgment?
    Coulson resigned in the aftermath, and took up the role as director of communications of Cameron's Conservative Party, helping to shape his campaign to become prime minister.

    Neil Hall / Reuters, file

    Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks, shown leaving London's Southwark Crown Court on June 22, will face charges in the phone-hacking scandal

    Critics say Cameron appointed Coulson in order to secure the backing of the journalist's former boss, Murdoch, and say the appointment showed a shocking lack of judgment.

    Complete UK news coverage on NBCNews.com

    The involvement of Coulson and Brooks -- a close friend of Cameron’s -- turned the long-running hacking story into a national political scandal that has laid bare the collusion between senior politicians, the police and the media.

    Brooks, her husband and her personal staff have already been charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice over the hacking case, while Coulson has been charged in Scotland with perjury after he denied in an unrelated court case any knowledge of phone hacking.

    Brooks, wooed by a string of politicians and prime ministers first in her role as editor of the News of the World and Sun tabloid, and then as the head of Murdoch's British newspaper arm News International, was one of the most powerful women in Britain, instantly recognizable by her long, curly red hair.

    She was also close to Cameron, socializing with him over Christmas breaks, and both were embarrassed earlier this year when an inquiry into media ethics read out text messages sent between the two.

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

    Cameron used to sign his frequent text messages to Brooks with an affectionate "LOL", which he thought stood for "lots of love."

    Damaging, but not fatal, to Cameron's political fortunes
    Paul Farrelly, an opposition Labour lawmaker who questioned Rupert Murdoch and his son James as part of a parliamentary committee investigation into the hacking, said Tuesday's developments were damaging, but not fatal, for Cameron.

    "My view is that what happens to Andy Coulson and Rebekah Brooks reflects on David Cameron's judgment in both the appointment of Coulson and in being seen to be so close to a certain newspaper empire," he said.

    "Because it's been going on so long, it's in no way fatal to his premiership. What is more important to the survival of his premiership and the coalition is the economy," Farrelly added.

    NBC News correspondent Duncan Golestani, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    34 comments

    Would Murdock's Faux News do such vile things? You 'betcha! Does Faux News have a partisan bias? You betcha! Does Faux News make up and spread lies and vile innuendo? You betcha.

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    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, news-corp, david-cameron, featured, news-of-the-world, news-international, andy-coulson, phone-hacking, rebekah-brooks
  • 11
    Jun
    2012
    11:06am, EDT

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

    Tom Stoddart / Getty Images Contributor, file

    Media mogul Rupert Murdoch talks with Gordon Brown at a party in 2007 as Murdoch's wife Wendi, left, looks on.

    By msnbc.com news services

    LONDON -- Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown accused media tycoon Rupert Murdoch on Monday of misleading a government-sponsored inquiry into press ethics with incorrect testimony alleging Brown had threatened war against Murdoch's company.

    "This conversation never took place. I am shocked and surprised that it should be suggested," Brown told the Leveson inquiry. "This call did not happen. The threat was not made."

    "I find it shocking," Brown said. "This did not happen. There is no evidence that it happened other than Mr Murdoch's, but it didn't happen."


    Murdoch had told the inquiry under oath that Brown phoned him in September 2009 after the Sun newspaper started supporting the Conservative Party. Brown vowed to wage war on Murdoch's company in revenge, he testified.

    "We were talking more quietly than you or I are now -- he said, 'Well, your company has declared war on my government and we have no alternative but to make war on your company,'" Murdoch told the inquiry in April.

    When pressed on how a serving prime minister could make such a threat, Murdoch told the inquiry: "I don't think he was in a very balanced state of mind."

    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.

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

    Brown, who served as prime minister from 2007 to 2010, said that Murdoch was wrong about both the date and the contents of the phone call. A spokeswoman for News Corp declined immediate comment.

    Statements submitted to a media watchdog by five of Brown's advisers, and seen by Reuters, show none of the five heard Brown threaten Murdoch on the call.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Aides to Brown, including his special adviser, director of strategy and deputy chief of staff, said in statements submitted to the Press Complaints Commission last year that Brown made no such threat on the call, which took place in November not September as Murdoch had said.

    "I listened to the phone call between Mr Brown and Mr. Murdoch in November 2009," Stewart Wood, special adviser to the prime minister's office, said in a statement dated October 2011 that Reuters has seen.

    "At no point in the conversation was threatening language of any sort used by either Mr Brown or Mr Murdoch," Wood said.

    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.

    In one of the other corroborating statement, lawmaker Michael Dugher, wrote: "At no time did Mr Brown threaten the position of News International. Both Mr. Brown and Mr. Murdoch were entirely courteous and calm."

    A former British leader accusing Murdoch of misleading the inquiry under oath will further tarnish the reputation of the world's most powerful media tycoon in a country which is home to some of his biggest newspaper and broadcasting interests.

    A British parliamentary committee which investigated allegations of illegal phone-hacking by Murdoch publications has already deemed the Australian-born tycoon unfit to manage a major global company.

    The cross-party parliamentary committee said in May that Murdoch was ultimately responsible for the illegal phone-hacking that has corroded his global media empire and convulsed Britain's political elite.

    The scandal erupted after revelations that reporters at Murdoch's News of the World tabloid routinely hacked voicemails. It has since spread to involve a range of other offenses and ensnared dozens of journalists, politicians, police officials and other public figures. 

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

    Brown also challenged a version of events given by Murdoch's lieutenant, Rebekah Brooks, about a Sun report that Brown's four-month-old son Fraser had been diagnosed with cystic fibrosis.

    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. 

    Brooks, a close Murdoch confidante who was charged last month with interfering with a police investigation into the phone-hacking scandal, told the inquiry the Browns had given their backing to the story.

    "I have never sought to bring my children into the public domain," Brown said. He denied his consent had been given to publish the story.

    "I find it sad that even now in 2012 members of the News International staff are coming to this inquiry and maintaining this fiction."

    Medical records hacked?
    The former prime minister has questioned whether the paper had hacked into his son's medical records to get the story. Brooks has denied this and Murdoch has said the story was broken when a father of another child tipped off the newspaper.

    "A father from the hospital in a similar position had called us, told us," Murdoch said in his testimony.

    'War criminal': UK ex-PM Tony Blair heckled during inquiry into Murdoch scandal

    But Brown told the inquiry that the National Health Service in Fife had apologized to his family because information about his son came from NHS staff.

    "There were only a few medical people who knew that our son had this condition," Brown said.

    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.

    He said the NHS in Fife "now believe it highly likely that there was unauthorized information given by a medical or working member of the NHS staff that allowed the Sun through this middle man to publish this story," Brown said.

    The Sun ran a story in July 2011 under the headline "Brown Wrong" which said the source of the story was a "shattered dad" who had a son with the genetic disorder and that Brown's wife, Sarah, had given the newspaper consent to run the story.

    Brooks said on May 11 at the inquiry that a donation was made to the cystic fibrosis charity at the request of the man.

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

    But Reuters has seen a copy of a letter from the chief executive of the Cystic Fibrosis Trust, Ed Owen, saying the Trust found no record of any donation by The Sun or News International at the time of the story.

    The Sun newspaper also reported that its readers had helped Cystic Fibrosis Trust double its donations in the wake of their story about Fraser. But the letter from the Cystic Fibrosis Trust showed they had seen no significant increase in donations.

    Regardless of who the source was, the subject of a front-page story detailing the serious illness of a four-month baby is likely to prove unedifying and garner sympathy for Brown, who has rarely appeared in public since he left office in 2010.

    'Pyjama party'
    Murdoch described a relationship with Brown - whose political career effectively ended when he lost an election to incumbent Prime Minister David Cameron in 2010 - that included meals which their wives attended and conversations on topics ranging from charity to the war in Afghanistan.

    Brooks told the Leveson inquiry she formed a friendship with Sarah Brown and that they had had a "pyjama party" at the prime minister's official country residence, Chequers, with Murdoch's daughter, Elisabeth, and his wife, Wendi.

    But Murdoch said their relationship worsened after his media companies opposed Brown ahead of the 2010 election.

    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.

    Brown told parliament in 2011 that News International was part of a "criminal-media-nexus" that had broken the law on an industrial scale.

    Cameron is due to give evidence in a day-long session on Thursday.

    Charlie Beckett, director of the POLIS media institute at the London School of Economics, said Cameron's judgment is likely to come under scrutiny, but warned those who expect the leader to be humbled are likely to be disappointed.

    "It's difficult to see what the killer questions are. As the politicians have given evidence the inquiry's tone hasn't had that same feel of a trial, as it did when journalists were being questioned," he said.

    The inquiry, which opened in September, has seen reporters and editors intensely grilled on media practices.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    34 comments

    Hmm ... Murdoch lying? This is not surprising from a man whose US cable entertainment company LIES on air about all sorts of things. Maybe a much deeper inquiry is called for in THIS country into this man and his media empire here.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: london, rupert-murdoch, uk, gordon-brown, featured, leveson-inquiry
  • 28
    May
    2012
    4:46am, EDT

    'War criminal': UK ex-PM Tony Blair heckled during inquiry into Murdoch scandal

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair was accused of being "a war criminal" by a heckler who burst into a courtroom as he testified at an U.K. inquiry into media ethics on Monday.

    By NBC News' Baruch Ben-Chorin and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson

    Updated at 10:49 a.m. ET: LONDON - Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair was accused of being "a war criminal" by a heckler who burst into a courtroom as he testifed at an U.K. inquiry into media ethics on Monday. 

    The protester, who gave his name as David Lawley-Wakelin, shouted that Blair should be arrested -- but only seconds later he was bundled away by security staff.


    He yelled at Blair, who is a $2.5-million-a-year adviser to U.S. investment bank JP Morgan: "This man should be arrested for war crimes. JP Morgan paid him off for the Iraq war, three months after he invaded Iraq." 

    In response to the outburst, Blair said: "Can I just say on the record what he said about Iraq and JP Morgan is completely and totally untrue. I have never had a discussion with them about that."

    Lawley-Wakelin describes himself online as a documentary film-maker working on a project called the "The Alternative Iraq Enquiry", for which he has traveled to Iraq.

    ITV News reported he was being questioned by police, but later released.

    Sky News reported that an investigation was immediately launched into how he entered the secure area of the court - an embarrassing breach of security less than a year after Rupert Murdoch was hit by a custard pie at a inquiry into the same subject at Britain's parliament.

    Prior to the interruption, Blair was facing questions about his relationship with Murdoch.

    Blair, who served as prime minister between 1997 and 2007, was the latest senior politician to appear at the investigation set up last year in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal when it emerged that reporters at the Murdoch-owned News of the World tabloid had routinely hacked into the phones of public figures. Other witnesses have included actor Hugh Grant, as well as Murdoch and his son James.

    More coverage from Britain's ITV News

    Blair is godfather to one of the powerful News Corp. chairman and CEO.'s children.

    Ordered by Prime Minister David Cameron, the inquiry has tarnished Britain's elite by laying bare the collusion between politicians, the police and the media.

    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.

    While Blair is no longer active in British politics, the inquiry may still prove uncomfortable as it examines issues such as his decision after stepping down as prime minister to become a godfather to Murdoch's daughter Grace at a ceremony on the banks of the River Jordan.

    "Blair led the way in having no shame about courting Murdoch," said Ivor Gaber, professor of political journalism at City University. "He set the style and the standard and if you regard Cameron as the 'heir to Blair' then it's not exactly surprising that he followed suit."

    The BBC reported that, giving evidence earlier in May, one of Mr Blair's former Cabinet ministers told the inquiry he felt the relationship had "arguably" become "closer than wise".

    Murdoch told the inquiry last month that he had never asked a prime minister for anything.

    Blair set the tone for his relationship with Britain's press when he flew to Australia in 1995 to speak before a gathering of Murdoch's executives who had previously used their British tabloids to vilify his Labour Party predecessors.

    'Into the lion's den'
    The decision infuriated much of his left-of-center party who saw the Australian-born tycoon as a right-winger who had helped to keep them out of power for years.

    "People would be horrified," Blair said later in his autobiography. "On the other hand ... not to go was to say 'carry on and do your worst,' and we knew their worst was very bad indeed."

    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 country's most powerful newspaper proprietor, whose publications have hitherto been rancorous in their opposition to the Labour party, invites us into the lion's den. You go, don't you?"

    With the backing of Murdoch's top-selling Sun tabloid, Blair swept to power in 1997 and again in 2001 and 2005. But with an ever-increasing reputation for public relations "spin", he started to face questions over his sincerity.

    "Tony Blair quickly became famous in Fleet Street for inviting in one group of newspaper people and telling them how skeptical he was about Europe; and then inviting in another lot and telling them how keen he was on Europe," Andrew Marr, a senior BBC journalist, told the inquiry.

    May 1: 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. 

    "But the different groups compared notes, and his reputation was not hugely enhanced."

    Much of that came to a head when Blair and then President George W. Bush agreed to invade Iraq, going against the public opinion in Britain.

    Blair is likely to be asked why he spoke to Murdoch three times in the days leading up to the Iraq war and whether this had any impact on the fact that all Murdoch's papers supported the unpopular invasion.

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

    He will also be asked whether his reliance on Britain's press meant that he did not properly scrutinize their role in society and whether any group, such as Murdoch's UK arm, News International, had too much control of the market.

    "There was a desperation to get the Sun onside and to get News International on side, basically at all costs," Liverpool University's political professor Jonathan Tonge, told Reuters. "And if that meant sacrificing a serious analysis of the relationship and the health of the relationship, then so be it." 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    558 comments

    who do you expect this mass murdering,serial killing psychopath to associate with

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  • 23
    Apr
    2012
    3:49pm, EDT

    Judge slams Murdoch's Sky News for illegal email hacking

    The head of Britain's Sky News has admitted that one of his reporters broke the law by illegally hacking into email accounts.Editors sanctioned the move because they believed it was in the public interest. ITV's Sejal Karia reports.

    By Reuters

    LONDON -- The judge presiding over an inquiry into British press standards on Monday rebuked the head of Sky News, the influential news channel of Rupert Murdoch-controlled BSkyB, for breaking the law by hacking into emails to generate a story. 

    Prime Minister David Cameron ordered judge Brian Leveson to examine standards after Murdoch's now-defunct News of the World tabloid admitted hacking thousands of phones to produce ever-more salacious stories.  


    BSkyB, the highly profitable satellite broadcaster 39-percent owned by Murdoch, had previously avoided any fallout from the hacking scandal, but its admission this month that it accessed private emails for a story in 2008 on insurance fraud risked dragging the company into the frame. 

    John Ryley, the head of Sky News, has defended the channel's actions and said it was acting in the public interest, but Leveson appeared annoyed as Ryley and a barrister in the inquiry discussed whether the action broke the U.K.'s broadcasting code, run by the Ofcom watchdog body. 

    'Breaching the criminal law'
    Ryley had just taken the oath at the high-profile media inquiry and had started to explain the 2008 email hacking when Leveson interjected. 

    "What you were doing wasn't merely invading somebody's privacy, it was breaching the criminal law," Leveson said to Ryley. 

    "It was," Ryley replied after a pause. 

    "Well, where does the Ofcom broadcasting code give any authority to a breach of the criminal law?" Leveson asked. 

    "It doesn't," Ryley replied. 

    Will BSkyB lose its broadcast license? Discussing hacking "in the public interest", with Martin Dunn, former New York Daily News editor-in-chief.

     

    Ofcom said earlier on Monday it had launched its own investigation into Sky News over the email hacking admission. Sky said it passed information onto the police that helped to secure a criminal conviction. 

    "Ofcom is investigating the fairness and privacy issues raised by Sky News' statement that it had accessed without prior authorization private email accounts during the course of its news investigations," an Ofcom spokesman said. "We will make the outcome known in due course." 

    The story involved was the bizarre case of the so-called "canoe man," who faked his own death after paddling out to sea. Sky News said the information it found was given to police and helped to secure the conviction of the man's wife over an insurance fraud. 

    Criminal charges considered over newspaper phone hacking in UK

    Ofcom is already looking closely at parent company BSkyB as to whether its owners and directors are fit to own a broadcast license in light of the problems at the newspaper division. 

     Phone-hacking lawsuits to be filed in US courts

    Ryley also apologized for an earlier statement made to the Leveson inquiry asserting that no Sky journalists had intercepted communications, but, at the end of the 80-minute hearing, he was given the chance to state that Sky News was entirely separate from the newspaper division of News Corp. 

    "Our journalistic endeavors, our journalistic activities, our management structures are very separate," he said. 

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    5 comments

    Daddy and son need to be in prison. This sad empire is crumbling.

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  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    7:41am, EDT

    Ex-tabloid editor and friend of UK PM arrested in phone-hacking investigation

    Former chief executive of News International, Rebekah Brooks, has been arrested for a second time by police investigating allegations of illegal phone hacking. ITN's Neil Connery reports.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    LONDON -- 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 Tuesday in a wide-ranging investigation into phone hacking in the British media, NBC News reported.

    A total of six people were arrested in the early morning on suspicion of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, British police said in a statement. The charge is an indication that investigators may be focusing on a possible attempted coverup of the scope of phone hacking.


    The Metropolitan Police said five men and a woman were arrested in various locations in London and surrounding countryside in a series of raids conducted between 5 a.m. (1 a.m. ET) and 7 a.m. (3 a.m. ET) Tuesday. Police said searches of the premises are ongoing.

     

    The investigation stems from widespread wrongdoing at Rupert Murdoch's now-closed News of the World tabloid. The victims have ranged from celebrities and major politicians to the families of crime victims.

    Tabloid editor got free horse from UK police

    Police, who did not release any names, said a 43-year-old woman was arrested at her home in Oxfordshire and she was being questioned by police there. Also arrested were a 49-year-old man in Oxfordshire, a 39-year-old man in Hampshire, a 46-year-old man in West London, a 38-year-old man in Hertforshire and a 48-year-old man in East London.

    It emerged recently that Rebekah Brooks got a free horse from the U.K. police, and that this horse was subsequently ridden by Cameron. Police are also investigating allegations of illegal payments made by some British newspapers to police officers.

    News Corp executive James Murdoch is back in front of British lawmakers to answer tough questions regarding his knowledge of a phone hacking scandal involving the News of the World tabloid.

    Rebekah Brooks was previously arrested in July 2011 at her apartment block in an exclusive area of Chelsea, West London, on suspicion of phone hacking and corruption.

    Her husband Charlie, a former race horse trainer, reportedly tried to reclaim a computer, paperwork and a phone from a trash can outside the apartment block, saying they were his. But detectives removed the items for investigation, NBC reported.

    According to a count by the BBC, the total number of arrests made in the Operation Weeting phone-hacking inquiry is 45.

    Cash settlements
    A judge-led inquiry into media ethics has heard extensive testimony about wrongdoing by tabloid journalists, and Murdoch's company has reached cash settlements with a number of victims.

    There is also a simultaneous investigation into corrupt relations between the police and the press which has yielded a number of arrests in recent weeks.

    James Murdoch insists he didn't mislead British lawmakers

    An inquiry panel appointed by Prime Minister David Cameron is trying to determine why an initial police investigation into phone hacking in 2006 failed to reveal the scope of the problem.

    At the time, Murdoch's executives claimed the wrongdoing was limited to one scurrilous reporter and an unprincipled private detective, both of whom were jailed.

    Journalist: CNN star Piers Morgan must have known about tabloid phone hacking

    The dormant police investigation was reopened last year after reporters were found to have hacked into the voicemail of a missing schoolgirl who was later found to have been murdered.

    That investigation led to the resignation of Cameron's top media adviser, Andy Coulson, who had been the editor of the News of the World. Like Rebekah Brooks, Coulson has denied wrongdoing.

    NBC News Correspondent Jim Maceda shares details from the testimony.

    Murdoch's company has reached cash settlements with various hacking victims, including actress Sienna Miller and singer Charlotte Church, but many new cases are being brought against News International, the U.K. newspaper branch of Murdoch's global media empire.

    The scandal also scuttled Murdoch's plans to purchase full control of the British broadcaster BSkyB.

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    NBC News correspondent Keir Simmons and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    26 comments

    I think Rupert Murdoch has proved to the World that he cannot operate his media empire responsibly without a leash!

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    Explore related topics: britain, europe, arrest, rupert-murdoch, uk, featured, news-of-the-world, charlie-brooks, phone-hacking, rebekah-brooks

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