Former British tabloid editor Rebekah Brooks was cleared in a London
court on Tuesday June 24,2014 of all charges related to a phone-hacking case that raised serious
questions about the news-gathering conduct of journalists working for
the media empire of Rupert Murdoch.
Andy Coulson, her former
colleague and an former tabloid editor himself, was found guilty of one
charge of conspiring to hack phones. Coulson was previously British
Prime Minister David Cameron's communications chief.
Both had denied any involvement in taking part or authorizing phone
hacking — an illegal activity that involves listening in on voice mails —
while working at the Murdoch-owned
News of the World and
Sun tabloids.
Dozens of journalists and officials have been arrested and questioned as part of the probe, and the trial has been going on since Oct 2013
The prosecution and defense both accepted that phones were hacked on a
large scale and News U.K., the publisher of the-now disbanded
News of the World, admitted that wrongdoing had occurred and has been paying victims compensation
Andy Coulson and 5 others are
facing prison for their roles in what prosecutors called a ‘pervasive’
culture of phone hacking at the News of the World.They each face a maximum sentence of two years for the phone hacking.
Under Andy Coulson’s editorship, the phone messages of actors, celebrities, and
politicians were intercepted on ‘an industrial scale’. Police
identified 4,000 possible victims.
The
phone hacking scandal began to unravel in 2007, when royal reporter Clive
Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were jailed for
intercepting the voicemails of members of the Royal Household.
At the start of this trial in Oct 2013 ,the scale of
the hacking plot became clear when the Old Bailey was told that 3
former news editors at the newspaper were among 5 men who pleaded
guilty to their part in the hacking plot.
Senior executives Greg Miskiw(64),Neville Thurlbeck( 52) and
James Weatherup(58) all admitted playing a
part in a six-year campaign of phone hacking which targeted politicians,
pop stars and members of the Royal Family.
Mulcaire(43) who was paid £100,000 a year by the paper to arrange the hacking,
admitted intercepting the voicemails of murdered schoolgirl Milly
Dowler, among a host of other victims.
Reporter Dan
Evans, who appeared as a witness for the prosecution in the hacking
trial, confessed to hacking Sienna Miller’s messages on actor Daniel
Craig’s phone.
He has
admitted conspiracy to hack phones at the Sunday Mirror between February
2003 and January 2005, and the same offence at the News of the World
between April 2004 and June 2010.
He also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office and perverting the course of justice.
They will be sentenced alongside Andy Coulson after he was found guilty of conspiring to hack phones.
News UK – the British newspaper
publishing arm of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire – said it had put in
place measures to ensure that the wrongdoing at the News of the World
could not happen again.
The jury heard that phone hacking was
so widespread at the News of the World that senior journalists even used
a special hotline for ‘do-it-yourself hacking’ and targeted rival
journalists.
Celebrities
who were hacked include Sir Paul McCartney and his then wife Heather
Mills, as well as Jude Law and Miller, his girlfriend at the time.
Kate Moss, Will Young and Joanna Lumley were targeted too.
Note
News Corp closed the News of the World
tabloid in 2011 amid a public uproar following disclosures that
journalists at the paper back in 2002, had hacked the phone of British
teenager
Milly Dowler,
who was later found murdered.
The resulting public and
political outrage led to the closure of the 168-year-old paper and the
setting up of a public inquiry to examine journalistic ethics.
The
incident revived a police investigation of tabloid-newspaper tactics,
including not only allegations of phone hacking but also bribing
officials in the pursuit of scoops.
Tuesday June 24,2014 verdicts came
three years after it was revealed that journalists on News of the World
hacked the phone of then-missing teenager Milly Dowler in 2002, raising
hopes that she was alive and checking messages, when in fact she had
been murdered.
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