December 22, 2024

2nd Newspaper Group Faces Inquiry in British Hacking Scandal

“The group does not accept wrongdoing within its business and takes these allegations seriously,” Trinity Mirror, which also publishes the left-leaning Daily Mirror tabloid and Sunday People, said in a statement. “It is too soon to know how these matters will progress and further updates will be made if there are any significant developments.”

The hacking scandal has largely embroiled British newspapers in Rupert Murdoch’s empire. In July 2011, Mr. Murdoch closed The News of the World, a tabloid, after disclosures that its staff had hacked into the cellphone messages of a teenager, Milly Dowler, who had been abducted and was later found murdered.

Two former editors and several ex-employees of Mr. Murdoch’s British newspaper subsidiary have been formally arraigned on charges relating to the scandal pending trials expected to start later in the year. All have denied wrongdoing.

In March, the police said that four Mirror group journalists had been arrested in South London on suspicion of “conspiracy to intercept telephone communications.” The journalists were not identified by name. Scotland Yard said they were three men ages 40, 46 and 49, and a 47-year-old woman. British news reports at the time said the four were all senior serving or former editors, including the editor and deputy editor of the tabloid Sunday People and the former editor and former deputy editor of The Sunday Mirror.

The hacking scandal led to an array of investigations, one of which, the Leveson Inquiry, concluded that Britain needed a new form of press oversight with statutory underpinnings.

During months of hearings, one of the witnesses at the inquiry led by Lord Justice Sir Brian Leveson was Piers Morgan, the CNN talk-show host who was editor of The Daily Mirror from 1995 to 2004. He told the investigation that he knew no one who hacked phones.

Other witnesses testified that phone hacking was rife at The Mirror, but Mr. Morgan repeatedly testified that it was not and that he knew nothing about it.

The Sunday Mirror, according to recent industry statistics, had a circulation of around 1 million in August, but The Sun on Sunday, which replaced the shuttered News of the World, led the Sunday tabloid market with sales of 1.9 million, followed by The Mail on Sunday with around 1.6 million.

The arrests in March related to individuals, but Thursday’s announcement showed that police officers also wanted to investigate whether their employer bore a corporate responsibility for any wrongdoing.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/13/world/europe/2nd-newspaper-group-faces-inquiry-in-british-hacking-scandal.html?partner=rss&emc=rss