November 22, 2024

Second Newspaper Group Under 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.”

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 current 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.

Thursday’s announcement indicates that the police are also investigating whether the employer of the arrested journalists bears corporate responsibility for any wrongdoing.

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 employees 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 charged and trials are expected to start later in the year. All have denied wrongdoing.

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.

One of the witnesses at the inquiry, led by Lord Justice Sir Brian Leveson, was the CNN talk show host Piers Morgan, 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 one 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.

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

Reporter Known for Scoops Is Held in Hacking Inquiry

The reporter, James Desborough, worked in Britain for the newspaper for four years before being sent to Hollywood in 2009. It is not clear when the crimes he is suspected of committing — gaining illegal access to other people’s voice mail messages — took place. Until 2005, Mr. Desborough covered celebrity culture for The People, a Sunday tabloid owned by Trinity Mirror, which also publishes The Daily Mirror and The Sunday Mirror.

He was sent to Hollywood by The News of the World shortly after being named “showbiz reporter of the year” at the annual British Press Awards. The judges said Mr. Desborough had “produced a series of uncompromising scoops which mean no celebrity with secrets can sleep easy.”

Among those articles was an exclusive report revealing that Fern Britton, a British television personality who claimed to have lost a large amount of weight through diet and exercise, had in fact had gastric band surgery. Mr. Desborough also appears to have been the first journalist to report that Peaches Geldof, daughter of the rock star Bob Geldof, was getting a divorce after a hurried marriage in 2008.

In addition, Mr. Desborough wrote exclusive articles about Heather Mills before her divorce from Sir Paul McCartney. Ms. Mills recently said she believed that she had, at some point, been a victim of phone hacking.

Mr. Desborough, after winning the reporting award in 2009, said in an interview with its sponsor, The Press Gazette, that he was working at a “very difficult time for the tabloid market.”

“A lot of deals are done these days between P.R.’s and papers,” he said, referring to public relations professionals. Speaking of his own articles, he said: “These stories were all old-fashioned journalism where we said, ‘We know this to be true, would you like to comment?’ ”

The Metropolitan Police did not identify Mr. Desborough by name in announcing the arrest, but the person close to the investigation confirmed his identity. The police said that the suspect was taken to a London police station at 10:30 a.m. and that he was questioned into the afternoon.

He has not been formally charged. It is common practice in Britain for charges in such cases to be brought months after an arrest. An arrest does not mean a suspect will be charged.

Most of the other people arrested in the phone hacking investigation have been released after hours of questioning and ordered to report back to the authorities in the fall.

They include former News of the World reporters and editors, including Andy Coulson, an editor who later was the communications chief for Prime Minister David Cameron, and Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International, The News of the World’s parent company and the British arm of the News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch’s media conglomerate.

Also on Thursday, a private investigator who is one of the central figures in the scandal, Glenn Mulcaire, sued the newspaper unit of News International, Bloomberg News reported. In 2007, Mr. Mulcaire and a News of the World reporter were jailed in a phone hacking case that News International executives had long maintained was the lone episode of phone hacking at the tabloid.

The lawsuit’s specifics were not made public, but they appeared to involve Mr. Mulcaire’s legal fees. Last month, the payments were abruptly halted after members of Parliament questioned Mr. Murdoch and his son James about them. Mr. Mulcaire is a defendant in roughly 40 suits over phone hacking accusations.

Don Van Natta Jr. contributed reporting from Miami. 

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=95b26772acd179b96704c36e04d2cae1