Tag Archives: notw

Amy Winehouse Was Hacked

 

Exclusive

 

THE phones and medical records of singer Amy Winehouse were “routinely”accessed by tabloid newspapers.

Winehouse was found dead inside her north London apartment yesterday. She was 27.

Her short but electrifying musical career earned her a catalogue of worldwide awards,  including five Grammies. That fame brought rewards, and vices.

Winehouse was a sensation. The sensation brought world attention. The attention made her a regular target of hacking and illegal data access  by tabloid reporters keen to splash an exclusive.

Her father Mitch, mother Janis and on-off lover Blake Fielder-Civil, the man whose name she had tattooed over her heart, were also directly targeted in the tabloid battle to get a scoop. Her brother Alex was also a victim. His phones and personal data were also scanned to establish connections and potential stories.

Details of her stays in rehab  were also obtained, and included timings  of when she was expected to arrive at clinics so photographers could be in place. The same details were either sold or accessed so she could be photographed leaving after treatment. Her time inside these clinics was also widely reported.

A source said: “Privacy was the last thing she was going to get. She was at one point the world’s number one singer. She blew people away with her voice, all over the world.  The press knew where she would be, who would be there, what time, at any given time.

“They were able to be there too, to befriend her and actively encourage her, as if they had arrived by chance. That made better copy and, more importantly, better photos for the snappers  both inside and waiting outside.

“Not that she needed any encouragement, but it was there if she wanted it.

“Take a look at the acres of coverage of her getting out of taxicabs and walking into rehab. Or walking out of rehab into cabs. How did that happen? Or the details of her time in rehab, her private life.  A lot of the time some people close to her sold the info, but her data was accessed on a routine, wholesale basis. And not just by one newspaper group, by most of them.

“A lot of showbiz journalists started covering tracks with the news of  her death.”

Police, while confirming Amy’s body had been found in her North London flat, cautioned against newspaper assumptions of an overdose.

More follows…

ends


A Necessary Evil?

 

In the days before the world wide web and instant news journalists on a local beat got the news of the day by physically going to the police station and sitting down to a cup of tea with the duty officer, who  would arrive armed with the incident log, a sanitised, neatly typed version of the previous night’s mayhem.

Admittedly, some reporters used the phone to obtain this. I always preferred to wander in for a chat. I felt it always got me that wee bit more.

What it certainly got me was “face time” with high ranking cops who were happy to help if they saw me at some later date on a job they were also attending. That’s what you did. It’s how you grew your contacts book as a young reporter and it’s how most reporters over 40 would have begun their careers.

There was a relationship there, between the press and the police. The reporter is acting on behalf of members of the public who don’t have time to go and seek out the news from their area. You do the legwork, publish the news that’s fit to print, and they reward your efforts by buying the paper. Simple enough.

Some of those relationships evolved into contacts, some did not. Over two decades in hard news reporting I’ve had police contacts. Lots of them. Any decent journalist has them. And any decent cop has journalist contacts. But something changed.

It was a centralising process, I suppose, somewhere around the early 90′s.

You could no longer walk into the cop shop for a cuppa. They no longer appreciated a free bundle of first editions at the counter. You had to “go through the press office.”  Barriers went up.

The news that was being fed down the line was no longer what had actually happened the night before, it was what they wanted you to know about. Press managers and forces began to control the flow of information. In that event any journalist worth a candle should be trying to obtain the real news at any cost.

That’s where police sources come in. The officers who are not on-message. The ones who will give you the unedited information, especially if it concerns corruption or failings within a particular force. What press office is going to hand that over?

Add to that the FOI machinery now in place across the UK. A police press office unhappy at handing over damaging statistics or information will almost always ask you to make an FOI request. This can delay having to answer by over a year, in real terms.

Bona fide news gathering journalists have been fobbed off with this in recent years. I know it has happened to me on a number of occasions. We are now in the position where calling these press offices is almost a waste of time, apart from obtaining the anodyne and humdrum.

You may not realise it, or if you do you may not like it, but these relationships are a necessary evil. Without them we wouldn’t know what’s really going on. Some of the officers involved may take money for their services, but in the main they do not.

You may well say the ones who do are corrupt, but they have families, pensions and mortgages to balance against the risk of telling journalists about things that matter.  I know journalists have paid police officers for information. That should come as no surprise.

But what about the senior officers who turn up in a pub to meet a journalist, get free drinks all night, a four course meal, and wander home with four free tickets to the races in their pockets. Are they as corrupt?  They’ve simply taken their payment in kind. No paperwork.

Or the senior officers who use journalists to brief against each other. A Deputy who sticks the knife in the chief through a friendly reporter will hope to be elevated to that chief’s position. There is a financial gain there. Corrupt? Or politics?

And if you’re looking for corruption, how about the lodge meetings across Scotland where very senior police officers, judges and journalists all share information within the four walls of a lodge? That’s to their mutual benefit, is it not?

Strathclyde Police has been tasked by the Crown Office to investigate Scotland’s civic life, effectively, but I’m told this probe will focus simply on links between Lothian & Borders officers involved in the Tommy Sheridan case and journalists from News International.

I’m also told Strathclyde Chief Constable Stephen House is keen it stays on that track. He has watched two of the Metropolitan Police’s most senior officers walk the plank over corruption and hacking. He has told senior officers his force’s probe will not repeat their mistakes.

Meanwhile across the country senior officers at L&B are furious, I’m told, that their “weegie” counterparts will be examining their roles and relationships. Historically the Lothian force has had the better reputation.

House  knows better than most, given recent events in London,  the price to be paid for an incomplete inquiry. He has been handed something of a poisoned chalice. Damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t. The prospect of a return to the Big Smoke, where a couple of vacancies have recently opened up,  must seem appealing at the moment.

If there is to be a proper corruption probe in Scotland it should not  be run by Strathclyde Police. First Minister Alex Salmond should build an independent task force, with the power to take witness statements on oath. That is the only way we can ensure a full, proper investigation into perjury, corruption, collusion and hacking in Scotland.

ends


Coulson for Court

exclusive

by Charles Lavery

Andy Coulson WILL  face perjury charges in  a Scottish court.

The former News of the World executive and press adviser to Prime Minister David Cameron has been told he will face court in Scotland over statements he made under oath during the Tommy Sheridan trial.

He met Scots QC Paul McBride at the Matrix legal chambers in London last week.  That meeting came after  a series of telephone calls between McBride, Coulson, and senior members of the Conservative Party.

McBride has been helping the Conservatives shape their legal policies for some time and is on first name terms with some of the party’s most senior figures in Scotland and London.

Coulson has been told to prepare himself  for charges. Legal restrictions prevent further reporting at this time.

More follows

ends


Cops And Bloggers. An Update.

Police operation code names are randomly generated by computer.

The computer programme, synced across all UK forces, throws out a name based on an A-Z  list so that no two ongoing operations in the country have the same code name at the same time.

For some reason the list favours the classics, like it was propagated by Inspector Morse.

You would think, with such attention to detail, that our police service thinks of everything.

It does not.

Operation Merlin, as the computer labelled it, was one of the most expensive investigations in the history of Strathclyde Police. It was a probe into the police corruption Paul McMullan spoke about at the Leveson Inquiry and targeted journalists who allegedly paid serving police officers for stories. It achieved nothing, apart from the promotion of several officers involved in it, and cost over £1 million.

The only police officer taken to court at the end of this mammoth probe walked free after two days of Crown evidence with a no case to answer.  The reason?  There was no evidence. Yesterday, he wrote to Leveson to offer his experience to the Inquiry. It is quite a story.

He was targeted while newspaper executives who signed cheques, not to the officer in question, struck deals behind the scenes. Evidence was withheld and senior newspaper industry executives colluded with senior police officers to avoid adverse publicity for the particular news group in question.

The journalist involved in this inquiry has recently been doorstepped by officers of the Counter Corruption Unit of Strathclyde Police, the new name for the Professional Standards Unit. They were apparently investigating a complaint by the now retired police officer into allegations of collusion and corruption… by their own unit.  They were given short change.  A police force allowed to investigate its own officers and units is a police force open to accusation.

Here’s why Operation Merlin failed: intelligence…they “sexed up” the dossier. Every police force has what’s called a Professional Standards Unit nowadays. It’s a concept that started in the Met in the 90′s. At that time the Met was so riven with corruption they established a secret unit to deal with it.

That model was rolled out across all UK forces. An integral part of that model was tackling press liaison. Controlling the message. A couple of Guardian writers risked their careers to write this excellent take on the whole affair and the genesis of the Professional Standards Units across the UK forces:

http://amzn.to/rdS3L9

To cut a long and interesting story short, the Met established a “ghost squad” of officers who kept tabs on their colleagues. It worked. Dozens of corrupt cops were exposed, prosecuted and drummed out of the force. Such was the success it became a blueprint. Cops love blueprints.

Part of that blueprint was to identify, target and eliminate any un-sanctioned dealings with the press. Strathclyde, among other forces in Scotland, stuck to the blueprint. Between 2002 and 2007 they conducted an operation called Merlin. On a whiteboard in a room at Pitt St HQ, the same  room the Lockerbie Inquiry had been managed from, were the coded images for  a number of individuals.

They didn’t have names, they had tags. Two officers targeted were identified on the board by their ranks, the insignia of a sergeant and that of a constable. Journalists were portrayed on the board by the masthead of their newspaper, and various other connections, like taxi drivers, were denoted by a black cab orange hailing light. This was the Professional Standards Unit (PSU) hothouse, and it was kept under lock and key.

The end result of this was five men being  turned out of their beds at 7am during a concerted, coordinated series of raids organised by the PSU. Two serving police officers, two taxi drivers and a civilian. The white board and all its symbols had thrown up the answers, or so they thought.

Years of intelligence gathering had led them to the raids.  Their inquiry had lasted four years. It took a further two years to take it court. One serving constable appeared at court and after two days of crown evidence walked free when the judge ruled he had no case to answer.

One of the  journalists targeted had his home swept for bugs twice. His office and all communication devices were also checked.  He was placed under surveillance for months by the Central Surveillance Unit of Strathclyde Police. Detailed logs noted who he met, spoke to, and where he went. His telephone conversations were monitored, and still are.

It led to a furious bust up between the PSU and the CSU, or Central Surveillance Unit, who eventually refused to follow a journalist around town when their resources could be better used. Drug dealers were making money and they were otherwise engaged.

The journalist in question was pulled in by his bosses at the time and sent to meet the company lawyer. That lawyer tried to force the reporter into signing  a sworn statement that would have ensured his sources would have gone to jail.  He refused. Back channel chats were in play. The journalist was told he would be given a £5000 fine which the company would pay and be convicted of a Data Protection breach. The sources, serving police officers, would be going to jail.

The newspaper offices were raided at this time  and paperwork related to payments were confiscated by police. They took with them logs of payments made to a civilian with links to serving police officers. But their intelligence was deeply flawed. They had acquired surveillance warrants on the journalist, signed by then First Minister Jack McConnell, on the basis of capital crime allegations. They had “sexed up” the dossier, and one journalist in particular found himself accused in intelligence files of running brothels and hookers, being an active member of the IRA and having firm knowledge of a series of murders. He also, apparently, had timeshare villas in Asia,  bought from the proceeds of crime, that had been wiped out in the Tsunami.

None of this was true. A registered informant had provided the information. Registered informants are what police officers use to obtain surveillance orders. Most of the time they are genuine. Sometimes they are not. When police officers need to sex up a request for surveillance, a registered informant, a trusty, comes into play. The shockingly poor intelligence gathered in Merlin led to the dire outcome of the four-year long probe: one constable brought to court and released on a no case to answer after two days of Crown evidence.

But it raises questions in the wake of the NotW scandal, and as the  Leveson Inquiry rumbles on.

Uncomfortable questions.

Media groups routinely paying cops for information. Strathclyde Police, along with Lothian & Borders and various other forces, know this.  There is a “scoping exercise” ongoing at the moment, led  by Strathclyde Police, into the allegations surfacing south of the border. There is also talk of senior executives at papers north of the border being interviewed by police. Executives, I know, have been burning out shredders. In the wake of Paul McMullan’s evidence, they are awaiting the knock on the door. Whether it will ever come is another question, so deeply intertwined are our news groups and police forces.

It is a little known fact that one of the most senior officers in the Merlin inquiry was also one of the biggest culprits. He even alerted journalists to the fact that the inquiry was underway. That is the scale of it. That same officer accepted free drinks and race meeting tickets in the pub, surrounded by journalists.

The PSU at Strathclyde Police selected a journalist from the Scottish media who regularly gave them a bloody nose in the press and directed hundreds of thousands of pounds of resources into surveillance and evidence gathering. That was what the blueprint said they should do, and they stuck to it. But no newspaper executives had sleepless nights over it.

There was never any suggestion that  an editor, whose signature was on the cheques, might be the focus of a police probe. Or a chief executive. That had been squared away, after the editor in question gave a statement to the cops and allowed them into the building to gather evidence of payments, without a warrant. Again, the back channel chats came into play. It was police corruption, but not one executive was interviewed under caution. The same rules seem to apply in London, if McMullan is to be believed. I have no reason to doubt him. His evident fragile state at the hearing belies the fact that he wrote 300 stories for the News of the World and never lost a single court case.

There is a link in Scotland between the police, a leading law firm I cannot name in this piece and newspaper editors. It is an unhealthy “back channel” arrangement that does nothing for journalism and everything for those involved in it. I shall write more of it later, with examples of its influence, but suffice to say it controls, moderates and stymies proper journalism in this country. The same is evidently true south of the border.

Newspapers paid, and pay, police officers for information. The one and only prosecution for this, Operation Merlin, ended in farce. The acquitted officer walked through Glasgow Sheriff Court after the case against him collapsed wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words: “No Case To Answer - The Fiscal’s A Chancer.”

He got that slightly wrong. It was the newly promoted officers behind Operation Merlin, reported to be the most expensive operation in the history of Strathclyde Police, who were the chancers.

ends
//


Setting Fire To The Pyre

 

There’s something not quite right about the News of the World closure.

Too fast, too soon.

Rupert Murdoch has played his endgame first. The result today  is a “Thank You & Goodbye” headline and a “banging out”  by a solitary editor of a staff dedicated to their paper, regardless of what you think about its stance or readership.

I’ve witnessed bangings out from newsrooms. They are highly charged and emotional affairs. Whatever makes a noise is banged against hard surfaces as the person leaving takes the long walk to pastures new. It’s a throwback to the old print days when the metal type would be banged in its tray as a mark of respect to a departing  colleague.

But it’s usually a solitary figure doing the walking, not an entire workforce.

The emotion would  have charged the very air around the  journalists as they watched their editor continue a long held tradition for the very last time, alone.

The decision to close a profitable market leader in the space of three days can only mean one thing:  there are dark days ahead.

Hacking on an industrial scale. If you want to know who was hacked start with Who’s Who and move on to the list of all government ministers.  Then the Royal household, senior cops, celebrities of course, and sportspeople.

But we know that.

The real problem here for the Murdoch empire, together with David Cameron and the Met,  is  the police officers paid for their information. Their names are already known, as are the myriad of journalists who used the services of the three private detectives already dealt with or interviewed by police. Corruption on a scale never before seen.

And a 63-year-old private eye called Steve Whittamore is a major link in  this chain of evidence.

A chain that could leave former NOTW editor and Cameron spin doctor Andy Coulson in court.  A chain that will at some point in the very near future see Les Hinton, former chief executive at NOTW and now in charge of Dow Jones, the company that owns The Wall St Journal, interviewed by police.

Mr Hinton will be asked to verify he signed off on the payments. He was Coulson’s boss at that time.  Whether he knew who was being paid  is a matter for the investigators to decide. I suspect not.

The investigating team from the Met will by now have paired payments to stories. It takes a long time to do this. Cops are not paid directly. A brother, some in-law with a different surname, and a false reason for payment entered into the newspaper’s accounting log can muddy the trail.

But police officers look for patterns. So if Detective Sergeant Smith’s (made up name) sister was paid £5000 on July 1st what stories privy to confidential information were published in the month before that payment? Soon the jigsaw completes itself and a pattern emerges. Link this with calls and contact between two parties and you begin to build a picture.

Mr Whittamore,  believed to have been arrested yesterday along with Andy Coulson, believes he was Oliver to the newspaper industry’s Fagin. His position is best described here:

http://t.co/3TOeUQb

If we focus on Scotland for a moment we can safely assume high profile footballers from the Old Firm were the targets of  hacking. Tommy Sheridan? Almost certainly. In fact, most Scottish celebrities, actors, senior politicians and business leaders. But not just by the News of the World.

Make no mistake. We are talking here about a J. Edgar Hoover style approach. The paranoid American with a file on everyone could not hold a candle to Murdoch in this web driven age.  Why else would politicians court him so? But his reporters didn’t have exclusive access. Many others, yet to be revealed, obtained the same data.

But when a man is caught in possession of a large hoard of information he should not have, with the authorities able to match it and join the dots, he has no option but to set fire to the pyre. Goodbye News of  the World.

He hopes this will be enough. So does Prime Minister David Cameron.

It won’t be, and as the real victims of this story emerge over the coming weeks Cameron, the Murdoch empire and the Metropolitan Police, Whitehall 1212, will see their back-channel relationships exposed and vilified.

The breathtaking speed of  the closure raises questions. Will the other newspaper groups about to be targeted for the very same thing react in a similar fashion? Will Trinity Mirror close down the Sunday Mirror? Will Associated close the Mail on Sunday? They were the worst offenders after all, beating the News of the World by some distance in terms of information obtained from private eyes.

There is a document you should read. It is now a mind boggling document. When it was first published it simply raised a few eyebrows within the trade and was largely forgotten about. That in itself, as the esteemed author points out, is very strange indeed, given its findings.

In the spirit of data journalism I give you the link to the report with no comment. It is worth the read.

And remember:  a lot of simply brilliant  investigative  journalists were put out to pasture today. How can that be a good thing?

http://t.co/Hy7Bu8k

ends


Coppers

When Nick Davies broke the Milly Dowler story in the Guardian on Monday http://bit.ly/lKawqd one paragraph stood out:

“According to one senior source familiar with the Surrey police investigation: “It can happen with abduction murders that the perpetrator will leave messages, asking the missing person to get in touch, as part of their efforts at concealment. We need those messages as evidence. Anybody who destroys that evidence is seriously interfering with the course of a police investigation.”

A large raft of the paperwork discovered under warrant in this massive NOTW  inquiry relates to allegations that police officers were routinely paid by journalists at the News of the World and elsewhere  for information and background checks.

In fact that is why Andy Coulson and former Royal reporter Clive Goodman are being questioned under caution by Knacker of the Yard as I write. Coulson has already told parliament and a Scottish court that to the best of his knowledge police officers were not paid by News International.

Now that paperwork relating to over £100,000 in payments to serving officers has turned up, life has become a little more difficult for David Cameron’s former spin doctor. I suspect a “no comment” interview from both men will be the order of today.

But let’s look again at the Davies quote. “According to one senior source familiar with…”  followed further in the paragraph by “we need those messages as evidence.” There can be no doubt that Davies, a remarkable investigative journalist of some standing, was getting his information from a serving police officer.

Knowing the Guardian, said police officer would not have received so much as a cup of coffee  for this information. But he has still broken the law and were he to be discovered could be drummed out of the force and face  a prison term.

In all likelihood he was given the green light, or is senior enough in rank,  to speak “off the record” and to give Davies the nod or steer required. Good for him. Had he not we would not know the awful truth of the Milly Dowler voicemail deletions.

But it does raise serious questions. Police forces across the UK have fostered relationships with “friendly” journalists, the ones they can count on not to stick the boot into their force. The ones who will regurgitate what they are told into print without a second thought, or a tricky question.

But imagine if that was the only source of information coming from a police force. What then? A sanitised version of events spun the right way and the reader none the wiser, that’s what.

Newspapers across the country have paid serving police officers for information since the first front pages were printed. If Nick Davies bought his police source a curry and a beer as they chatted the story through, would that be OK in the circumstances?

If he gave a donation to a police benevolent fund at the officer’s request, would that be acceptable? It doesn’t matter. A serving police officer has disclosed privileged information to a third party. A criminal offence. The huge public interest defence would outweigh this of course, in the Dowler case.

But consider the same scenario except the officer giving the information demanded some type of payment, be it in cash or goods. The public interest in the story is still there, and the story should be told. That’s a decision only an editor can make, and most if not all would opt to pay the cop, albeit in various roundabout ways.

And so they should.

These payments made by NOTW executives to serving police officers are the reason the first Met inquiry into hacking went nowhere. Can Of Worms. There was already a long established symbiotic relationship neither party wished to reveal.

The danger comes when the information being sought is not in any way, shape or form in the public interest. It’s not about what interests the public, it’s about whether the story is something people should know about. Corruption, malfeasance, fraud, theft. Failings within public bodies and security apparatus.

Paying a cop to discover if Marvin from The Scheme has been hosted at HMP Barlinnie falls outwith the public interest test.  As does the rest of the showbiz related rubbish which no doubt makes up the majority of that £100,000 in payments.

But if we want to live in a free, democratic society where journalists can serve the public interest, we’re going to have to put up with those abuses. No system is perfect, but I’d rather have it that way.

And that’s the reality.  As officers north of the border prepare to wade in with a scoping exercise into abuses within Scotland’s media community,  it will be very interesting if they examine the relationships between certain senior officers and members of the fourth estate. Very interesting indeed.

Without rank and file cops talking – paid or unpaid -  you wouldn’t be getting real news, you would be getting the sanitised version their bosses want you to read.

ends


Breaking News

We need to go back.

Back to a time when tabloid reporters produced news investigations and broke exclusives.

These took time, money and seriously skilled manpower. Some stories took weeks and the end result was a two page spread inside the paper and maybe a touch on the front. That was the name of the game. It has not been this way for quite some time.

In the early 90′s I first heard the phrase “blackbagging.” I sat at my desk as older journalists who had been shown the door stuffed their collected detritus into refuse sacks and took the long walk out. After this exodus manpower was in short supply, and editors started to look at how long a story would take.

It started to creep into news conferences. Editors and money men wanted to quantify stories, put a time limit on them, rein in the expense. And all the time there was more “blackbagging.”

And that was the beginning of the end. Investigations, they lectured,  could be timed. One week, two weeks, no result yet? Bin it. The shortage of staff meant there was always something waiting to be looked at or written up, and as the years rolled by the allocated time for investigations and exclusives shortened, along with the wage bill.

In the absence of stories to fill the paper they looked elsewhere for the news, the “exclusives.” And they looked to TV.

To reality TV, in fact.  Big Brother, Jungle, BGT, to name but a few. They wrote stories about programmes fans had already watched the night before, with nothing new in the following day’s story. They wrote it because editors knew it was cheap.  It wasn’t.

It doesn’t take Einstein to figure out that those who liked this type of show would have watched it the night before, so wouldn’t read the story, and those who hadn’t watched it the night before had made that choice so, er, wouldn’t read it either.

But editors thought up ever more ingenious ways of justifying their decision on driving their papers down Celebrity Road and assured anyone who asked it was what the punters wanted, in the face of freefalling circulation figures.

They didn’t consider the reader for a moment, they only saw the bottom line. And that bottom line was less bottoms on newsroom seats.

By this time a newspaper “investigation” was no such thing, unless you can do one these days from your desk with Google Street View. There are a few notable exceptions, but in the main tabloid newsrooms across the UK had fewer staff, more work and the reporters they had were inexperienced and had never “worked a beat.”

In the case of one newspaper group, Trinity Mirror, they set up a training course, placed a number of journalism trainees on it then gave them all jobs on a pittance at the end of it. Cue another round of “blackbagging.”

So we are where we are. Short-staffed dumbed down newsrooms, poorly paid and poorly trained reporters with little experience, no real news and papers populated with celebrity tittle-tattle because it’s cheap and can be done from the desk. Pressure mounted to get the “front of the book” stories that would make their paper stand out.

Not that reporters were allowed to spend any time doing it.  Actually finding it.  No time for that. Find another way. So, in a bid to hammer down costs,  it became cost effective to hire someone from without to “pin down” who they were after so there was no longer any need to send reporters around 10 addresses listed in the phone book for Harry Jones. Cost effective quality information. Private detectives. The shadow lands.

Finding  Harry Jones, the right Harry Jones, and heading  straight to the correct address saved a fortune.

And if Harry Jones was not home but there was a car parked in the driveway? Wouldn’t it save an awful lot of time and money to know if that was Mr or Mrs Jones’ car? Once more to the shadow lands.

And what if Mr Jones’ tax return could be accessed, wouldn’t that give a place of work? That would save time waiting for him to come home. And all  done without leaving the office so reporters could be writing something else while awaiting the details from the man on the other end of  the phone. “Do it,” said the editors.

And then the black arts of the shadow lands really kicked in. Voice messages, texts, calls, BT Friends & Family lists, computer access, it all made life so easy for the ” investigative journalists.”

So they became inured to “civilians,” the general public. They did this for years and nobody asked them how they got the info. In fact their bosses quite happily paid  the people in the shadow lands who delivered it.

Then one day it happened: a snap decision was required. A series of voice mails left on a mobile phone. They had them, and they didn’t want anyone else to have them. This has always been the mantra. They made the decision in a heartbeat. The messages were deleted. They had become such a part of the machine they hadn’t even thought through the wrenching heartache their actions would spark. It has happened in most redtop newsrooms in the UK.

In fact, News International are not the worst offenders. In the coming weeks and months other national newspaper groups will also feel the heat of the spotlight. Will their newspapers close down?

Rupert Murdoch wanted to move to a seven day operation. In a move of Machiavellian genius, he has in one fell swoop achieved his aim.  Meanwhile 200 staff don’t know how they’ll pay the mortgage.

Their editors are living mortgage free.

You may not know it, but you are the worse for it.

ends

 


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