A day after presiding over the publication of his new, damn-the-critics Sun on Sunday tabloid, Rupert Murdoch was confronted with fresh allegations from a top police investigator that the daily Sun had systematically paid large sums of money to “a network of corrupted officials” in the British police, military and government. Connect With Us on Twitter Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines. Twitter List: Reporters and Editors Readers’ Comments Share your thoughts. Post a Comment » Read All Comments (130) » The allegations, part of a deepening criminal probe into The Sun and Mr. Murdoch’s defunct News of the World, highlight the challenges to Mr. Murdoch and his News Corporation as he seeks to minimize the threat to his British media holdings. They also cast a harsh spotlight on the freewheeling pay-for-information culture of the British media. In public testimony on Monday, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Sue Akers, who is leading the criminal investigation into Mr. Murdoch’s newspapers, said The Sun, long a source of special pride and attention for Mr. Murdoch, had illegally paid the unidentified officials hundreds of thousands of dollars in exchange for news tips and “salacious gossip.” She said the payments had been authorized “at a very senior level within the newspaper.” Her comments, unusual during a continuing criminal inquiry, directly undercut Mr. Murdoch’s campaign of support for the embattled newspaper. On Feb. 17, the 80-year-old Mr. Murdoch made a grand entrance into the Sun newsroom, where, marching around in shirtsleeves, he vowed to reinstate journalists suspended in the criminal investigation, offered to pay their legal bills, issued a robust statement about the paper’s probity and announced that he was defying conventional industry wisdom by starting a Sunday issue. Ms. Akers said illegal activities had been rife at the paper. “There appears to have been a culture at The Sun of illegal payments, and systems have been created to facilitate such payments whilst hiding the identity of the officials receiving the money,” she told the Leveson Inquiry on media ethics and practices, led by Lord Justice Leveson. The payments involved “frequent and sometimes significant sums of money” to public officials, she said. In a statement, Mr. Murdoch said that “the practices Sue Akers described at the Leveson Inquiry are ones of the past, and no longer exist at The Sun.” He remained publicly bullish, helping promote the new Sun on Sunday in newspaper stores and announcing on Twitter that it had sold 3.26 million copies. In another blow to Mr. Murdoch, related this time to The News of the World, a lawyer for the Leveson Inquiry said Rebekah Brooks, a former Murdoch executive, was apparently informed by the police in 2006 that detectives had evidence that the cellphones of dozens of celebrities, politicians and sports figures had been illegally hacked by an investigator working for the newspaper. The disclosure, contained in a September 2006 e-mail from a company lawyer to the editor of The News of the World, Andy Coulson, is highly significant. Until late in 2010, Mrs. Brooks, Mr. Coulson and other officials at News International, the British newspaper arm of News Corporation, repeatedly asserted that the hacking had been limited to a single “rogue reporter” — the paper’s royal correspondent, Clive Goodman. The assertion was rendered implausible, at best, by the fact that the police had information that so many hacking victims existed, and that so few of them had anything to do with the royal family. Monday’s disclosures could not have come at a more inopportune time for Mr. Murdoch. In recent weeks, morale at The Sun hit a low point after a number of senior editors and reporters were arrested on suspicion of illegally paying sources. At the same time, journalists at The Sun and elsewhere released a stream of angry attacks at the police, saying the investigation had gone too far and was targeting reporters for what they said was normal behavior in the British tabloid press like taking sources out to lunch or paying whistle-blowers. “The Sun journalists who have been arrested are not accused of enriching themselves — they were simply researching stories about scandals at hospitals, scandals at army bases and scandals in police stations that they believed their readers were entitled to know about,” Kelvin Mackenzie, a former editor of The Sun, wrote in The Daily Mail. “If the whistle-blower asks for money, so what?” The Metropolitan Police Service’s highly unusual decision to release specific details of a continuing investigation seemed designed to rebut such criticism. “The cases we are investigating are not ones involving the odd drink, or meal, to police officers or other public officials,” Ms. Akers said. “Instead, these are cases in which arrests have been made involving the delivery of regular, frequent and sometimes significant sums of money to small numbers of public officials by journalists.”
Monday, 27 February 2012
The daily Sun had systematically paid large sums of money to “a network of corrupted officials” in the British police, military and government.
Posted by
LIQUID NEWS ENGINE
18:24
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Category
- 000 heart attack deaths (1)
- A Facebook crime every 40 minutes (1)
- A grisly event in South East Asia highlights the region's developing meth-driven drug war (1)
- A Nation 'Addicted' To Statins... (1)
- A4e faces new fraud investigation (1)
- Allen Stanford faces decades behind bars after being convicted of a $7 billion fraud that snared investors in 113 countries (1)
- Amber Gold affair is one of the biggest financial scandals to hit Poland since the fall of communism in 1989. (1)
- Amy Winehouse coroner (1)
- An unflinching look at drugs (1)
- And Beer (1)
- Arrest made after prison van escape in West Midlands (1)
- Arrested businessman had ‘double life’ (1)
- Assange seeks political asylum (1)
- Bank of England meets amid talk of £50bn stimulus (1)
- Bank tax dodges halted by retrospective law (1)
- Bankers face the prospect of jail as Serious Fraud Office launches criminal probe into interest-rate fixing at Barclays (1)
- Barclays boss Bob Diamond resigns (1)
- Biggest solar storm in years races toward Earth (1)
- Breaking Free of the Co-dependency Trap (1)
- Britain's biggest ever Ponzi scheme Kautilya Pruthi faces 14 years in jail (1)
- calling her ‘embarrassing’ and ‘desperate’ (1)
- Canadian woman charged in Gadhafi smuggling plot (1)
- Captain ordered back onto boat by port officials (1)
- Carnival says caring for cruise disaster victims (1)
- Deadlocked Stanford Fraud Trial Jury Told to Keep Deliberating (1)
- Doctors may strike over cuts to their pension pots (1)
- Donaldson enjoyed a lavish lifestyle in Marbella and Tenerife (1)
- Elton John’s husband attacks Madonna after Golden Globes win (1)
- Europe is on the verge of financial chaos. (1)
- Ex-Navy man detained in U.S. for alleged drug smuggling in Japan (1)
- Facebook (1)
- Five Britons in court in UK for Mallorca pyramid fraud (1)
- German nationals face death penalty over drug smuggling charges in Malaysia (1)
- Hacking officers and the 'champagne links' to Wapping (1)
- How supergrass Damon Alvin turned the tables in gangland murder case (1)
- How Wall Street Bankers Use Seamless To Feast On Free Lobster (1)
- Italian fugitive arrested in Almería (1)
- James Murdoch to resign as BSkyB chairman (1)
- London's secret music venue and their livestream act (1)
- Malaya case hears dramatic statement from Fidel San Román (1)
- Mandela faces fraud charges (1)
- Meat causes cancer. It’s been said so many times that you’d have to be an idiot not to believe it (1)
- Mexican Cartels Moving Drugs in Armored Vehicles (1)
- military and government. (1)
- New info about statin safety affects millions (1)
- northern Spain is the place to go (1)
- Pilot Strike Affects Scores Of Travelers (1)
- Police divers search for head and limbs of Gemma McCluskie (1)
- police hunt for Michael Brown's missing millions (1)
- Police study Murdoch's 'secret' iPhone account (1)
- Ponzi fraud: two men found guilty of involvement in £115m UK scam (1)
- Rebekah Brooks and husband arrested in phone hacking inquiry (1)
- Recession causes 2 (1)
- right? (1)
- San Diego tax preparer for the wealthy accused of ordering hit on 2 witnesses in fraud trail (1)
- Scotland Yard lent police horse to Rebekah Brooks (1)
- Shark attack at South Africa's deadliest beach (1)
- Spain takes legal action against Spanair (1)
- Spain's 4th largest airliner goes broke (1)
- Stalking to become a crime for 1st time with offenders facing up to 5 years in jail (1)
- Steak (1)
- Sun defence editor arrested (1)
- the daily Sun had systematically paid large sums of money to “a network of corrupted officials” in the British police (1)
- The great Asian gold theft crisis (1)
- The shooting of three IRA members by the SAS in March 1988 is linked to a major review commissioned by the Prime Minister David Cameron (1)
- The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the roadside bomb that killed six British soldiers on patrol in Afghanistan (1)
- Thousands of passengers faced massive travel disruptions across Spain (1)
- Times of London (1)
- trafficking accused found hiding in loft with £70k in cash (1)
- Trolling Could Get You 25 Years in Jail in Arizona (1)
- Twitter addict? Too much Internet may alter your brain (1)
- Two businessman linked to a Glasgow gangland family will have almost £1m assets confiscated under proceeds of crime legislation. (1)
- Two UK Murdoch journalists in apparent suicide bids (1)
- Vintage Ads Most Disturbing Household Products (1)
- Vladimir Putin is moving to Marbella (1)
- Wayne Rooney launches phone-hacking claim (1)
- Why don't GPS warn you that statins can harm your memory? (1)



0 comments:
Post a Comment