Phone hacking scandal at News of the World: latest news stories
It's the story that just keeps on giving astonishing headlines. Today Rupert gota pie thrown in his face by a protester as well as struggling at times to answer questions at the committee hearing. Yesterday the body of Sean Hoare, the former NOWT reporter who was the whistleblower who came forward saying that phone hacking was common practice in the newsroom.

Latest stories:
Man tries to hit Rupert Murdoch in the face with a pie. (Guardian)
Hacking committee hearings: Who are the interrogators? (Sky)
Watch BBC live stream of the committee hearings. (BBC)
Murdochs and Brooks to face MPs today. (BBC)
Profile: Sean Hoare, the whistleblower who died. (The Guardian)
Rebekah Brooks Quits As NI Chief Executive (Sky News)
Read Rebekah Brooks resignation letter (Guardian)
News Corp withdraws bid for BSkyB (BBC)
All political parties unite against Murdoch's BSkyB bid. (BBC)
Ed Miliband: BSkyB bid 'untenable' (BBC)
BSkyB shares plumment as city analysts say the deal is "all but dead" (Guardian)
Nick Clegg urges Murdoch to drop BSkyB bid (BBC)
Alistair Campbell: This is a change for the British press to shake off Murdoch's shackles (Financial Times - paywall)
Rupert Murdoch: Rebekah Brooks is my "top priority" (Daily Mail)
Emails from 2007 show News International execs "knew about payments to police" (BBC)
Charlie Brooker reviews the final edition of the News Of The World. (Guardian)
Did the News of the World hack the phones of 9/11 victims' families? (Sky News/Twitter)
Jarvis Cocker shows what he thinks of the News of the World (clue: by pretending to wipe his bum with it) (Digital Spy)
Did News of the World staff hide digs at Rebekah Brooks in clues to the last edition's crossword? (Guardian)
It was social media wot won it: how News of the World became the biggest discussion topic on social networks (We Are Social)
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Stories from before the weekend:
The moment we've all been waiting for has finally come; the News of The World scandal has been given the Taiwanese animation treatment -
Ed Miliband calls for David Cameron to apologise over hiring Andy Coulson.
James Murdoch defends Rebekah Brooks' "very good ethics" in this video interview with the Guardian.
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Last week's stories
In the wake of the shocking news that murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler's phone was hacked by the News of the World, stories about more hackings, reactions from News International and the government, and advertisers abandoning the beleaguered paper are dominating the news agenda. Here's a roundup of the week's earlier stories:
Royal Legion drops News of the World as campaigning partnerIn the wake of new allegations that an investigator working for the paper targeted the mobile phones of soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Royal British Legion has ended its campaigning partnership with the NOTW.
David Cameron promises News of the World probe
The Prime Minister, facing criticism for his close friendship with ex-NOTW editor Rebekah Brooks, has bowed to pressure and promised a public inquiry into the paper's use of hacking.
Five senior journalists and News of the World execs will "be arrested within days"
The police are expected to interview five journalists and executives about new allegations about the hacking scandal. Ex-News of the World editor Andy Coulson, who was deputy editor of the paper at the time of the Milly Dowler hacking, is rumoured to be a target for the blame.
News of the World editor tells staff to "atone for wrongdoing that took place in the past
In an email to staff, present editor Colin Myler wrote: "Understandably, there is a great deal of anger directed towards this newspaper as a result of what happened in some cases as far back as nine years ago. While this is unfair and extremely upsetting for all of you who had nothing to do with these activities, we have to accept and deal with those criticisms."
Advertisers abandon News of the World
Ford, Sainsburys, Virgin Holiday, Halifax bank, Vauxhall, Mitsubishi and Co-operative Group have all cancelled ad deals with the newspaper. The Guardian has collated the top 50 NOTW advertisers and if you're on Twitter you can contact most of them directly with the click of a button, thanks to these pre-written tweets.
Interestingly the domain thesunonsunday.co.uk was registered on the 5th of July…
Press Complaints Commission: "Rebekah Brooks leading inquiry is extraordinary"
The press watchdog says letting Rebekah Brooks lead the News International inquiry into the News of the World hacking scandal is 'extraordinary'. PCC chair Peta Buscombe added that she now believed the press watchdog had been 'lied to' two years ago by News International when it carried out its own investigation into phone-hacking.
--------------- Recommended further reading ---------------
- Video of Rebekah Brooks admitting the NOTW paid police for information
- What the papers won't say about the phone-hacking scandal
- David Cameron is "in the sewer because of his News International friends"
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Scott_Pert [removed]
- This comment was removed by its owner.
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Scott_Pert [removed]
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betterwatchit
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Scott_Pert:
Point taken. For anyone who isn't from Britain, the Sun's headline on the day after the Hillsborough football disaster in the 80s accused Liverpool FC fans of running riot and basically blaming them for all the deaths that happened. To this day, reading the Sun in Liverpool is considered hazardous to your health.
- 11 months ago
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betterwatchit
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betterwatchit
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I know for a fact that he's going to bring out a new Sunday newspaper, the Sun on Sunday. The website address has been registered for weeks!
- 11 months ago
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betterwatchit
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Argon18
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This is a very good sign that finally Rupert Murdoch is paying a heavy price for his policies.
"Pick your Watergate reference at will, but one thing is certain: The long-simmering phone-hacking story that has been hounding Murdoch for years took a dire turn this week for News Corp. and it suddenly has the possible makings of a career-defining debacle for the partisan media mogul. It's a debacle that features Murdoch starring in the eerily similar role as the one Dick Nixon played.
Like Nixon during his Watergate demise, the hacking story appears to have thrown Murdoch into a free fall with no safe landing spot in sight. There doesn't seem to be any maneuver or strategy available to him at this crucial juncture that will make the blockbuster story go away, even for a price. And like Nixon, whose aides couldn't stop the Watergate bleeding, Murdoch is being hounded by a dogged newspaper determined (and perhaps able) to take him down, as well as by aggressive prosecutors.
And like Nixon's team, Murdoch's News Corp. has recently been unable to make stick the claim that the wrongdoing, and the knowledge of the wrongdoing, does not reach up to the very most senior levels of the company."
There are other similarities like there is also a tape involved in this like the famous Nixon Tapes.
"Now, court documents filed in a lawsuit make clear whom Ms. Regan was accusing of urging her to lie: Roger E. Ailes, the powerful chairman of Fox News and a longtime friend of Mr. Giuliani. What is more, the documents say that Ms. Regan taped the telephone call from Mr. Ailes in which Mr. Ailes discussed her relationship with Mr. Kerik.
It was an incendiary allegation — and a mystery of great intrigue in the media world: After the publishing powerhouse Judith Regan was fired by HarperCollins in 2006, she claimed that a senior executive at its parent company, News Corporation, had encouraged her to lie two years earlier to federal investigators who were vetting Bernard B. Kerik for the job of homeland security secretary."
"Follow the money," as always is still good advice for investigating this scandal as well, no doubt there will also be a "deep throat" to reveal the details of the crimes.
"Meanwhile, I'd suggest that like Nixon's crooked White House, the phone-hacking scandal perfectly captures a larger News Corp. culture at play and that it, therefore, cannot be dismissed as some sort of anomaly. These weren't just rogue elements at work within the Murdoch media empire. Instead these were elements that reflected a dark Murdoch ethos, where serial mendacity isn't just embraced, but often celebrated.
Just ask Glenn Beck, who for more than two years was welcomed onto Fox News to tell every conceivable falsehood, and launch every possible personal smear, that his fervent imagination could conjure up. It was only after his ratings fell and advertisers abandoned him that Beck was shown the door.
Or just ask Fox News boss Roger Ailes who, according to a New York Times report earlier this year, was once caught on tape urging an employee to lie to federal investigators.
Meaning, it makes perfect sense that it's News Corp. that finds itself at the center of this galloping controversy because, quite frankly, it's inconceivable that any other global media company would ever allow its employees to consistently misbehave the way Murdoch allows his lieutenants to skirt common sense rules."
And the similarities just keep on happening since a man with a very close name was arrested first in the Watergate Scandal. Are they going to start naming them after Murdoch now too? It would be hard to come up with something as catchy as the "gate" suffix, though
"Charles Colson was a former Special Counsel for President Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1973.
He was commonly named as one of the Watergate Seven, and pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice for attempting to defame Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel Ellsberg and the following year served seven months in the federal Maxwell Prison in Alabama as the first member of the Nixon administration to be incarcerated for Watergate-related charges."
Hopefully when the dust settles and Murdoch has lost most of his media empire, some reforms will be put into place to assure accuracy in reporting. Maybe the other media outlets will be discouraged to follow the extremes in sensationalism and put the more of the fact before the ratings
Another hopeful sign is that a court just made a ruling against media consolidation.
"The decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit threw out a 2007 FCC rule change that would have allowed a single company to own a daily newspaper and several broadcast stations in one local market.
The court also upheld the FCC's decision to retain its other local broadcast ownership restrictions, and instructed the agency to better consider how its rules affect broadcast ownership by people of color.
The decision is a sweeping victory for the public interest. The court rejected arguments made by broadcast and newspaper giants while exposing the FCC's repeated failures to rein in runaway consolidation.."
- 11 months ago
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Argon18
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spectacle
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The News of the World, part of News International, and the Rupert Murdoch empire didn't get to this point by accident. Find out how it all began when in 1986 New International was moved to Wapping, the printer's union broken and over 5,000 workers fired in one day...
- 11 months ago
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spectacle
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WalmartRamen
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Was it noted that News of the World is run by Fox News??
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/News_Corporation - 11 months ago
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WalmartRamen
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amo42
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He is shutting down the newspaper in hopes that the investigation does not go beyond this newspaper. Murdoch has developed a culture of lies within all of his media holdings why should we believe that these activities were only at this paper.
- 11 months ago
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amo42
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figgdimension
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how nice of Rupert fudgestick he needs to do that to the rest of his propaganda machine too
- 11 months ago
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figgdimension
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smurph25
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Sigh! Unbelievable this story is as twisted as a super-injunction order, and yet my Dad reads it, but I wonder what those online subscribers to the News of the World (AKA by a paywall) be subscribing next?
- 11 months ago
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smurph25