News International faces civil action by Lib Dem MP whose voicemail messages Glenn Mulcaire admitted intercepting in earlier criminal case The Liberal Democrat MP, Simon Hughes, is to sue News International over phone hacking at the News of the World, he confirmed on Thursday. Hughes told the Evening Standard: “It is important now that all those who were clearly the subject of criminal activity help to get to the bottom of what happened during this dark period in British journalism.” Hughes’s decision to take legal action against Rupert Murdoch’s Sunday tabloid, which was closed last month, is significant because the private investigator employed by the paper has already been convicted of targeting his mobile phone. Glenn Mulcaire pleaded guilty to hacking into Hughes’s messages, along with those left on mobiles belonging to seven other people, in 2006. That means Mulcaire will be unable to resist complying with any court order Hughes obtains that requires the former investigator to say who asked him to intercept Hughes’s messages. In other cases currently going through the civil courts, Mulcaire’s legal team has successfully appealed against such orders by arguing that he would be incriminating himself if he were to comply with them by admitting his guilt. Mulcaire will not be able to mount the same argument when Hughes takes legal action, against News International subsidiary News Group Newspapers, because he pleaded guilty to hacking his phone five years ago. That could lead to more News of the World journalists being named. Three of the original eight victims named in the 2006 legal action have already sued the paper’s owner. Publicist Max Clifford received a £1m payout and Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the PFA, received a secret £700,000 sum in 2008 in a deal approved by James Murdoch. Football agent Sky Andrew is also pursuing legal action. He is one of the victims named in a court case scheduled to be heard early next year. It was Andrew’s court action that forced Mulcaire to name the News of the World’s former assistant editor (news) Ian Edmondson as the person who ordered him to hack into Andrew’s phone. That claim undermined the paper’s defence that hacking was the work of a “rogue reporter”. The paper was closed by James Murdoch last month after publishing for 168 years. On Wednesday night, his father Rupert Murdoch conceded during a press call with journalists and media analysts for News International parent company News Corporation’s annual results that the company had to “get to the bottom of” what happened at the title. “Were there a dozen guilty people or two dozen?” the News Corp chairman and chief executive said . Greg Miskiw, who on Thursday became the 12th person arrested by police officers investigating alleged phone hacking by the News of the World as part of the Metropolitan police’s Operation Weeting, has been released on bail. Miskiw held a senior editorial role at the now-defunct Sunday tabloid until 2005, when he joined a news agency in Manchester before moving to Florida. He told reporters last month that he was returning to the UK to meet police officers. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . News of the World Simon Hughes News International Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers James Robinson guardian.co.uk