During the 2008 presidential campaign one Fox News executive repeatedly tried to smear Barack Obama with charges of “socialism.” Liberal watchdog group Media Matters has uncovered audio that indicates Fox News Washington managing editor Bill Sammon was just engaging in what he called “mischievous speculation.” In 2009, Sammon told an audience aboard Mediterranean cruise sponsored by a right-wing college that his 2008 attempt to link Obama to socialism was “a premise that privately I found rather far-fetched.” “Last year, candidate Barack Obama stood on a sidewalk in Toledo, Ohio, and first let it slip to Joe the Plumber that he wanted to quote, ‘spread the wealth around,’” Sammon said. “At that time, I have to admit, that I went on TV on Fox News and publicly engaged in what I guess was some rather mischievous speculation about whether Barack Obama really advocated socialism, a premise that privately I found rather far-fetched.” During the 2008 campaign, the then-Washington deputy managing editor repeatedly suggested that Obama had socialist tendencies. On Oct. 14, 2008, Sammon said that Obama’s comment to Joe Wurzelbacher “is red meat when you’re talking to conservatives and you start talking about ‘spread the wealth around.’ That is tantamount to socialism.” In early February, Media Matters obtained an email where Sammon offered talking points to Fox News staff, linking Obama to socialism and Marxism during the 2008 campaign. “If Fox News really cares about its ‘reporting,’ they will fire DC exec Bill Sammon over this,” former MSNBC anchor David Shuster tweeted Tuesday. “These remarks, unearthed by the liberal advocacy group Media Matters, raise the question of whether Sammon, who oversees Washington news coverage for Fox News, was deliberately trying to sabotage the Democratic presidential candidate,” The Daily Beast’s Howard Kurtz noted . In another e-mail obtained by Media Matters, Sammon told his staff to downplay the importance of climate science that showed the world was getting warmer. Additional emails showed that Sammon asked his news department to refer to the public option as the “government run option” because polls showed the phrase “government option” was opposed by the public.
Continue reading …Don’t be afraid of the new longer length maxi and midi skirts. Here’s how to drop your hem and raise your style quotient Admit it. The fashioning-up of the longer skirt has piqued your interest, hasn’t it? The maxi skirt and its more awkward younger sister, the midi length, have – after a couple of seasons’s hard graft – finally stolen the limelight. It is the trend most likely to convert its catwalk kudos into commercial success and as a grown-up with a real body you’re keen to get involved, but more than a little bit wary because – and let’s not sugarcoat this – they might be less revealing but they are far from easy to wear. In fact they are downright difficult. The catwalks have been trying to convince us about “longer” for a while. Back in September there was a lot of hoo-ha after a beautiful Jil Sander show focused on floor-length couture-style skirts in pinks and oranges. It was, according to Caroline Issa, fashion director at Tank magazine and darling of the blogosphere, “the moment when I
Continue reading …Don’t be afraid of the new longer length maxi and midi skirts. Here’s how to drop your hem and raise your style quotient Admit it. The fashioning-up of the longer skirt has piqued your interest, hasn’t it? The maxi skirt and its more awkward younger sister, the midi length, have – after a couple of seasons’s hard graft – finally stolen the limelight. It is the trend most likely to convert its catwalk kudos into commercial success and as a grown-up with a real body you’re keen to get involved, but more than a little bit wary because – and let’s not sugarcoat this – they might be less revealing but they are far from easy to wear. In fact they are downright difficult. The catwalks have been trying to convince us about “longer” for a while. Back in September there was a lot of hoo-ha after a beautiful Jil Sander show focused on floor-length couture-style skirts in pinks and oranges. It was, according to Caroline Issa, fashion director at Tank magazine and darling of the blogosphere, “the moment when I
Continue reading …Don’t be afraid of the new longer length maxi and midi skirts. Here’s how to drop your hem and raise your style quotient Admit it. The fashioning-up of the longer skirt has piqued your interest, hasn’t it? The maxi skirt and its more awkward younger sister, the midi length, have – after a couple of seasons’s hard graft – finally stolen the limelight. It is the trend most likely to convert its catwalk kudos into commercial success and as a grown-up with a real body you’re keen to get involved, but more than a little bit wary because – and let’s not sugarcoat this – they might be less revealing but they are far from easy to wear. In fact they are downright difficult. The catwalks have been trying to convince us about “longer” for a while. Back in September there was a lot of hoo-ha after a beautiful Jil Sander show focused on floor-length couture-style skirts in pinks and oranges. It was, according to Caroline Issa, fashion director at Tank magazine and darling of the blogosphere, “the moment when I
Continue reading …Katy B cut her teeth on London’s dubstep scene – but now the charts and breakfast TV are calling. The 21-year-old tells Rebecca Nicholson why she’ll always be a raver at heart In skinny jeans, red jumper and Vans trainers, her freshly dyed red hair pulled back, South London’s Katy B is a different kind of pop star. Somehow she’s got all bases covered, juggling white label, pirate-station authenticity and one-of-us, we-could-be-mates appeal. While the media still hypes indie bands, it’s an increasingly desperate endeavour: this week, the entire top 40 features just one – Noah and the Whale at No 19. Just as they have for the past two years, pop, dance and R&B continue to reign supreme, and Katy B, whose irresistible pop-dubstep single Katy on a Mission hit the top five last summer, is the current sound of both the clubs and the charts. At the east London headquarters of Rinse FM , the pirate station turned legit broadcaster which has been pushing the dubstep, grime and UK funky of London’s underground since its inception, Katy is busy attending to the business of being a pop star, choosing clothes for TV appearances and planning rehearsals for the live show she’s about to take on the road. Rinse is also home to her record label and management, and she spends her mornings here, working and hanging out. Today, she drops into the Grimey Breakfast Show, broadcasting from the studio next door, to mess around on air with host Scratcha . She gets her hair and makeup done for a series of photoshoots, gossips with her stylist about celeb-mag favourites Peter Andre and “new love” Elen Rivas, and fills me in on the EastEnders baby-swap storyline. It’s like going to the hairdresser, if the hairdresser had a healthy interest in the state of dubstep as well as holidays in Turkey with her mates. Born Kathleen Brien (“the most Irish name ever”) to a plumber father and postwoman mother, Katy grew up in Peckham, south-east London and learned her trade as a vocalist on the underground dance scene. She appeared as Baby Katy on DJ NG’s Tell Me when she was just 16, working mostly with bedroom producers whose records got picked up by pirate radio stations across the capital. In the four years since then, she has criss-crossed genres, singing over drum’n’bass, house, dubstep and its latest mutation UK funky, finally coming up with a debut album, On a Mission, that mixes up those styles into something both credible and accessible. There are mixed-up elements in Katy herself, too. She finished a degree in popular music at Goldsmiths university last year, at around the same time as she filmed her first music video. Her course involved writing an essay about UK funky , “the social elements around it and how it developed and stuff”, which she probably knew more about than the person marking her. Although her relationship with Rinse was well underway, she did the degree regardless: “I just wanted to learn more about music and I didn’t want to fall into getting a job and not pursuing it, so I thought it would keep me on that path.” And though she found her way into music through club nights and on pirate stations, she’s been a performer looking to turn pro since she was a child, auditioning for Annie in the West End when she was eight. “That was the first time I had to sing. I auditioned to be Hermione in Harry Potter as well. They were like, ‘Have you read the book?’ I was like, ‘No.’ ‘Next!’” When she was 14, she went to the Brit school for performing arts in Croydon, where she was in the year below Adele and Jessie J . “If people think it’s all singing, dancing and acting, well that’s what I wanted, do you know what I mean?” she says, insisting that going to stage school didn’t earn her any stick from the hipper-than-thou dance community. “I met all my best friends and I loved it,” she says, before summing up her overground/underground appeal completely. “But I didn’t make my music there, I did it outside. The first tune that I released, I
Continue reading …Katy B cut her teeth on London’s dubstep scene – but now the charts and breakfast TV are calling. The 21-year-old tells Rebecca Nicholson why she’ll always be a raver at heart In skinny jeans, red jumper and Vans trainers, her freshly dyed red hair pulled back, South London’s Katy B is a different kind of pop star. Somehow she’s got all bases covered, juggling white label, pirate-station authenticity and one-of-us, we-could-be-mates appeal. While the media still hypes indie bands, it’s an increasingly desperate endeavour: this week, the entire top 40 features just one – Noah and the Whale at No 19. Just as they have for the past two years, pop, dance and R&B continue to reign supreme, and Katy B, whose irresistible pop-dubstep single Katy on a Mission hit the top five last summer, is the current sound of both the clubs and the charts. At the east London headquarters of Rinse FM , the pirate station turned legit broadcaster which has been pushing the dubstep, grime and UK funky of London’s underground since its inception, Katy is busy attending to the business of being a pop star, choosing clothes for TV appearances and planning rehearsals for the live show she’s about to take on the road. Rinse is also home to her record label and management, and she spends her mornings here, working and hanging out. Today, she drops into the Grimey Breakfast Show, broadcasting from the studio next door, to mess around on air with host Scratcha . She gets her hair and makeup done for a series of photoshoots, gossips with her stylist about celeb-mag favourites Peter Andre and “new love” Elen Rivas, and fills me in on the EastEnders baby-swap storyline. It’s like going to the hairdresser, if the hairdresser had a healthy interest in the state of dubstep as well as holidays in Turkey with her mates. Born Kathleen Brien (“the most Irish name ever”) to a plumber father and postwoman mother, Katy grew up in Peckham, south-east London and learned her trade as a vocalist on the underground dance scene. She appeared as Baby Katy on DJ NG’s Tell Me when she was just 16, working mostly with bedroom producers whose records got picked up by pirate radio stations across the capital. In the four years since then, she has criss-crossed genres, singing over drum’n’bass, house, dubstep and its latest mutation UK funky, finally coming up with a debut album, On a Mission, that mixes up those styles into something both credible and accessible. There are mixed-up elements in Katy herself, too. She finished a degree in popular music at Goldsmiths university last year, at around the same time as she filmed her first music video. Her course involved writing an essay about UK funky , “the social elements around it and how it developed and stuff”, which she probably knew more about than the person marking her. Although her relationship with Rinse was well underway, she did the degree regardless: “I just wanted to learn more about music and I didn’t want to fall into getting a job and not pursuing it, so I thought it would keep me on that path.” And though she found her way into music through club nights and on pirate stations, she’s been a performer looking to turn pro since she was a child, auditioning for Annie in the West End when she was eight. “That was the first time I had to sing. I auditioned to be Hermione in Harry Potter as well. They were like, ‘Have you read the book?’ I was like, ‘No.’ ‘Next!’” When she was 14, she went to the Brit school for performing arts in Croydon, where she was in the year below Adele and Jessie J . “If people think it’s all singing, dancing and acting, well that’s what I wanted, do you know what I mean?” she says, insisting that going to stage school didn’t earn her any stick from the hipper-than-thou dance community. “I met all my best friends and I loved it,” she says, before summing up her overground/underground appeal completely. “But I didn’t make my music there, I did it outside. The first tune that I released, I
Continue reading …Katy B cut her teeth on London’s dubstep scene – but now the charts and breakfast TV are calling. The 21-year-old tells Rebecca Nicholson why she’ll always be a raver at heart In skinny jeans, red jumper and Vans trainers, her freshly dyed red hair pulled back, South London’s Katy B is a different kind of pop star. Somehow she’s got all bases covered, juggling white label, pirate-station authenticity and one-of-us, we-could-be-mates appeal. While the media still hypes indie bands, it’s an increasingly desperate endeavour: this week, the entire top 40 features just one – Noah and the Whale at No 19. Just as they have for the past two years, pop, dance and R&B continue to reign supreme, and Katy B, whose irresistible pop-dubstep single Katy on a Mission hit the top five last summer, is the current sound of both the clubs and the charts. At the east London headquarters of Rinse FM , the pirate station turned legit broadcaster which has been pushing the dubstep, grime and UK funky of London’s underground since its inception, Katy is busy attending to the business of being a pop star, choosing clothes for TV appearances and planning rehearsals for the live show she’s about to take on the road. Rinse is also home to her record label and management, and she spends her mornings here, working and hanging out. Today, she drops into the Grimey Breakfast Show, broadcasting from the studio next door, to mess around on air with host Scratcha . She gets her hair and makeup done for a series of photoshoots, gossips with her stylist about celeb-mag favourites Peter Andre and “new love” Elen Rivas, and fills me in on the EastEnders baby-swap storyline. It’s like going to the hairdresser, if the hairdresser had a healthy interest in the state of dubstep as well as holidays in Turkey with her mates. Born Kathleen Brien (“the most Irish name ever”) to a plumber father and postwoman mother, Katy grew up in Peckham, south-east London and learned her trade as a vocalist on the underground dance scene. She appeared as Baby Katy on DJ NG’s Tell Me when she was just 16, working mostly with bedroom producers whose records got picked up by pirate radio stations across the capital. In the four years since then, she has criss-crossed genres, singing over drum’n’bass, house, dubstep and its latest mutation UK funky, finally coming up with a debut album, On a Mission, that mixes up those styles into something both credible and accessible. There are mixed-up elements in Katy herself, too. She finished a degree in popular music at Goldsmiths university last year, at around the same time as she filmed her first music video. Her course involved writing an essay about UK funky , “the social elements around it and how it developed and stuff”, which she probably knew more about than the person marking her. Although her relationship with Rinse was well underway, she did the degree regardless: “I just wanted to learn more about music and I didn’t want to fall into getting a job and not pursuing it, so I thought it would keep me on that path.” And though she found her way into music through club nights and on pirate stations, she’s been a performer looking to turn pro since she was a child, auditioning for Annie in the West End when she was eight. “That was the first time I had to sing. I auditioned to be Hermione in Harry Potter as well. They were like, ‘Have you read the book?’ I was like, ‘No.’ ‘Next!’” When she was 14, she went to the Brit school for performing arts in Croydon, where she was in the year below Adele and Jessie J . “If people think it’s all singing, dancing and acting, well that’s what I wanted, do you know what I mean?” she says, insisting that going to stage school didn’t earn her any stick from the hipper-than-thou dance community. “I met all my best friends and I loved it,” she says, before summing up her overground/underground appeal completely. “But I didn’t make my music there, I did it outside. The first tune that I released, I
Continue reading …A friendly of vigour and ambition is an anachronism and the majority of the Wembley crowd will be unsure if it is wholly to their taste. Those England followers did not see a victory delivered by Andy Carroll’s first goal for his country because Ghana deservedly equalised in stoppage time with a shot from Asamoah Gyan. The fixture had also contained the statutory curio when Danny Welbeck, on loan to Sunderland from Manchester United, received his England debut as a substitute. Supporters are not naive and few bought tickets under the misconception that a rip-roaring performance from the cream of the country’s footballers awaited them. The nature of friendlies is understood and more or less tolerated. Indeed, fans were not being exploited quite as severely as some had dreaded, even if Joe Hart, Glen Johnson, Jack Wilshere, and Ashley Young were the only starters who had also been on the field at kick-off against Wales in Cardiff last Saturday. The England manager Fabio Capello had not really resorted to obscure batch of footballers. Carroll certainly could not be termed a makeweight once Liverpool had spent £35m to take him from Newcastle United. He had already made his debut in the loss to France four months ago, but expectations have climbed in parallel with his valuation. If it was any comfort to him, there was a craving from his team-mates to get him into the action. At least the early part of the night was given over to spirited attacking from the hosts. There was high energy, underlined by the interchanging midfield. Modest experimentation was on show, too, with Stuart Downing and Ashley Young, against expectation, on right and left wings respectively. If there was any disappointment, it lay for a while in the fact that Carroll did not look entirely fit following the recent injury and could not assist much in the swirling play at that stage. It may be most encouraging of all that he notched the opener in any case. Regardless of physical condition, his impact was unimpaired. Two minutes from half-time Young found his Aston Villa team-mate Downing and the latter released Carroll to score with a low and accurate finish. Young’s part in that ought to have come as a relief to the Villa winger since he had found a way of hitting the bar from close range after excellent build-up from Downing before Miler cut the ball back in the 25th minute. There was an eagerness to England that could not have been expected in the opposition. Nobody would have supposed that the friendly was at the forefront of Ghana’s thinking. Minds were expected to have been a little jumbled by the 4,000 mile journey to London following Sunday’s away victory in Brazzaville over Congo in the Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers. Even so, some were sprightlier than others and Sunderland’s Gyan, who had been suspended from that fixture, should have been capable of bringing a relative freshness to this match. There was a desire to compete with England and to earn the approval of the significant number of their followers at Wembley. Hart needed to make a very good save from a close range attempt by Dominic Adiyah in the 25th minute, even if the goalkeeper was also on the verge of looking a hapless figure when he knocked the ball to Gyan. The striker came to his aid by looking puzzled rather than merciless on discovering that he was in possession. The edge to the game also looked a little blunted at the outset of the second-half. Ghana, perhaps hoping to counter the fatigue of the trek to London, made three substitutions at half-time. It would, in any case, have been unexpected for a friendly to continue in so frisky a manner. If anything, it was the visitors who had more zest. Talk of their desire to be the first African team to defeat England did not look like promotional hype when a drive from John Pantsil was deflected just over the bar with almost an hour gone. At that point England followers might have felt a secret pang of nostalgia for duller friendlies in which their team prevails as a matter of course. There had to be a deep respect for a side that had travelled so far and arrived so recently to conduct themselves as if such a schedule had been expressly designed to bring out the best of themselves. As the match moved towards the last 20 minutes England were still awaiting evidence of exhaustion in their opponents. Many onlookers will have known days when they raged against the insipid character of matches at Wembley when no prize is at stake, but this was too authentic for comfort. It did at least hold the attention of 80,102 people. Some held their breath when Gyan ran clear from the right in the 68th minute, only to bash his shot into the side netting from an angle. Capello brought on the Wolves winger Matt Jarvis for his debut, but by then it must have been the need for more energy that really accounted for his introduction on this testing occasion. Friendlies England Ghana Kevin McCarra guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Hillary Clinton and William Hague claim arming rebel groups may be legal under the recent UN resolution The US and Britain have raised the prospect of arming Libya’s rebels if air strikes fail to force Muammar Gaddafi from power. At the end of a conference on Libya in London, Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, said for the first time that she believed arming rebel groups was legal under UN security council resolution 1973, passed two weeks ago, which also provided the legal justification for air strikes. America’s envoy to the UN, Susan Rice, said earlier the US had “not ruled out” channelling arms to the rebels. The British foreign secretary, William Hague, agreed that the resolution made it legal “to give people aid in order to defend themselves in particular circumstances”. The west’s main Arab ally, Qatar, also said providing weapons to Gaddafi’s opponents should be considered if air strikes failed to dislodge him. The Gulf state’s prime minister, Sheikh Hamad Al-Thani, said the effect of air strikes would have to be evaluated in a few days, but added: “We cannot let the people suffer for too long.” A prolonged conflict appeared more likely after pro-Gaddafi forces launched a powerful counterattack against Libyan rebelstoday, sending the revolutionaries fleeing from towns they had taken only two days earlier. Mahmoud Shammam, a spokesman for the rebel interim national council (INC) said the insurgents lacked weapons. “We don’t have arms at all, otherwise we would finish Gaddafi in a few days. We ask for the political support more than we are asking for the arms. But if we get both that would be great.” However, the French and the Italians disagreed with Washington and London’s interpretation of the UN resolution. Asked about the possibility of arming the rebels, the French foreign minister, Alain Juppé said: “It is not part of the UN resolutions, but we are ready to discuss it with our partners.” French and Italian officials said the issue had been discussed at the conference in London, contradicting US and British assurances to the contrary. There appeared to be greater consensus on offering Gaddafi a way out of the conflict through exile, with Italy leading the way in seeking a haven prepared to accept the Libyan leader. The UK was not looking for somewhere for him to go, said Hague. “That doesn’t exclude other countries from doing so.” Clinton said the UN’s special envoy to Libya, Abdul Ilah Khatib, was due in Tripoli soon to explore “a political solution that could involve [Gaddafi] leaving the country”. The INC was not formally invited to the London conference, and has only been recognised so far by France and Qatar. However, it emerged from the conference with its status enhanced. The group was allowed to use the Foreign Office’s official briefing room to launch its political manifesto, A Vision of a Democratic Libya, which diplomats distributed on its behalf. Shammam said Clinton herself had “just stopped short of recognition,” but had dispatched a senior US diplomat, Chris Stevens, to Benghazi to strengthen ties. “We have been told here that a lot more delegates will be coming to Benghazi soon,” Shammam said. The conference agreed to study a Qatari proposal to sell oil from rebel-held areas of Libya, to provide revenue for the insurgents. However Clinton admitted that Americans “do not know as much as we would like to” about the INC. In Washington, Admiral James Stavridis, Nato’s supreme allied commander in Europe, told the Senate intelligence analysis had revealed “flickers” of al-Qaida or Hezbollah presence inside the movement, and argued it required further study. Rice told Fox News she was “reading much the same stuff” and distanced herself from Stavridis’s comments. “I think we can’t rule out the possibility that extremist elements could filter into any segment of Libyan society and it’s something clearly we will watch carefully for,” she said. Pro-Gaddafi forces bolstered by recent reinforcements bombarded rebel positions 45 miles from the politically and strategically significant town of Sirte, on the Libyan coast. Revolutionaries around Bin Jawad eventually fled under the intense assault. The government army moved into the town and then continued to press east for 20 miles along the main coastal road until they came within striking distance of Ras Lanuf, which was left dangerously vulnerable when rebels fled a fresh round of attacks on the road. Towns on the road to Benghazi have changed hands several times since the beginning of the uprising two months ago. The rebels’ see-sawing military fortunes, which saw them charge down the road to Bin Jawad on Sunday after western air strikes sent Gaddafi’s forces fleeing only to charge back up again yesterday, is further confirmation that they are unlikely to be able to defeat the regime without foreign air forces continuing to destroy government tanks and artillery. It was not immediately clear if there had been any air strikes near Sirte or Bin Jawad on Monday, but the advance of the regime’s forces did not appear to have been slowed. Rebel fighters demanded to know if Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president who is a favourite of the revolutionaries after his government recognised them, was sleeping. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Hillary Clinton William Hague Arab and Middle East unrest US foreign policy Julian Borger Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Scotland Yard acting deputy commissioner defends himself after criticism from MPs Scotland Yard’s acting deputy commissioner, John Yates, has continued to fight his corner in the face of further allegations that he misled parliament over the phone-hacking scandal. In written evidence to the home affairs select committee, Chris Bryant MP, who first laid the charge against Yates in the House of Commons earlier this month, claimed that: • Yates had always maintained there were very few victims in the affair, yet a briefing paper produced by Scotland Yard during the original inquiry had recorded that “a vast number of unique voicemail numbers belonging to high-profile individuals have been identified as being accessed without authority.” • Yates had told the home affairs committee last September that there was no evidence that MPs’ phones had been tapped, yet “at least eight MPs that I am aware of, have now been shown evidence that has been in police possession since 2006 that shows precisely that.” • Yates claimed that police had approached all known and suspected victims, yet they had failed to inform a number of people who had now been confirmed as victims including, Bryant said, the former deputy prime minister, John Prescott, actor Sienna Miller and her friends and family and interior designer Kelly Hoppen. • Yates had failed to tell select committees that police never fully searched the material which they seized in 2006 from Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator at the centre of the affair, and since this had later proved to include 2,978 mobile phone numbers, “it is difficult to see how his assertion that there were very few victims can possibly have been based on fact.” Yates emphatically denied he had ever misled parliament. He defended his position on the central point of law which has become the subject of a public dispute between him and the director of public prosecutions (DPP), Keir Starmer QC. Yates has consistently said that it is an offence to intercept voicemail only if it has not already been heard by its intended recipient. On this narrow interpretation, the hacking affair involved few victims and few offenders. However, the DPP has told the committee in writing that prosecuting counsel in the original inquiry in 2006 never adopted this interpretation and that it played no part in the charges brought against Mulcaire and the News of the World’s royal correspondent, Clive Goodman, or in the legal proceedings generally. Yates stood his ground. He said Bryant had been wrong to claim in the House of Commons on 10 March that the CPS had never advised police to adopt this narrow interpretation. He provided the committee with a written summary of evidence which he gave last week to the media, culture and sport committee listing a series of occasions on which the CPS had specifically told police that they had to prove not only that voicemail had been intercepted but this had happened before their intended recipients had heard them. “That advice permeated the entire inquiry,” he said. Yates told the committee that the advice had remained unchanged until October 2010, when Scotland Yard started a new inquiry and the CPS advised them to take a broader approach, simply regarding all interception of voicemail as illegal. He said Bryant had been wrong to suggest that in October 2010 the CPS had formally warned police that the previous advice had been wrong. “A different QC had provided some differing advice. It signalled an intention to take the broader view for the future.” He said Bryant had now “absolutely conceded” that he had been wrong on the point. However, in his written evidence, Bryant conceded only that “it is true that during the very early days, a lawyer at the CPS may have advised” adopting the narrow version of the law. He quoted the DPP’s claim that this advice “had no bearing on the charges brought against the defendants or the legal proceedings generally.” He suggested that that the original CPS advice had been set aside during the original inquiry, in August 2006, when David Perry QC was brought in as prosecuting counsel. “Perry expressly wrote to the CPS on October 3 2006 that all that they had to prove was that the message had been listened to by Mulcaire, not that the message was virgin.” Bryant went on to accuse Yates of misleading the culture, media and sport committee last week: “Even in his evidence to the DCMS committee last week, he disingenuously only referred to advice prior to August 9th 2006, before the first meeting at which David Perry gave the advice that secured the conviction of Goodman and Mulcaire.” The committee chairman, Keith Vaz, said the DPP would be giving evidence on the matter. The committee also asked Yates whether police had ever questioned Rebekah Brooks, the former editor of the News of the World and the Sun, over her 2003 evidence to a select committee that her journalists had paid the police for information. Yates said she had not been questioned but that Scotland Yard was currently ‘researching’ the matter to see what had been done about it. Yates was challenged by Mark Reckless MP to explain why he was willing to use public money to pay for lawyers to threaten newspapers whose reports he found objectionable, while victims of the hacking affair had had to spend large amounts of their own money to take civil actions to uncover the truth about crimes committed against them. Yates said the two points were completely separate and that, while he had asked for authority to use public funds for his legal advice, he had no intention of suing. Bryant referred to recent disclosures about a series of dinners where Yates and other senior officers met News of the World editors: “The Met have not helped themselves by having regular meetings with the News of the World at the same time as they are supposed to be investigating them.” There was, he said, “a serious risk that they might be perceived to be in collusion with the newspaper.” Yates said police were “duty bound to engage at various levels with politicians, businessmen and media” and suggested that he had probably had more lunches with the Guardian than with the News of the World. Bryant told the committee that he commended the current Yard inquiry under Deputy Assistant Commissioner Sue Akers. But he added: “The Met not only failed to do a full investigation in 2006; they have consistently and repeatedly failed to interrogate the evidence they seized in 2006; they have misled individual victims and potential victims; they have opened themselves to charges of collusion by frequently socialising with journalists and executives at the very organisation they were supposedly investigating; and they have consistently failed to give the full picture to this committee. Most worryingly, they have, for whatever reason, failed to expose the full degree of criminality involved, leaving victims to fend for themselves by dragging information out of the Met in civil court.” Phone hacking John Yates Police National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Nick Davies guardian.co.uk
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