News of the World’s former legal manager, Tom Crone, contradicts News Corp executive’s evidence to select committee James Murdoch knew about an explosive email that would have proved that phone hacking at the News of the World was not confined to “one rogue reporter”, MPs have been told. The former legal manager at the now-defunct tabloid, Tom Crone, openly contradicted evidence given by Murdoch to a parliamentary committee in July by telling the same committee today that he was “certain” he told the News International chief of the existence of this email during a meeting in 2008. According to Crone, the meeting lasted 15 minutes and was also attended by the then News of the World editor, Colin Myler, who concurred with the former legal affairs manager’s versions of events. Murdoch immediately dismissed Crone’s claims in a robust statement. He said he stood by his original testimony to the select committee and had not been aware that phone hacking extended beyond the former royal editor Clive Goodman and the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, both of whom had been convicted and jailed in relation to phone-hacking charges more than a year earlier. “Neither Mr Myler nor Mr Crone told me that wrongdoing extended beyond Mr Goodman or Mr Mulcaire,” said Murdoch. He added: “As I said in my testimony, there was nothing discussed in the meeting that led me to believe that a further investigation was necessary.” The continuing war of words between Murdoch and his two former executives almost certainly means he will be recalled to appear before the committee for a more forensic scrutiny of his original evidence. The culture, media and sport committee was today taking evidence from Crone and Myler and two other former News International executives as part of its investigation into allegations of “cover-up” of the scale of phone hacking at the Sunday paper. Crone said it was made clear to Murdoch during the 15-minute meeting what the email “was about” and “what it meant”. He said the email was documentary evidence that at least one other reporter was aware of phone hacking and that this was why they needed to settle out of court with the former Professional Footballers’ Association boss Gordon Taylor, who had taken civil action against the publisher in relation to the alleged interception of his voicemails by the paper. The email only emerged during the process of discovery by Taylor’s lawyers. “Up to then there was no evidence that News of the World were implicated. The first I saw of that was that was the ‘for Neville’ email which reached us in spring 2008. We went to see Mr Murdoch and it was explained to him what this document was and what it meant,” said Crone. It was at that meeting that Murdoch authorised Crone to reach a settlement with Taylor, who was eventually paid £425,000, the committee heard. Crone also insisted that there was no “cover-up” by the company, as the email had been provided to them by the Metropolitan police after it was seized from private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, who was jailed with Goodman in 2007 for hacking into the phone messages of members of the royal household. A confidentiality clause included in the settlement was insisted upon by Taylor’s lawyers to avoid sensitive information about his personal life becoming public, said Crone. He said the size of the payout to Taylor was “good legal management” designed to avert further litigation from other public figures who had been named in Glenn Mulcaire’s court case and was not about buying his silence. In a bruising clash with committee member Tom Watson – the Labour MP who has led the charge over phone hacking – Crone denied that Murdoch demanded a confidentiality clause and authorised the large financial settlement in order to prevent the exposure of “widespread criminality” at the News of the World. The former legal manager said his priority was to avoid cases being launched by four other individuals whose phones Mulcaire had admitted hacking. “The imperative or the priority at the time was to settle this case, get rid of it, contain the situation as far as four other litigants were concerned and get on with our business,” said Crone. Crone also said that the former editor of the paper, Andy Coulson, was keen to keep Goodman employed even if he was convicted and jailed for phone-hacking offences. And MPs were told that Goodman received a payout of about £240,000 despite being found guilty and being jailed for the offences in 2007 because of a “sense of family” towards staffat News International. The former head of legal affairs at News International, Jon Chapman, said the former chief executive of the company, Les Hinton, had “wanted to do it on compassionate grounds because of the Goodman family”. Chapman separately admitted that Rupert Murdoch had got it wrong when he said legal firm Harbottle & Lewis had made a “major mistake” when it did not report any evidence of illegal activities at the News of the World. However, he defended his former paymaster by saying he had not been properly briefed on Harbottle & Lewis’s review of internal emails. •
Continue reading …A bacterium found in soil could be a useful tool in fighting many types of cancer, reports the BBC . The Clostridium sporogenes bacterium, a relative to botulism and tetanus, produces spores that only grow when there is no oxygen. The human body is full of oxygen, but solid cancer tumors,…
Continue reading …Ken Clark says decision to allow sentencing to be televised will increase public confidence in justice system Judicial sentencing is to be televised, the justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, has announced. . The ban on filming in law courts will now be overturned, Clarke confirmed, as the government hopes to improve transparency and public understanding of the courts. The issue had been due to go for consultation with senior judges but in recent days Downing Street had moved to circumvent this consultation process and support the change. Announcing the decision on Tuesday, Clarke said: “The government and judiciary are determined to improve transparency and public understanding of courts through allowing court broadcasting. We believe television has a role in increasing public confidence in the justice system. “Broadcasting will initially be allowed from the court of appeal, and government will look to expand to the crown court later. All changes will be worked out in close consultation with the judiciary.” Filming will be of judges’ summary remarks only – victims, witnesses, offenders and jurors will not be filmed. The televising of court is currently banned by acts of parliament and so legislation will be required to allow cameras into court. A shift towards televising court has always been hampered by the spectre of OJ Simpson’s trial in the US which degenerated into prime-time entertainment. Television companies have been pressing for greater access to the highlights of court cases, and a consultation on the shift was undertaken by the previous Labour government but was eventually discarded. Now the present government has revived the plans, believing a judicial pronouncement should become more of a moment of public reckoning. Officials believe transparency would aid public understanding of the court process and the idea has gained momentum in the aftermath of the riots. After a Guardian report saying the prime minister was set to announce the change in the coming weeks, Clarke told Sky News on Tuesday morning he could see “no good reason” why television cameras should not be allowed in court to “record and give to the public the remarks of the judge”. By the afternoon, the government had decided to push ahead. Clarke also announced that new information on the performances of courts will be published in future to allow everyone to see how their local courts are working. This will include: • court-by-court statistics for the time taken for cases to be processed, from offence to conviction, allowing people to compare the performance of their local courts. • details on how many trials were ineffective and why they were ineffective. • anonymised data on each case heard at local courts and the sentences given. • details of how many people have been convicted or released from prisons in each area and how often they re-offended afterwards. From next May justice outcomes will be placed alongside crime data on police.uk so people can see what happens next after crimes are committed in their areas. When the country’s most senior court – the supreme court in Westminster – was opened in September 2009 it was fitted with cameras. As things stand it is the only court where footage is routinely available for broadcasters on request and has been televised live. It allows visitors to watch appeals and judgments on televisions around the building without sitting in the courtrooms, but it is seen to be a different case since supreme court hearings do not involve witnesses being cross-examined or juries. Cameras have been allowed in some Scottish courts under tight restrictions since 1992. The appeal of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing was televised in 2002. Writing in the Guardian in December, the head of Sky News, John Ryley, suggested the trials of six MPs who were accused of misusing their parliamentary expenses were prime examples of public interest trials that would have benefited from being televised. Last month he renewed his call for televised sentencing in an open letter to Clarke Sadiq Khan, Labour’s shadow justice secretary, welcomed the announcement that certain aspects of court proceedings will be televised. “Allowing the broadcast of judges’ sentencing remarks could make the sentencing process more transparent and understandable,” he said. “However, it will be extremely important to ensure that careful controls are in place to protect jurors, victims and witnesses. We do not support the televising of anything that might make jurors, victims and witnesses vulnerable to intimidation. “Our criminal justice system relies on victims and witnesses coming forward to give evidence and nothing should be done to jeopardise that. “It is important that our justice system is open and accessible. If done well and responsibly, this could be an important step in achieving that.” Cameras in court Kenneth Clarke UK criminal justice Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Following a run of downbeat economic data, the chancellor acknowledged that he would have to cut his forecast of UK growth George Osborne has signalled that the government would stick to its hardline deficit reduction strategy despite being forced to revise down his growth forecasts for the economy following the slowdown of recent months. The chancellor said the coalition’s tax increases and spending restraint had been designed to allow interest rates to remain low — a clear hint that he would back a second round of money creation from the Bank of England through the quantitative easing process. Speaking at Lloyd’s of London, the chancellor said: “We warned repeatedly that the recovery would be choppy. And we set in train a plan that was comprehensive and clear in its vision, but also flexible enough to withstand shocks along the way. “A plan for fiscal responsibility to bring unsustainable government borrowing under control, so that monetary activism can allow interest rates to stay lower for longer. The plan we have set out is designed in tough times for tough times. It is the rock of stability upon which any sustainable recovery depends and we will hold to it.” Following a run of downbeat economic data, Osborne acknowledged that he would have to cut his forecast of UK growth when he delivers his autumn statement to parliament on 29 November. He said recoveries from financial crises were slower and choppier than recoveries from other types of recession. “So, while we have all had to revise down our short term expectations over recent weeks, the only people who should be fundamentally re-examining their view of the world are those who thought that this time was different.” Most City firms believe that the economy — which has grown by a total of 0.2% in the nine months to June — will grow at barely more than 1% this year, and will continue to expand sluggishly in 2012. Weak surveys for manufacturing, construction and services in the past week have increased the pressure on the Treasury and the Bank of England to provide a boost to growth. Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund and Robert Zoellick, the president of the World Bank, have both warned this week of the dangers of governments cutting deficits too aggressively, but Osborne said his strategy had ensured Britain had remained insulated from the sovereign debt crisis affecting other nations. “We had an emergency budget last summer on our own terms – not this summer on the market’s terms – unlike so many other countries. We have been ahead of the curve. We have been a safe haven in the sovereign debt storm. We have delivered record low interest rates for families, businesses and taxpayers. We are not immune from what happens on our doorstep. But we can remain masters of our own destiny.” Osborne said ministers had always understood that there could never be a return to the “business as usual” conditions that existed before the financial crisis of 2007. “This government has never thought that this time would be different,” he said. “We understood right from the beginning that the world of the boom years had changed beyond recognition. We identified the problems and the risks – an overleveraged economy, an unsustainable budget deficit and a broken model of growth.” Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said: “It’s time George Osborne got out of his denial and admitted that Britain now faces a growth crisis. And he should listen to the head of the IMF and one of the largest investment funds in the world who have warned that cutting too far and too fast risks economic recovery. “Without strong growth and more people in work it will be harder to get the deficit down. That’s why we urgently need leadership from the chancellor on the world stage to agree a global plan for growth and a more balanced deficit plan here in Britain.” Budget deficit Economics Economic policy George Osborne Government borrowing Financial crisis Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Two police officers and 46 other people were shot in New York City over the holiday weekend, reports the New York Daily News . Many called it the worst weekend of violence in years, with three people killed, including a 56-year-old woman sitting on her porch who was hit by a…
Continue reading …A gigantic saltwater crocodile as heavy as a Volkswagen Beetle has been captured by residents of a Philippine village. They plan to make the monster the star of a new local ecotourism park. The 21-foot, one-ton male was nabbed in a creek and could be the largest croc captured in…
Continue reading …Are the experts more likely to err on the high side or the low side when they predict how many jobs the economy created each month? Nate Silver of the New York Times looked at every monthly jobs report since 2000 to find out. His conclusion: “Over the past ten years, there have been 89
Continue reading …A Colorado teenager lost both her legs below the knee when she tried to jump onto a moving freight train with her friends and slipped under the rails. One of her friends pulled her out and a nurse who happened to be passing applied tourniquets to her limbs, reports the…
Continue reading …President Obama isn’t the only candidate for the White House who’s set to give a major speech on the economy this week. One of his main rivals, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, will lay out his own job creation plans this afternoon. And in an op-ed in USA Today, Romney offered a sneak peek at
Continue reading …Trouble in political paradise? Senior Republican strategic Ed Rollins, who helped Michele Bachmann win the Iowa straw poll last month, is stepping down from Bachmann’s campaign, citing health issues, reports Politico . “I wish I was 40 years old, but I’m not,” he said. “I’m 68 years old, I had a…
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