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Piers Morgan under pressure to return to UK from America

MPs say ex-Daily Mirror editor must face questions after phone hacking allegations made on Newsnight Piers Morgan is facing calls to return to the UK to answer questions about phone hacking as the controversy over how much he knew about the practice showed no signs of abating. John Whittingdale, the Conservative MP who chairs the Commons culture, media and sport committee, said it was right that the former Daily Mirror editor should return from the United States, where he hosts a CNN chatshow. Whittingdale said: “Therese Coffey [a Tory member of the committee] said he should come back to this country to answer questions and I think that is absolutely right. He certainly should.” Harriet Harman, Labour’s deputy leader, said Morgan had questions to answer, citing a column he wrote five years ago in which he wrote that he had once been played a message left on a mobile phone belonging to Heather Mills. Harman said: “Hacking is a criminal offence and … every allegation has got to be thoroughly investigated by the police. We started off with just the News of the World … it’s clearly been much more widespread than people have been prepared to admit.” Morgan, who edited the Daily Mirror for nearly 10 years until 2004, said in a Daily Mail column in 2006 that he had heard the message, which was left by Sir Paul McCartney on Mills’s phone after the couple had an argument. He said the former Beatle sounded “lonely, miserable and desperate”. Mills told the BBC’s Newsnight this week that a senior journalist on a paper owned by Trinity Mirror, the Daily Mirror’s parent company, conceded to her in 2001 that he had obtained information about an apology left by McCartney by listening to her phone messages. According to Mills, the journalist rang her and “started quoting verbatim the messages from my machine”. She said she challenged him, saying: “You’ve obviously hacked my phone and if you do anything with this story … I’ll go to the police.” Mills said he responded: “OK, OK, yeah, we did hear it on your voice messages, I won’t run it.” Morgan has consistently denied he has ever hacked a phone, ordered any of his journalists to do so, or published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone. He issued a statement through CNN, for whom he records Tonight with Piers Morgan, in response to Mills’s claims pointing out that a high-court judge had described her as a unreliable witness. “No doubt everyone will take this and other instances of somewhat extravagant claims by Ms Mills into account in assessing what credibility and platform her assertions are given,” he said. Morgan used Twitter to ridicule the prominence of the story on Thursday, posting: “Morning all, lovely day in LA. Anything going on back home in UK? Seems a bit quiet over there … so heart-warming that everyone in UK’s missing me so much they want me to come home.” Trinity Mirror, which also owns the Sunday Mirror and the People, said on Thursday: “All our journalists work within the criminal law and the PCC code of conduct and we have seen no evidence to suggest otherwise.” Meanwhile the FBI is widening its investigation of News Corporation’s activities within the US to look at whether allegations of computer hacking by one of its subsidiaries was an isolated case or part of a “larger pattern of behaviour”, Time magazine is reporting. Time suggests that the FBI inquiry has been extended from a relatively narrow look at alleged malpractices by News Corp in America into a more general inquiry into whether the company used possibly illegal strongarm tactics to browbeat rival firms, following allegations of computer hacking made by retail advertising company Floorgraphics. In a civil lawsuit against News Corp in 2004 Floorgraphics told a court that its website had been breached 11 times over four months without authorisation. The source of the alleged hacking was traced back to an IP address registered to News America in Connecticut . Piers Morgan Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers United States James Robinson guardian.co.uk

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Piers Morgan under pressure to return to UK from America

MPs say ex-Daily Mirror editor must face questions after phone hacking allegations made on Newsnight Piers Morgan is facing calls to return to the UK to answer questions about phone hacking as the controversy over how much he knew about the practice showed no signs of abating. John Whittingdale, the Conservative MP who chairs the Commons culture, media and sport committee, said it was right that the former Daily Mirror editor should return from the United States, where he hosts a CNN chatshow. Whittingdale said: “Therese Coffey [a Tory member of the committee] said he should come back to this country to answer questions and I think that is absolutely right. He certainly should.” Harriet Harman, Labour’s deputy leader, said Morgan had questions to answer, citing a column he wrote five years ago in which he wrote that he had once been played a message left on a mobile phone belonging to Heather Mills. Harman said: “Hacking is a criminal offence and … every allegation has got to be thoroughly investigated by the police. We started off with just the News of the World … it’s clearly been much more widespread than people have been prepared to admit.” Morgan, who edited the Daily Mirror for nearly 10 years until 2004, said in a Daily Mail column in 2006 that he had heard the message, which was left by Sir Paul McCartney on Mills’s phone after the couple had an argument. He said the former Beatle sounded “lonely, miserable and desperate”. Mills told the BBC’s Newsnight this week that a senior journalist on a paper owned by Trinity Mirror, the Daily Mirror’s parent company, conceded to her in 2001 that he had obtained information about an apology left by McCartney by listening to her phone messages. According to Mills, the journalist rang her and “started quoting verbatim the messages from my machine”. She said she challenged him, saying: “You’ve obviously hacked my phone and if you do anything with this story … I’ll go to the police.” Mills said he responded: “OK, OK, yeah, we did hear it on your voice messages, I won’t run it.” Morgan has consistently denied he has ever hacked a phone, ordered any of his journalists to do so, or published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone. He issued a statement through CNN, for whom he records Tonight with Piers Morgan, in response to Mills’s claims pointing out that a high-court judge had described her as a unreliable witness. “No doubt everyone will take this and other instances of somewhat extravagant claims by Ms Mills into account in assessing what credibility and platform her assertions are given,” he said. Morgan used Twitter to ridicule the prominence of the story on Thursday, posting: “Morning all, lovely day in LA. Anything going on back home in UK? Seems a bit quiet over there … so heart-warming that everyone in UK’s missing me so much they want me to come home.” Trinity Mirror, which also owns the Sunday Mirror and the People, said on Thursday: “All our journalists work within the criminal law and the PCC code of conduct and we have seen no evidence to suggest otherwise.” Meanwhile the FBI is widening its investigation of News Corporation’s activities within the US to look at whether allegations of computer hacking by one of its subsidiaries was an isolated case or part of a “larger pattern of behaviour”, Time magazine is reporting. Time suggests that the FBI inquiry has been extended from a relatively narrow look at alleged malpractices by News Corp in America into a more general inquiry into whether the company used possibly illegal strongarm tactics to browbeat rival firms, following allegations of computer hacking made by retail advertising company Floorgraphics. In a civil lawsuit against News Corp in 2004 Floorgraphics told a court that its website had been breached 11 times over four months without authorisation. The source of the alleged hacking was traced back to an IP address registered to News America in Connecticut . Piers Morgan Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers United States James Robinson guardian.co.uk

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A recent Northwestern law school graduate was a little distracted as she completed the second and final day of the Illinois bar exam last Wednesday … by the very impending arrival of her newborn son, the Chicago Tribune reports. Elana Nightingale Dawson says the contractions began during the three-hour afternoon…

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President Obama is officially 50, and he rang in the milestone with a joke. At a fundraiser in Chicago last night—where he was feted by the likes of Jennifer Hudson, OK Go, and supporters willing to pay up to $35,800 a plate—Obama predicted what his first day…

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Imagine Jon Stewart’s dismay when he discovered that after months of drama, the debt deal only shaved our deficit from $28.8 trillion to $26.3 trillion at the end of a decade. “That’s what this whole f***ing thing was about?” he asked last night . Removing “one paper-thin chocolate shaving…

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We’re here, not queer, get used to it? Sao Paolo’s city council has just passed legislation designating an official Heterosexual Pride Day to be held on the third Sunday of each December, the AP reports. Mayor Gilberto Kassab must sign the bill before it goes into effect, however, and he…

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Val Kilmer may be a celebrity, but he’s also a deadbeat dad, according to his ex-wife. Joanne Whalley, an actress who has a 19- and a 16-year-old with Kilmer, says he’s fallen behind on his $27,500-per-month child support payments. According to court documents TMZ obtained, Whalley placed a lien…

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Last year in the US, antidepressants were the second-most widely prescribed drug—and they are increasingly being used by patients who haven’t been diagnosed with a psychiatric condition. A new study finds that in 2007, non-psychiatrists prescribed nearly 75% of antidepressants in the US, up from 60% 10 years prior….

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World stock markets in turmoil

Almost £50bn wiped off leading British shares and huge sell-off on Wall Street amid economic fears Almost £50bn was wiped off the value of Britain’s 100 biggest companies on a day of global stock market mayhem triggered by a deepening of the eurozone crisis and fears for the health of the US economy. After a day of massive of stock market falls in Europe and the US of a kind not seen since the depths of the last economic downturn, traders said on Thursday the atmosphere in the markets was reminiscent of the banking crisis of October 2008. “For many traders this week has felt like the start of the banking crisis in 2008, which would go some way to explaining the panic selling we have seen today,” said Will Hedden, sales trader at IG Index. Rumours were swirling around the City that hedge funds were being forced to sell assets such as gold in order to cover deepening losses on other investments. This led to a surprise 1% drop in the value of gold, which in recent weeks had risen to record highs of more than £1,000 an ounce as a safe haven bet during the eurozone and US debt crisis. Brent crude prices fell 5% to $107 a barrel amid signs of slowdown in the west’s major economies. Anxiety over the debt crisis in the eurozone, and increasingly in Italy, had set the tone for nervous trading during the London morning, but the pace of the decline accelerated as Wall Street opened sharply lower. By early afternoon in New York the Dow Jones had declined by 400 points, resuming the two-week losing streak that was only briefly interrupted on Wednesday. Despite this week’s 11th-hour agreement to raise the US debt ceiling, Wall Street is becoming increasingly anxious about the health of the world’s biggest economy. A major test will come on Friday with the release of keenly watched US employment data that will provide the latest health check of an economy that barely grew in the first half of the year. The FTSE 100 index fell to its lowest close – 5393.14 – since September 2010 after a 191.27 points drop. The 3.43% slump was the index’s biggest daily fall in percentage terms, and the biggest points fall, since March 2009. Banks were particularly hard hit, with falls in the bailed-out banks Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland leaving taxpayers nursing £28bn of losses. There were big falls by other FTSE 100 companies, including the satellite phone company Inmarsat, which closed 19% lower, and leading miners. The index of leading shares has now shed 422 points since the start of this week, wiping £110bn off its value. It is down 11% since April’s peak. The continued weakness in the UK economy ensured the Bank of England kept interest rates at their record low of 0.5% for the 29th successive month. The president of the European commission, José Manuel Barroso, fuelled anxiety about the eurozone debt crisis by berating European leaders about the speed at which they were responding to the debt crisis, barely a fortnight after congratulating them about their latest deal to rescue Greece. “We are no longer managing a crisis just in the euro area periphery,” Barroso said. “Euro area financial stability must be safeguarded.” He urged European leaders to review “all elements” of the €440bn (£382bn) European financial stability facility and its €500bn replacement, the European stability mechanism. The European Central Bank, which raised interest rates in July to quell inflationary pressures in Germany, gave signals that it was ready to resume buying bonds of troubled eurozone countries. Dealers said the central bank had been buying Portuguese and Irish bonds – but crucially not those of Italy and Spain, where borrowing costs have shot to euro era highs and have become the new focus of the markets. Jamie Dannhauser, economist at Lombard Street Research, said the ECB was “still in cloud cuckoo land. The overriding impression one gets of the ECB is of an organisation unwilling to accept the reality that faces the eurozone. In contrast to other major central banks, the ECB has recently been making hawkish noises – at least, that is, until now.” Despite the intervention by the ECB, continental European markets suffered heavy losses, with Germany’s Dax closing 3.5% lower and the French CAC dropping by 4%, while the euro fell sharply against other major currencies, losing nearly 1.5 cents against the US dollar to $1.4170. The Bank of Japan had sparked frenzied action on the foreign exchanges after intervening to drive down the value of the yen, which has been strong against the dollar. Bond yields – interest rates – in Italy remained stuck above the critical level of 6% while Italian shares plunged amid confusion about the moves in the main stock market index which was experiencing pricing difficulties. Amid the rout, it emerged that police acting on orders from the prosecutors of Trani, a port on Italy’s Adriatic coast, had raided the Milan offices of the rating agencies, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s, as part of continuing investigations into their role in recent financial turmoil. The chief prosecutor in Trani told Reuters his office was checking to see whether the ratings agencies “respect regulations”. The £1.4bn loser Ivan Glasenberg, chief executive of the commodity trading group Glencore, has emerged as one of the biggest losers of thecurrent stock market sell-off – at least on paper. When Glencore floated on the London stock market in May, the 54-year-old South African’s personal stake was worth £5.76bn. But, by the time the market closed on Thursday, it was valued at £4.31bn – a loss of £130m a week. When it listed, Glencore was valued at about £37bn – bigger than Tesco and nearly twice the size of insurer Prudential – and the float catapulted Glasenberg into the list of the world’s richest 100 people. Since then the shares have fallen 25% from 530p to 396.35p on Thursday night. The Glencore listing created a huge amount of interest as the company was immediately thrust into the FTSE 100 index of leading shares and, from there, it automatically became a key holding in many people’s pension funds. The float also generated massive rewards for a group of faceless traders who had spent much of their careers operating in almost total obscurity. Apart from Glasenberg, four other Glencore billionaires emerged after the company went public: Daniel Maté and Telis Mistakidis, whose fortunes are now worth about £1.7bn each; as well as Tor Peterson and Alex Beard, whose stakes are both currently valued at around £1.5bn. Glasenberg, who has spent his entire career at Glencore, was hired by the company’s founder Marc Rich, the controversial trader best known for being charged by US authorities with trading with Iran, fleeing to Switzerland and then being pardoned by Bill Clinton on the president’s last day in the White House. Rich left Glencore in the mid-1990s when Glasenberg and others took control. Simon Goodley Stock markets European debt crisis United States Europe Jill Treanor Nick Fletcher guardian.co.uk

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The White House called on Congress to end a standoff over the FAA that has put 74,000 people out of work—but there were absolutely no signs it would do so, in part because everyone’s left town. Press Secretary Jay Carney said Obama was “looking at different options” for…

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