Oman Daily Observer

Undercover reporter jailed for 15 months

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LONDON: British journalist Mazher Mahmood, renowned for his “fake shaikh” undercover sting operations for media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s tabloids, was jailed for 15 months on Friday for tampering with evidence in a highprofil­e trial.

Mahmood, 53, whose elaborate disguises have duped criminals, celebritie­s, and even royalty, plotted to get his driver to change a police statement during the drugs prosecutio­n of Tulisa Contostavl­os, a singer and former judge of the British version of the X Factor TV talent show.

Contostavl­os had been about to go on trial accused of supplying cocaine for Mahmood, the self-styled “King of the Sting”, as he posed as an influentia­l Indian film producer while working on an exclusive story for the Sun on Sunday paper.

The conviction is set to ruin the ca- reer of Mahmood, one of Britain’s bestknown undercover journalist­s. News UK, Murdoch’s UK newspaper arm, said it had sacked him.

Some 18 individual­s caught out by Mahmood’s stings are planning to take civil action against him and lawyers are reviewing cases in which his evidence had led to successful criminal prosecutio­ns.

“Mazher has led scores of successful investigat­ions during his 25-year career with the company,” a News UK spokesman said, adding any legal claims would be “vigorously defended”.

“His work has led to the exposure of criminalit­y and wrongdoing. It is a source of great regret that his time with the company should end in this manner.”

Prosecutor­s said Mahmood got his driver, Alan Smith, to change a statement he gave to detectives which would have made Contostavl­os’s conviction less likely by supporting her case that she was a victim of entrapment. Her trial collapsed in July 2014 after questions arose about Smith’s evidence.

Earlier this month both men were found guilty of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice at London’s Old Bailey court and on Friday Mahmood was jailed for 15 months while Smith was given a suspended 12-month prison term.

Mahmood made his name at Murdoch’s News of the World, which was closed in 2011 after it was revealed senior journalist­s had been hacking voicemails on mobile phones to get stories.

He carried out the undercover inquiry which led to the 2011 conviction of three Pakistani cricketers for taking bribes to fix incidents in a match against England and also duped Sophie, Countess of Wessex, wife of Queen Elizabeth’s youngest son Prince Edward, in 2001 when he posed as an Arab sheikh.

But other stings have led to prosecutio­ns which collapsed, including the case against five men accused of plotting to kidnap singer-turned-designer Victoria Beckham in 2002.

Mahmood made his name at Murdoch’s News of the World, which was closed in 2011 after it was revealed senior journalist­s had been hacking voicemails on mobile phones to get stories.

 ?? — AFP ?? Former British actor John Alford (R), who was jailed in a sting arranged by Mazher Mahmood, a British journalist known as the Fake Sheikh stands outside the Old Bailey Central Criminal Court in central London, on Friday.
— AFP Former British actor John Alford (R), who was jailed in a sting arranged by Mazher Mahmood, a British journalist known as the Fake Sheikh stands outside the Old Bailey Central Criminal Court in central London, on Friday.

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