Toronto Star

Tabloids, EXPOSED!

What the British media probe has revealed about celebrity press

- JILL LAWLESS ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— J.K. Rowling described how press intrusion made her feel like a hostage, Hugh Grant traded insults with a newspaper editor and a former tabloid reporter insisted that only evildoers had any need of privacy.

The first phase of Britain’s media ethics inquiry ended this week after 40 days of dramatic hearings that heard from184 witnesses — celebritie­s, journalist­s, editors, academics and lawyers — and revealed wildly differing perspectiv­es on the murky workings of the tabloid press.

Prime Minister David Cameron set up the inquiry, led by Lord Justice Brian Leveson, in response to a scandal that began with illegal eavesdropp­ing by Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World. Murdoch shut down the 168-year-old tabloid in July after evidence emerged that it had accessed the mobile phone voicemails of celebritie­s, politician­s and even crime victims in its search for scoops.

The first section of the inquiry looked at the culture, practices and ethics of the British press. Here’s what we’ve learned so far: As the inquiry opened, victims’ lawyer David Sherborne said it was not just the disgraced News of the World, but “the whole of the press, and in particular the tabloid section of it, which we say stands in the dock.”

Illegal eavesdropp­ing was just one of the improper techniques of which papers stood accused. Celebritie­s — and non-celebritie­s thrust into the spotlight — described paparazzi stakeouts, late-night pursuits and relentless attention that left them angry and paranoid.

Hugh Grant testified his apartment had been broken into, details of a hospital visit leaked and the mother of his baby daughter hounded by paparazzi. He accused the Mail on Sunday of hacking his phone. (“A mendacious smear,” countered Paul Dacre, editor of sister paper the Daily Mail.)

Singer Charlotte Church, the subject of intense media interest from childhood, said her mother had at- tempted suicide partly as a result of a News of the World story about her father’s extramarit­al affair headlined “Church’s three in a bed cocaine shock.”

Journalism professor and former tabloid editor Roy Greenslade said that even for newspaper veterans, the daily accumulati­on of evidence had been startling.

“I think all of us who have worked in popular newspapers were not massively surprised, but there were, even so, eye-opening moments — harassment of people, pursuit of people and intrusions into their private lives,” he said.

As for phone hacking, other newspapers were accused, but without firm proof. Daily Mirror editor Richard Wallace said hacking “might well” have been going on at the Mirror in the early 2000s, though CNN celebrity interviewe­r Piers Morgan said he didn’t believe he had ever listened to hacked voicemail messages while he was editor between 1995 and 2004. But he offered no explanatio­n for how he heard a voicemail message left by former Beatle Paul Mccartney for his then-girlfriend, Heather Mills. Celebrity witnesses expressed outrage that fame made every aspect of their private lives fair game for the press. Rowling said the tabloids’ attitude was: “You’re famous, you’re asking for it.” The press camped on her doorstep, phoned her husband pretending to be tax collectors, even slipped a note into her 5-year-old daughter’s schoolbag. “I felt such a sense of invasion,” Rowling said. “(It was) like being under siege and like being a hostage.” Others described a similar sense of violation. But representa­tives of the tabloid press saw it differentl­y — as a codependen­t relationsh­ip involving attention-starved celebritie­s and story-seeking journalist­s. The Daily Mail’s Dacre said that “a lot of celebritie­s, celebrity chefs, sportspeop­le make a lot of money by revealing their lives to the public. I believe newspapers should be given some latitude to look into their lives when they err.” Former News of the World reporter Paul Mcmullan put it more bluntly: “The only people I think need privacy are people who do bad things,” he said. “Privacy is evil.” The inquiry was triggered by widespread revulsion in July when the public learned about the hacking of the phone of Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old girl who was abducted and murdered in 2002. Since then, Britain’s rambunctio­us tabloids have been noticeably more muted, running few of the exposes of celebrity sex-and-drug scandal that were long their trademark. It seems editors are running scared. Celebrity publicist Max Clifford — who pocketed nearly 1 million pounds ($1.58 million) of Murdoch’s money when his own hacking case was settled — told the inquiry that in the last few months “there are several major stories that would have dominated the headlines . . . that haven’t come out.” Almost every witness agreed the current system of newspaper selfregula­tion through the Press Complaints Commission does not work. The commission can impose penalties and order apologies in response to complaints about stories, but it has no legal powers, membership is voluntary and it is composed mainly of newspaper editors. Sherborne, the hacking victims’ lawyer, said that the current setup was “tantamount to handing the police station over to the mafia,” and victims have called for stronger — if often undefined — measures to curb wayward journalist­s. But journalist­s and newspaper editors fear such pressure could lead to some form of state regulation of the media. They would prefer to see a new independen­t regulator with stronger powers.

 ??  ?? Actor Hugh Grant accused the Mail on Sunday of hacking his phone.
Actor Hugh Grant accused the Mail on Sunday of hacking his phone.
 ??  ?? J.K. Rowling said she felt invaded.
J.K. Rowling said she felt invaded.
 ??  ?? Heather Mills spoke at the inquiry.
Heather Mills spoke at the inquiry.

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