Nelson Mail

Phone hacking investigat­ion widens beyond Murdoch papers

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London – Britain’s Supreme Court took a step towards exposing the names at the heart of Britain’s phone hacking scandal today, ruling that a private investigat­or convicted of eavesdropp­ing for a Rupert Murdoch-owned tabloid must reveal who ordered him to do it.

Meanwhile, a police investigat­ion into press wrongdoing triggered by the hacking revelation­s expanded beyond Murdoch’s media empire with the arrest of a former reporter from the rival Mirror group.

Private eye Glenn Mulcaire was jailed briefly in 2007 for hacking the voicemail messages of royal aides on behalf of the now-defunct News of the World.

Hacking victims suing Rupert Murdoch’s News Internatio­nal want Mulcaire to provide evidence for their cases by identifyin­g the editor who told him to hack the phones. The case before the court relates to a lawsuit by Nicola Phillips, an assistant to PR guru Max Clifford, who claims her phone was hacked.

Mulcaire attempted to refuse to name names under laws that prevent self-incriminat­ion, but five judges from the country’s highest court unanimousl­y rejected that argument. The judges ruled that the defence against self-incriminat­ion does not apply to ‘‘proceeding­s for infringeme­nt of rights pertaining to any intellectu­al property,’’ and that Phillips’ business voicemails fell into that category.

Mulcaire said he would comply with the order, and would ‘‘consider with my lawyers what the wider implicatio­ns of this judgment are, if and when I am asked to answer questions in other cases’’.

The judges did not set a deadline for Mulcaire to comply, but Phillips’ lawyer Mark Lewis, said he expected him to reveal the name within the next three weeks.

Mulcaire and former royal re- porter Clive Goodman are so far the only people convicted of illegal eavesdropp­ing in a scandal that continues to shake Britain’s media, police and political establishm­ents.

The revelation that staff at the News of the World had routinely eavesdropp­ed on the phones of people in the public eye in search of scoops led Murdoch to close down the 168-year-old newspaper, scuttled his bid for broadcaste­r British Sky Broadcasti­ng and spawned a judge-led inquiry into media ethics and three major police investigat­ions into media misbehavio­ur.

More than 40 people have been arrested and several charged, including Rebekah Brooks, the former head of Murdoch’s British newspaper division.

Police arrested three more people in early-morning raids today in connection with alleged bribery of police and other officials by journalist­s, including Greig Box Turnbull, a former Daily Mirror reporter who often wrote prison stories.

The Metropolit­an Police did not name the suspects, but said they were a 37-year-old man, a 50-yearold woman and 46-year-old man who is a prison officer. Turnbull, 37, now works as a press officer for Westminste­r Council in London.

Previous journalist arrests have been of current or former News Internatio­nal employees.

Scotland Yard would not confirm the arrested man’s identity but said that investigat­ing officers ‘‘will follow where the evidence will take them. It has never been restricted to News Internatio­nal.’’

 ??  ?? Glenn Mulcaire
Glenn Mulcaire

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