The Post

One trial down but more tribulatio­ns

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MORE than a year after asking for and receiving emails from News Corp’s US operation related to allegation­s of phone hacking and bribery, the FBI is still investigat­ing whether Britishbas­ed representa­tives of the media company may have broken US law, say sources familiar with the matter.

The FBI probe into Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp has not ended even though some former senior Murdoch aides were acquitted of charges by a British criminal court jury, the sources said.

They said the FBI was probing whether News Corp businesses or

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp still faces a legal probe by the FBI. representa­tives may have violated US laws, most notably the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which forbids US-based companies from paying bribes to foreign government officials.

News Corp is headquarte­red in New York City.

The company confirmed yesterday that its lawyers turned over more than 80,000 emails extracted from US-based servers to US Justice Department investigat­ors more than a year ago.

Sources said the emails were turned over via Williams and Connolly, a prominent Washington DC law firm, which the company had hired to help it deal with fallout, including possible US investigat­ions, from British investigat­ions into alleged phone hacking and payments to UK gov- ernment officials by representa­tives of News Corp’s London-based newspapers.

Asked about the turnover of emails, a News Corp executive said: ‘‘We voluntaril­y produced material to the Department of Justice more than a year ago and we understand that material was fully available to the authoritie­s in the UK well before the [recently ended] trial.’’

The executive named.

In the criminal court trial, a jury declined to convict defendants on charges related to alleged payments to public officials.

At the

declined

to

be

trial, Andy Coulson, a former editor of News Corp’s nowdefunct News of the World Sunday tabloid and former chief spokesman for British Prime Minister David Cameron, was convicted of a conspiracy related to phonehacki­ng.

But Rebekah Brooks, another former editor of News Corp tabloids who subsequent­ly became chief executive of his London publishing empire, was acquitted of all charges, as were her husband, other associates, and a former News of the World managing editor.

Two sources familiar with the matter said UK authoritie­s were planning to prosecute nine more criminal cases involving current or former News Corp journalist­s. There were understood to include allegation­s of possible corrupt payments to British government employees.

Reuters reported in February 2012 that an internal watchdog unit set up by News Corp had handed over to British investigat­ors emails and financial records allegedly charting the payment of more than £100,000 to police contacts, mostly in sums of under £1000.

A company source said at the time that the records showed many or most of the payments’ intended recipients were listed in company records under false names.

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Tough years: Former News Internatio­nal chief executive Rebekah Brooks and her husband Charlie make a statement to the media in London after their acquittal in the News of the World phone-hacking trial.
Photo: REUTERS Tough years: Former News Internatio­nal chief executive Rebekah Brooks and her husband Charlie make a statement to the media in London after their acquittal in the News of the World phone-hacking trial.
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