2008 E-Mail Alerted James Murdoch to Hacking
By RAVI SOMAIYA
NYT
LONDON — Rupert Murdoch’s son James received and responded to e-mail messages in 2008 that referred to “a nightmare scenario” of legal repercussions from widespread phone hacking at the tabloid The News of the World, a chain of e-mail messages and replies released Tuesday by a British parliamentary panel shows. It is the first documentation that Mr. Murdoch had been notified of a wider hacking problem long before he has admitted.
In statements released Tuesday, James Murdoch, who runs News Corporation’s operations in Europe and Asia, admitted that he had received and replied to the message on his BlackBerry, but he said that he “did not read the full e-mail chain.” He said he stood by his repeated public denials that he knew of widespread hacking at the tabloid at the time he approved a large legal settlement with a victim of the practice in 2008.
But the new documents appear to add fuel to a controversy that has severely damaged the reputation of News Corporation and the Murdochs’ leadership, both in Britain and the United States. The e-mail chain of messages backs ups the accounts of two of James Murdoch’s former senior executives, an in-house lawyer and an editor, who said they had told him of evidence that illegally intercepting voice mail messages to gather news and gossip went beyond a single “rogue reporter.”
(More here.)
NYT
LONDON — Rupert Murdoch’s son James received and responded to e-mail messages in 2008 that referred to “a nightmare scenario” of legal repercussions from widespread phone hacking at the tabloid The News of the World, a chain of e-mail messages and replies released Tuesday by a British parliamentary panel shows. It is the first documentation that Mr. Murdoch had been notified of a wider hacking problem long before he has admitted.
In statements released Tuesday, James Murdoch, who runs News Corporation’s operations in Europe and Asia, admitted that he had received and replied to the message on his BlackBerry, but he said that he “did not read the full e-mail chain.” He said he stood by his repeated public denials that he knew of widespread hacking at the tabloid at the time he approved a large legal settlement with a victim of the practice in 2008.
But the new documents appear to add fuel to a controversy that has severely damaged the reputation of News Corporation and the Murdochs’ leadership, both in Britain and the United States. The e-mail chain of messages backs ups the accounts of two of James Murdoch’s former senior executives, an in-house lawyer and an editor, who said they had told him of evidence that illegally intercepting voice mail messages to gather news and gossip went beyond a single “rogue reporter.”
(More here.)
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home