Tuesday, June 24, 2014

British PM's ex-press secretary found guilty in phone-hacking trial



Former News of the World editor and ex-press secretary to British Prime Minister David Cameron, Andy Coulson was found guilty of plotting to hack phones, AFP reports. His predecessor Rebekah Brooks, who went on to become chief executive of Rupert Murdoch's News International media empire, was cleared of all charges as well as the paper's managing editor, Stuart Kuttner.

Brooks' personal assistant Cheryl Carter, her husband Charlie Brooks, and News International director of security Mark Hanna were cleared of perverting the course of justice, DPA states. The jury is still deliberating over further charges against Coulson and Clive Goodman, the paper's royal correspondent.
The jury delivered their verdicts on Tuesday after eight days of deliberations at the dramatic end of the 130-day media trial sparked by the scandal that led to Rupert Murdoch shutting down the Sunday tabloid in disgrace in July 2011.
Coulson, who was forced to resign as British Prime Minister David Cameron's media chief over the scandal, now faces jail following his conviction at the Old Bailey court in London.
But the flame-haired Brooks, once one of Australian-born Murdoch's closest confidantes, will walk free after being cleared of conspiring to intercept mobile phone voicemails and of plotting to pay officials for information.
The jury at the Old Bailey court in London heard highly detailed evidence about the workings of the paper, known for its celebrity scandals.
The trial had its own dose of scandal worthy of the News of the World when the jury heard that Brooks and Coulson had an extra-marital affair while working at the paper.
Judge John Saunders had urged the jurors when he sent them out on June 11 to "put out of your head anything you have heard outside court".
The News of the World shut down in a firestorm of disgrace and a boycott by advertisers just over three years ago after it emerged that the paper had hacked the voicemails of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler.
The hacking scandal also prompted a judge-led inquiry into the ethics of Britain's famously aggressive press, which made recommendations for reforming the way it is governed, yet to be put into force.

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