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NEWS FLASH

BREAKING: Five More Arrested in News Corp Phone Hacking Scandal | Earlier today, Scotland Yard arrested five more individuals, including a police officer, in the ever-growing News Corporation phone hacking scandal in the United Kingdom. While previous arrests focused on phone hacking at the now-closed News of the World tabloid, today’s arrests are related to allegations of phone hacking at Rupert Murdoch’s flagship tabloid, the Sun. According to the BBC, those arrested today include: “Graham Dudman, a former managing editor; Fergus Shanahan, a former deputy editor; Mike Sullivan, the paper’s crime editor; and Chris Pharo, the paper’s head of news.”  With today’s arrests, 13 total people have been arrested in the course of the investigation into News Corporation’s alleged bribery of police officers.  If News Corporation is found to have bribed police officers or other public officials, the company could also face serious legal consequences in the United States under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Media

British MP Investigating News Corp Weighs In On Alleged Hacking In U.S.

ThinkProgress filed this story from Los Angeles, California.

Tom Watson, a Member of Parliament leading an investigation into the News Corp hacking scandal, shows up at a protest in Los Angeles against the company. (AP)

Today, a British parliamentary commission announced that it will summon James Murdoch for a second time to question him about News Corp.’s phone-hacking scandal. So far, the British inquiry has not yet initiated similar investigations in the United States.

In September, ThinkProgress followed up on a report by the Guardian that detailed the story of Robert Emmel, a former News Corp. employee. Emmel gave the U.S. Senate a 58-page whistleblower tip alleging that his company carried out a vicious hacking campaign against its competitors, including a company called Floorgraphics. We found that Sen. Chuck Grassley’s (R-IA) staffer had received the document (and said he would act on it), but never followed through with a referral to the Justice Department or a congressional inquiry. Emmel was subsequently crushed with a legal harassment campaign and the victims of News Corp.’s domestic hacking were silenced with $655 million in settlements and buyouts.

Tom Watson, a British member of Parliament, helped break open the News Corp. phone-hacking scandal. Watson traveled to Los Angeles on Friday to attend the News Corp. shareholder meeting and rally demonstrators against the company. A few hours after sparring with Rupert Murdoch, Watson told ThinkProgress in an interview that in his opinion, “when you’ve got a concern that the law is being breached,” the matter should be always be reported to police authorities:

FANG: Speaking of computer hacking, ThinkProgress broke the story that an employee at News Corp gave a 58-page dossier detailing the different computer hacking that News Corp used against its United States competitors, including Floormarketing, a company based in New Jersey. He gave that to the United States Senate, including Republican Senator Chuck Grassley. They sat on it. It’s been five years now, there’s been no action. They never referred it to the Justice Department; they haven’t opened their own investigation. What’s your message to the United States Senate? What should they be doing?

WATSON: Look it’s not up to me to tell the United States Senate what they should do. I’m a UK lawmaker and the Senate can make its own decisions. I just know with my own experience in the UK with the hacking scandal, there’s a lot of whistleblowers that come forward. You have to sift through serious concerns and those that are erroneous. But when you’ve got a concern that the law is being breached, then I’ve always taken a view that I should report it to the police as quickly as I can.

Watch it here:

Watson said he was unfamiliar with the specifics of the case, and had been under the impression that the Emmel tip had eventually found its way to American authorities. Unfortunately, that is not the case.

Not only has the Senate refused to refer the Emmel tip to the Department of Justice or open its own investigation, but the Department of Justice failed to act even on the advice of the FBI. New York Times media reporter David Carr noted that FBI agents, after reviewing the “excellent paper trail” left by News Corp. while allegedly breaking into the computers of competitor Floorgraphics, contacted the U.S. Attorney’s Office in New Jersey to consider a criminal investigation. At the time, the U.S. attorney was a Bush appointee named Chris Christie, now the governor of the state. Christie was a confidant of Roger Ailes, the head of News Corp. subsidiary Fox New, and as Carr noted, the FBI case “died a slow death” in Christie’s office.

NEWS FLASH

Alec Baldwin Boycotts Emmys After Fox Censors His Phone-Hacking Joke | Last night, the Fox Network presented the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards. Missing from the glitzy evening, however, was familiar favorite Alec Baldwin. The 30 Rock star pulled out of the program after Fox “killed a joke” referring to News Corp.’s ongoing phone-hacking scandal. In a pre-taped skit for the event, Baldwin plays a TV executive talking on the phone when he says, “Rupert? Is that you? I hear you breathing, Rupert!” Fox notified Baldwin last Thursday that it was censoring the joke “not because the joke involved [News Corp. CEO Rupert] Murdoch but because they take the phone-hacking allegations very seriously and did not want to be seen as making light of them.” Baldwin unleashed on the network on Twitter, stating, “Fox did kill my NewsCorp hacking joke. Which sucks bc I think it would have made them look better. A little.” He added, “If I were enmeshed in a scandal where I hacked phones of families of innocent crime victims purely 4 profit, I’d want that 2 go away, [too].”

NEWS FLASH

Parliament Opens New Hearings Into News Corp. Phone Hacking Scandal | A U.K. parliamentary panel opened new hearings today to determine whether News Corp. COO James Murdoch knew about hacked voicemail messages ordered by the company’s now defunct News of the World publication, and thus misled the Parliament. In a July testimony, Murdoch insisted that he had no knowledge of phone hacking at the tabloid, but two former executives challenged his comments as “mistaken.” Their testimony before the panel today is intended to discover “whether or not James Murdoch was aware of the so-called ‘for Neville e-mail,” a 2005 missive containing transcripts of hacked phone messages. That email emerged in a 2008 lawsuit in which Murdoch “chose to make a record $1.4 million settlement, which also included a confidentiality clause.” Murdoch testified in July that the settlement “made financial sense,” and was not intended “to disguise the truth.” Today’s testimony of the two executives that conflict Murdoch’s account will help “determine whether the panel recalls [James Murdoch] to give further evidence.”

NEWS FLASH

News Corp. Is Still Paying Rebekah Brooks A Salary, Murdoch Tells Her To ‘Travel The World On Him For A Year’ | Beleaguered by News Corp.’s now-international phone-hacking scandal, News International former chief executive Rebekah Brooks resigned last month in disgrace. Sort of. According to the Telegraph, Brooks is still on the company payroll. “My understanding is that Rupert told her to travel the world on him for a year and then he will find a job for her when the scandal has died down,” said the Telegraph’s source. Both Brooks and News International declined to comment.

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