Away from the hooha of the Leveson Inquiry, and largely
unnoticed by the rest of the media, Trinity
Mirror has appointed James Scott as editor of its “other” Sunday title The
People. Among the tittle-tattle and rumour, there is one secret that may
stay with Scott for the rest of his days: he
brought the Sven’n’Ulrika-ka-ka-ka story to the notice of the appalling
Piers “Morgan” Moron, and knows
whence it came.
James Scott - now in the editor's chair
It has been conceded that the revelation of the affair Ms
Jonsson was having with the then England manager came via phone hacking. But
the Mirror, as I pointed out recently, was not the paper doing
it. The Screws, then under the
editorship of the twinkle toed yet domestically combative Rebekah Wade (later
Brooks) had commissioned the hacking – and of both the couple’s phones.
But here a problem entered: the Screws only came out once a week, and the story was all ready some
days before the next edition hit the streets. Ms Wade and her hacks needed to
not only keep the scoop from the rest of those who scrabbled around the
dunghill that is Grubstreet, but also their neighbours at the Super Soaraway Currant
Bun. Sadly for her, the news leaked out.
Just how this happened was
revealed in an Independent diary
column recently. The Screws hacks who put the story together were given the
day off, went down the pub, and there bragged about their scoop to someone from
the Mirror. We know that one of the Screws men was Sean Hoare, now sadly no
longer with us. The identity of the Mirror
man has not been revealed.
But the information soon found its way to Scott, who has
never said if he was the man in the pub. On
the basis of probability I reckon he was, but can understand his keeping schtum about the whole affair, given
that publishing a story knowing it has been the subject of phone hacking could
attract the attention of the law, and also m’Learned friends (Ms Jonsson has
since sued the Screws).
Scott, who was the Mirror’s
show business man, even had
to endure the story being taken off him and credited to the “3am Girls”, as Moron wanted to give them
some much needed credibility. This loyalty has now borne fruit as he has been
trusted with the editor’s chair, following the recent sackings of Richard
Wallace and Tina Weaver. So what of the Sven and Ulrika business?
Ah well. Despite many in the press and blogosphere trying to
tease the information out of him, Scott has remained quiet (the story about him
having a drink or two off boasting about how he actually did some of the
hacking is complete crap). Not even the folks at Private Eye have come close. And now that he’s been promoted, the
likelihood of an admission is vanishingly small.
Had Trinity Mirror had
any worries on that score, he wouldn’t have got the job.
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