THIRD ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL
Actually we are now a fortnight beyond the third anniversary
of Nick Davies’ first Guardian
revelations, but this morning’s events make it an opportune moment to look back
and view the gradual decline and fall of many of the House of Murdoch’s most
faithful retainers, before their arraignment today.
Hang on, that Police van isn't my taxi ... or is it?
As I enjoy pointing out in a rare moment of rank immodesty
(ho ho ho), Zelo Street was on the Phonehackgate case from the outset (you
can see the initial set of posts HERE,
HERE,
HERE
and HERE).
Along the way, highlights included the host of idiots who called the whole
thing totally wrong (see HERE),
the spread of the story to the USA (HERE),
and the closure of the Screws (HERE).
But it is
today’s charge sheet that leads the news right now, and the list of names
upon it. These include Andy Coulson, recruited by the Rt Hon Gideon George
Oliver Osborne, heir to the Seventeenth Baronet, to work in the service of
Young Dave as chief spinmeister. This was despite Cameron being warned
that Coulson was damaged goods, and his featuring in the
Matt Driscoll unfair dismissal case.
The charge sheet also includes the twinkle toed yet
domestically combative Rebekah Brooks, like Coulson not only a Murdoch
retainer, but also close confidante of the current Prime Minister. One can
almost see John Prescott and Alastair Campbell agreeing that Tone and Pa Broon
would never have got away without a serious tabloid mauling had either had been
so closely involved.
Other names show how deeply the hacking culture may have
reached into the Murdoch press: former Screws
news editor Ian Edmondson, along with another former news editor Greg Miskiw
and former assistant news editor James Weatherup are all there, together with former
chief reporter Neville “Stylish
Masturbator” Thurlbeck.
But the one name that puts the icing on the cake is that of
Stuart Kuttner, former Screws managing
editor. Because it was Kuttner who let the cat out of the bag in the first
place: when Nick Davies was first promoting Flat
Earth News, he was on BBC Radio discussing the inclusion of a chapter
titled The Dark Arts when Kuttner,
also on the programme concerned, intervened
loudly to shout him down.
It was the vehemence of Kuttner’s intervention – “Nick Davies lives on another planet. What’s
he talking about? It was just one journalist at News of the World, who did it once, and he was fired and went to
prison” – that convinced Davies he had something to hide. And from that
moment, other journalists opened up to him, and the rest, as they say, is
history. Bring on the trials.
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