THE NEXT GENERATION
When it
was revealed last Friday before Mr Justice Vos that News International (NI)
may face as many as 230 compensation claims as part of the fallout from
Phonehackgate, and that 395 individuals had applied for disclosure of evidence
from the Metropolitan Police, some in the Murdoch empire might have thought
that the end of the whole sorry saga could now be in sight.
Some chance: the man who brought us Phonehackgate, Nick Davies,
has taken to Twitter today to point up a piece from the deeply subversive Guardian regarding the activities of one
hack at the Super Soaraway Currant Bun. That Davies has taken this action and
suggested there may be more to come should alert media watchers who will recall
how the hacking scandal broke in 2009.
Then, for a variety of reasons, not all the information
could be revealed at the outset, with the result that a number of right leaning
bloggers and pundits who should have engaged brain before mouth immediately
denounced the Guardian for indulging
in what was portrayed as the rotten lefties getting at Andy Coulson as some
kind of payback for Damian McBride’s excesses.
Note the Wallis smear ...
But Davies was right on the money, having been alerted to
this new part of what his must-read book Flat
Earth News called “The Dark Arts”
by a singularly ill-advised outburst by Stuart Kuttner, now facing charges
along with a number of other Murdoch luminaries. And onto Twitter this morning
has come another Kuttner figure in the shape of Neil “Wolfman” Wallis, to accuse Davies of paranoia.
But the
facts suggest otherwise: a 35 year old Sun
hack had been arrested and bailed as part of Operation Tuleta. The charge was
one of handling stolen goods, which appears to be a mobile phone. Now, Siobhain
McDonagh, Labour MP for Mitcham and Morden, has begun legal action against NI
relating to the theft of her mobile phone, alleged invasion of privacy and
breach of confidence.
... and how Davies puts him straight
Think about that: this is totally unconnected to
Phonehackgate. All of that is in the past: this matter pertains to the here and
now. The impression is given that, far from cleaning up the stables as has been
claimed, Rupe’s downmarket troops have merely found new ways to spy on those
whom they choose to go after. And the inference from Davies is that there is
more of this to come.
And the response has been exactly as before: Wallis, like
Kuttner, has come out fighting, smearing Davies and suggesting that there’s
nothing to see and we should all move along quietly. But, like Kuttner, the
thought enters that he doth protest too much. Zelo Street will be
keeping close watch on this one: I called
it right back in July 2009, and reckon this one has more to come. Keep watching, folks.
1 comment:
Ah once again it's "One rogue reporter"
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