A Police officer thought to have been the source of stories
in the Sun and Daily Mail that led ultimately to the resignation of chief whip
Andrew Mitchell – the so-called “Plebgate”
saga – has been arrested on
suspicion of misconduct in a public office. This has caused the right
leaning part of the Fourth Estate to go apoplectic with rage and, for good
measure, say that it’s, well, Leveson, so there.
Whistleblowing, Guv? It's that or Muslims, innit?!?
Nowhere has this tendency been more superbly displayed than
at the Mail, where the obedient
hackery of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre has gone into why-oh-why
overdrive today: “Police
Federation attacks arrest of leak officer who sparked 'plebgate' row that cost
top Tory Andrew Mitchell his job” screams the headline. Yes, it’s the
cops who are angry, and the Mail is
just passing on the information.
This is followed by the introduction of the frightener du jour “chilling” and its conjunction with “whistleblowing”, the whole being rounded off with a stern warning
that having anything to do with the proposals put forward by Lord Justice
Leveson will mean the end of the freedom of the press to print all manner of
pejorative garbage while not letting the readers in on the whole story.
And just to underscore that all the Mail wants is a fine, honest and upstanding Police force that does
not have the fear of being nicked just for speaking to a hack off the record,
Dacre’s tedious and unfunny churnalist Richard Littlejohn has been pressed into
service to frighten the readers even more. “Without
brave whistleblowers, Ali Dizaei would be running the Met police”
exclaims Dick. What a Dick he is.
Dick talks of the Met being “furious” over the arrest, though how on earth he can tell from the
poolside of his gated Florida compound is unclear. But he is deeply unhappy
with new Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe and one of his deputy Assistant
Commissioners. Then he says a provision of the Leveson report has been “embraced” by Hogan-Howe. Sadly, this is
not possible. It’s not for him to do so.
But what Littlejohn and the three hacks whose by-line
appears on the headline article appear unwilling to tell their readers is that
this arrest may not be about who the information about Andrew Mitchell may or
may not have been passed to. It centres on the possibility that the officer in
question was not present when Mitchell had his sweary outburst at the end of
Downing Street.
Moreover, the further possibility, which the deeply
subversive Guardian has
managed to pick up on, is that there may have been, shall we say, some
creative embellishment during the translation of what Mitchell actually said
into what was fed to the press. And that would be the press for which
Littlejohn works. So rather than let the readers know they may have been
suckered, someone else gets kicked.
Nobody addresses the thought that single-sourced copy might
not be A Good Thing.
Just watched C4 report on this - They seem to think that because the 'informant' disguised his identity he must have been lying.
ReplyDeleteIf as it appears he was a serving officer, it is only natural that he would want to conceal his identity.
Seems clear to me that he, the informant, became aware of contents of the log [Hogan-Howe said today he has no reason to doubt it's contents], and thought that it was important enough to be given the oxygen of publicity.
None of this in any way directly contradicts the version of events recorded by those officers who were present.
Not very good journalism from Crick...
You clearly weren't paying attention to the programme..........crowds of shocked tourists, some videoing the incident, the witness with his nephew. Give me a break ths is complete stich up. If this copper was showing his nephew from Hong Kong around London I'll eat my hat!!
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