Seemingly going unreported despite the increasing notoriety
of the defendants is a class
action for securities fraud lodged at the US District Court in the Southern
District of New York. Here, plaintiffs including
a UK Local Government pension fund are suing News Corporation, News
International, and also Rupe, Junior, Les Hinton and Rebekah Brooks, just to be
on the safe side.
Securities fraud in this instance refers to the price of
News Corp shares, the allegation being that some information regarding the less
than totally legal behaviour of some of Rupe’s troops in the UK had not been
disclosed in a timely manner so that potential investors could form a properly
informed judgment as to whether or not it was worth putting their money into the
Murdoch empire.
That so little is known about this action seems strange,
given that it has been rumbling on since papers were first filed in July 2011
(my thanks to @jpublik for the tip). And why the action was taken is not hard
to see if the News
Corp share price movements during 2011 are examined: after fluctuating
between $18 and $19 in April and May, there was a fall in August to under $14.
The volume of shares traded as the price fell shows spikes
that suggest heavy selling, possibly automatically triggered, and one can only
assume that the investors taking the action baled out during one of these episodes.
The News Corp share price did not recover that $19 level until January this
year (it later went well above $20 on the
prospect of the company being split up).
So who is taking the action? Well, there is a US Trust and a
Union pension fund, but the interest for those in the UK is that the action has
been joined by the Avon Pension Fund, which is nowadays administered by Bath
And North East Somerset Council (aka BANES). Avon was a county set up as part
of the 1973 Local Government reorganisation, but later abolished.
And the latest development is that News
Corp is trying to have the action dismissed. The grounds for this are that
the allegation of non-disclosure of wrongdoing is incorrect, and that evidence
of voicemail interception had been disclosed as early as January 2011. But what
really put the lid on the whole affair was
the July 2011 revelation that the Screws
had Millie Dowler’s phone hacked.
It was the Dowler revelation, and the subsequent closure of
the Screws, that hit the share price,
and it is more than likely that this will form the central plank of the case
against News Corp, along with the likelihood that someone high up in that
organisation knew about it. So if Rupe and his Stateside troops get this action
dismissed, I reckon they can count themselves very lucky indeed.
And if not, well, it could get even more messy – and a lot more expensive.
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