“Met forced to defend
role in £100m hacking trial” thundered the Times this morning, that being the same Times that is owned by Rupert Mudoch, six of whose formerly
faithful servants were found guilty as a result. But then the paper tells
readers “Eight month hearing brought one
conviction”, and at this point, the agenda becomes clear. Didn’t they have
anything better to spend all that money on?
He wasn't the only one getting guilty
I mean, there are all those rapists and paedophiles out
there, not to mention the hordes of Scary Muslims being battle-hardened
somewhere in the Middle East before heading back to the UK to cause some kind
of unspecified mayhem. And it wasn’t just the Met who were under the cosh: “CPS explains reason for hacking trial” was
the Telegraph’s angle. Yeah, they
wasted our money too!
It tells readers “Despite
unprecedented resources being thrown at the three year investigation and eight
month trial, five of the seven defendants, including former News of the World
and Sun editor Rebekah Brooks, were cleared of all charges. But prosecutors and
the police have insisted it was right to bring the case, which is estimated to have cost the taxpayer more than £45 million”
[my emphasis].
Estimated? By whom? As Lisa O’Carroll of the deeply
subversive Guardian has pointed out
this morning, the total cost of the prosecution – which includes attributions
for Operations Weeting, Sacha and Elveden, so accounts for Police expenditure
as well as Counsel and expert witnesses – was just short of £1.75 million.
Court staff will add rather more, but not that much more.
Rather less than £45 million, then
So someone is being distinctly economical with the actualité here. The “cost to the taxpayer” is nothing like the sum touted by the Tel. If anyone had to stump up serious
money, it was the Murdoch empire, which
bankrolled legal teams for all the defendants. The Crown, on the other
hand, had to make do with rather less in the way of resources, as Peter Jukes
pointed out earlier.
So that's who spent the most
As Peter notes, the
whole prosecution team cost around £5,000 a week. Rebekah Brooks’ team alone cost ten times that. The falsehood and
misinformation on costs has been bad: added to that is the inevitable “free press under attack”, this line
being supplied by Stuart Kuttner, former Sun
managing editor, and eagerly taken up by the Telegraph. And Kuttner’s old paper has made its own contribution.
Taking the biscuit? Full pack of Hobnobs, more like
“Miliband and his aides mistake the
obsessions of Westminster, and the hysteria of Labour’s Twitter fan club, for
the national conversation ... many normal people won’t know who Coulson is.
They talk about the economy and immigration ... Ask a question about those, Ed”.
The least f***ing subtle Look Over There you will see – until the next one. The
message is clear: one, it was a waste of money.
And two, just don’t
talk about it, right? So I will. You know
how it is, Rupe.
2 comments:
"many normal people won’t know who Coulson is"
...although a fellow ex Murdoch-rag editor, Rebekah Brooks, was apparently well-known enough amongst 'normal people' to appear on the front page yesterday.
"many normal people won’t know who Coulson is"
Wonder what their definition of "normal" people is? People who have heard of Hugh Grant perhaps? Steve Coogan? JK Rowling? Anne Diamond? The Barclay Brothers and Benedict Brogan - OK perhaps not those three. But then I don't really get their point. Most normal people according to many polls don't know half the Ministers that comprise the Cabinet but they wouldn't expect them to be phonehacked by our own press.
Most normal people I would expect to want our legal system and institutions not be corrupted by
the so called guardians of democracy the "free press" and its less than democratic owners.
Asd for the cost of it all - who was dragging it out as long a possible? Or has the evidence for that been mislaid, lost or unaccountably been deleted from the files and cannot be "recalled" from a bad memory back up system?
Me, I'm looking forward to the next instalment of the Trials of Murdoch with the added pleasure of accompaniment from UberMensch Troll. Long may she rain drivel over us (to be duly filleted by a blogger known to many "normal" people).
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