Court 12 at the Old Bailey was packed this morning, as Mr
Justice Saunders arrived to sentence five of the six who had either pleaded
guilty, or, in the case of Andy Coulson, had been found guilty by a jury of his
peers. Greg Miskiw, James Weatherup, Glenn Mulcaire and Neville “stylish masturbator” Thurlbeck completed
the line-up. Dan Evans will be sentenced separately.
Goodbye, indeed
Saunders told a hushed court that “my function is to pass sentences that reflect the criminality of the
defendants”. He expected ‘outrage’
from those who think he should exceed maximum sentences, or those who think
it's an attack on the press. He wanted the comment to be informed, but would not
comment on press regulation, or relations with police, or the costs of the
trial.
Some hacking targets were well known, but others were merely
work colleagues. Some were hacked merely by assumption they were related to
celebrities, like Laura Rooney. And whether the hacking was to stand up stories
or those concerned were using the press for their own ends, the defendants knew
that hacking was against the PCC code and was morally wrong. Ignorance of the
law was no excuse.
The Screws had
delayed telling the Police what it knew about Millie Dowler, and that was
unforgiveable. They acted not in her interests, but in their own: the
motivation was to sell more newspapers. Coulson and the others were prepared to
use illegal means to increase market share, to maintain their competitive edge.
Phone hacking expanded significantly under Coulson’s watch.
Then came the sentencing: those who had pleaded guilty would
receive a third reduction in return. Some of the remorse that had been
expressed, Saunders decided, was more “getting
caught” than true remorse. The irony of investigative journalists failing
to expose what was going on in their own back yard was noted. And then came the
first to be sentenced, Andy Coulson.
Young Dave’s former chief spinmeister was sent to prison for
18 months. Greg Miskiw and Neville Thurlbeck were both sentenced to six months.
James Weatherup was given a suspended sentence of four months. “You are truly the lucky one” Saunders
told Mulcaire, who was handed a suspended six month sentence, plus 200 hours’
community service. Coulson, Miskiw and Thurlbeck were taken down.
Glenn Mulcaire, having served his time previously for
hacking the Royals, was able to walk out through the main entrance. Saunders
told that all present “owe a huge debt of
gratitude to the court staff”. And so ended the Hacking Trial. There may be
more trials of other journalists to come. But at the Old Bailey, justice was
seen to be done, and one unhappy chapter in newspaper history was finally
closed.
And this, and many
other posts out there, are thanks to Peter Jukes’ live Tweeting.
No comments:
Post a Comment