One instinctively knows when part of the press has a
problem: most papers keep schtum and hope the story will go away. If this fails,
there is swift and loud denunciation of whoever stepped out of line, and
especially if the hated BBC gets involved. So it has been with the continuing
story of Mazher Mahmood, aka the Fake Sheikh, who is back in the news. But
only in the Guardian.
This photo may be about to get an update
The Fake Sheikh had enjoyed a long line of circulation
enhancing stings, joyfully trashing reputations and even getting folks jailed,
until his entrapment of Tulisa Contostavlos went
off the rails after a judge concluded
that he had lied, and had also manipulated evidence. Since then, other
sting trials involving Mahmood have collapsed. The Sun claimed to have suspended him.
However, and here we encounter a significantly sized
however, the Beeb has decided, in its wisdom, to allow the Panorama team to investigate Mahmood. Reporter John Sweeney was all
set to front a programme next Monday, and then the
lawyers got involved. The screening was under threat. Did the Fake Sheikh have
the means to instruct his learned friends?
As if you need to ask: Maz doesn’t have that kind of level
of petty cash availability. But he does know a man who does: step forward
Creepy Uncle Rupe. My understanding is that the Murdoch empire is bankrolling
what could be a non-trivial legal bill. And that begs the question whether this
is just the placing of faith in the usefulness of an employee, or something
rather more significant.
Mazher Mahmood’s USP has, for some time, been that his
identity has been kept a closely guarded secret. Any chance that the Sun, or any other Murdoch title, has of
making use of his dubious talents in the future means keeping it that way. So
it has to be assumed that Panorama was
going to unmask the SOB. That would be enough to finish him, whether or not he
is prosecuted for lying to judges.
That would impact on any other journalist who claims that
their work undercover means that publishing photos of them would endanger them,
or somehow prejudice their careers. Zelo Street is aware of one such
hack who has been using this excuse to have such photos taken down, and who may
well be following the Fake Sheikh case with more than a little trepidation.
All that we know right now is that, according to Roy
Greenslade, “it is thought that lawyers
acting for Mahmood have registered an objection to the programme being aired
and may seek an injunction to prevent the broadcast”. The BBC, though, is
believed to be sticking to its guns. That means that, even if the Panorama programme is not broadcast on
Monday, it will air soon after.
The career of Mazher Mahmood now hangs by a thread. Stay tuned, folks.
4 comments:
I would have thought that the "modus operandi" was the pertinent issue, the honeytraps used being a dodgy means of entrapment, almost an incitement to commit a crime?
Rupert, or at least the corporate front, getting involved could indicate that he wasn't acting entirely independently as, I believe, has been claimed? possibly more trouble on the corporate liability front?
According to this, Murdoch involves himself a lot more than he admits: http://fothom.wordpress.com/2014/10/27/how-involved-was-murdoch-in-news-of-the-world-stories-some-evidence-from-piers-morgan/#more-3223
Surely we are dealing here with "one bad apple"
@ foxytom
Yeah, but the tree from which it comes has produced so many it is difficult to judge whether it just another "rogue reporter" or a carefully nurtured product from a poisonous root.
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