The Sun’s
non-bullying political editor Tom Newton Dunn clearly thinks he is on to a
winner by backing an
article by the Daily Mail’s associate
news editor Stephen Wright, who has indulged in a little Guardian bashing – no surprise there –
by alleging that Alan Rusbridger and his team are being given preferential
treatment by the Police, because of Phonehackgate.
What neither Wright nor Newton Dunn appear to have taken on
board is that Nick Davies’ dogged campaign to get the Met to act on all that
information they had obtained from the likes of Glenn Mulcaire ultimately led
to the departure of Yates Of The Yard, and covered the Metropolitan Police in
rather more than embarrassment. The idea that the rozzers would favour whoever
did that is laughable.
But Wright’s research of those Police officers passing
information to the press at first looks convincing: he compares the case of Guardian journalist Amelia Hill and her
principal informant with those of three cops who passed information to red-top
journalists, and finds that the CPS decided not to prosecute Ms Hill, while the
tabloid hacks were not so fortunate – at the time of his writing.
Then he stresses that none of the journalists concerned paid
their sources for information, a point famously conceded before a select
committee by Rebekah Brooks before Andy Coulson intervened to correct her. From
this, Wright triumphantly concludes that it looks rather like the Guardian is being afforded more
favourable treatment to that meted out to the tabs.
On this note, he concludes the defence case. However, and
here we encounter a significantly sized however, Wright has, without perhaps
knowing it, let the cat out of the bag in his examination of Ms Hill’s case. While
the DPP’s legal offier said “these
articles contained confidential information derived from Operation Weeting,
including the names of those who had been arrested”, there was a
further point.
She also told that “the
information disclosed by the police officer, although confidential, was not
highly sensitive. It did not expose anyone to a risk of injury or death.
It did not compromise the investigation. And the information in question would
probably have made it into the public domain by some other means, albeit at
some later stage”. That was the basis on which it was decided not to
proceed.
Wright then manages to miss that test out of his examination
of all those officers, serving or otherwise, who passed information to the
tabloids. Thus the culture of those who work in the service of the legendarily
foul mouthed Paul Dacre: the facts carefully selected to fit the argument,
rather than giving the whole picture. The idea that Tom Newton Dunn is unaware
of this is not credible.
Nice try Tom, but your citation’s been rumbled. Must try harder next time.
1 comment:
It couldn't be construed to be exerting influence on the jury and in contempt of a current court case, which no doubt is being fully covered in The Sun, by any chance?
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