Rebecca Barry of ITV News set the scene: “I interview Prince Harry - plus others who found themselves catapulted onto the tabloid front pages … Our documentary also features Hugh Grant, Charlotte Church and Paul Gascoigne - as well as people suddenly thrust into the public eye”.
One of those thrust into the public eye was Paul Dadge, a first responder who had come to the aid of those wounded during the July 7th attacks in London. In return for his giving the press his mobile number, so they could ask him follow-up questions, they hacked his voicemail. He wasn’t a Sleb, there was no public interest defence whatever for the press to fall back on. The default behaviour was, at the time, to hack voicemail. Think about that.
And as to limits to the bad behaviour, there were none. That much has been confirmed by the presence of one Paul McMullan, whose recent book detailing his less than totally ethical activities is named after the phrase he made famous during his interrogation before the Leveson Inquiry - “Privacy is for Paedos”. A piece in Prospect magazine has the grim and gory details.
“The [Screws] had paid a policeman for a tip that Jennifer [Elliott, daughter of Denholm] was a heroin addict … ‘Yeah, I really went too far - she was begging because she had a heroin addiction. And that was enough, but I had to offer 50 quid for a shag. No, I think I changed it to 20 quid and she accepted that … So not only do I expose her as a beggar and a heroin addict, I now expose her as a bloody prostitute, which she wasn’t’”. Do go on.
But, those who believe we should just “move on”, and that the press has cleaned up its act, will claim this is all in the past and that this kind of thing no longer happens. However, and here we encounter a significantly sized however, we have to take the press on trust for that. And taking the press on trust, in the past, has proved to be a most unwise course of action.
Just what has previously gone on, and may still be going on, was summed up by Paul Gascoigne: “I bought 6 phones, kept on changing numbers and thought, GOD WHEN IS IT GOING TO STOP? I become a recluse, didn’t speak to nobody”. Actor and campaigner Hugh Grant added “This isn’t only about phone hacking- there were microphones & trackers dropped in my car”.
It was more than phone hacking for former PM Gordon Brown: “This group had no limits, hacking my bank, utility accounts, and seeking police information. Even as Chancellor and Prime Minister”. Improper access to the Police National Computer was a costly item for the press. But for the most high profile targets, it was a cost they were prepared to pay.
Having watched Tabloids on Trial, Jim Hawkins concluded “The press hasn't cleaned up its act. There are still huge questions to be answered. And lots of people who watched last night will be asking when the second part of the Leveson Inquiry will happen”. Which last is now down to those controlling business at the Labour Party. Who may think they have nothing to fear.
So the press haven’t come for them yet? They will. And when they do, Labour’s NEC will not be able to out-clever them. Not this time they won’t.
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14 comments:
Of course it didn't just stop at mere "celebrities".
Wikileaks long ago exposed US hacking of European leaders communications. Needless to say this was quickly swept under the carpet, Ministry of Truth style.
But the internet never forgets.....
Looking forward to the day when the publication of the tabloid press is no longer financially viable. I for one won't miss them. Muck raking liars the lot of them.
It is not just Labour 'judgment calls'. It is their policies unchanged from the previous thieves kitchen.
The cancellation of Leveson II was, and I apologise in advance for making you laugh so hard you lose your breakfast, hailed as a great day for press freedom by none other than disgraced former Health Secretary and kangaroo khyber eater Little Hattie Mancock.
Also, what the muddy flip have Blogger done to the Comments page?
"...we have to take the press on trust for that."
It's impossible to trust a corporate media press and broadcast employee. They're all lying shithouses.
It hasn't been financially viable for a long time. They've been operating at a loss for a long time. Yet, the owners always find cash to prop the business up...
McMullan is not even the worst of them. That label belongs to McFilth, the lowest form of inhuman crawling life.
It'd be worth implementing Leveson II just to upset Ian Hislop. But I think that no-one has any appetite for it any more - it's very much yesterday's news and rather like those permanently aggrieved by Brexit, the rest of us have just moved on.
Do you mean the change of format, Mr L, or do you mean all those posts being nasty to Bertie?
Maybe it's all part of Starmer's Great Re-set.
Looks the same stream of diarrhoea as usual here, both in typographical style and substance? Maybe it was missing a style sheet, if they're still a thing?
There has never been a time when Labour did "out-clever" Britain's far right racist lying press (which is all of it). Hence frequent up-to-their-necks wallowing in the Murdoch/Rothermere slime.
There's nothing "clever" about far right racist shithousery. It's just cowardice.
Over to you, Mr Santayana............
@Bertie: the latter. It's a horrible mess on an iPad and not much better on a Proper Computer.
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