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Murdoch Jr was 'kept in the dark' on hacking
NEWS Corp's James Murdoch was "kept in the dark" about the scale of phone hacking at the News of the World by his subordinates who tried to manage the problem, the newspaper's former chief reporter said yesterday.
Neville Thurlbeck has become a key figure in the scandal because he appears to be named in a crucial piece of evidence that critics of the company have seized on as proof the problem is widespread.
The evidence - an email addressed "for Neville" - included the transcripts of voicemail messages and resulted in Murdoch agreeing to make a payout of around 750,000 pounds (US$1.2 million) to an early hacking victim, the soccer union boss Gordon Taylor.
Critics of the company have said the much larger than normal payout was intended to buy the victim's silence and prevent the scale of the problem from being made public.
However, Murdoch has consistently argued he was not made aware of the relevance of the email and said he simply followed legal advice.
News Corp's British newspaper arm News International had long argued that the hacking of phones to secure stories was carried out by one rogue reporter, Clive Goodman, with the help of private investigator Glenn Mulcaire. That defense crumbled earlier this year.
"Mr Murdoch had been kept in the dark and deprived of vital evidence showing phone hacking went far wider than the Goodman/Mulcaire issue," Thurlbeck said in a statement, adding that he had sent a memo to the then editor Colin Myler and legal manager Tom Crone which also implicated another senior executive at the paper. He said he had also recorded another reporter and another executive discussing the case and asked to speak to the News International Chief Executive Rebekah Brooks, but had been rejected.
"Myler and Crone failed to disclose this critical evidence to Mr Murdoch," Thurlbeck said.
Murdoch, 38, son of media mogul Rupert and seen as his heir apparent, told a parliamentary hearing last week he was innocent of covering up phone-hacking at the tabloid.
Neville Thurlbeck has become a key figure in the scandal because he appears to be named in a crucial piece of evidence that critics of the company have seized on as proof the problem is widespread.
The evidence - an email addressed "for Neville" - included the transcripts of voicemail messages and resulted in Murdoch agreeing to make a payout of around 750,000 pounds (US$1.2 million) to an early hacking victim, the soccer union boss Gordon Taylor.
Critics of the company have said the much larger than normal payout was intended to buy the victim's silence and prevent the scale of the problem from being made public.
However, Murdoch has consistently argued he was not made aware of the relevance of the email and said he simply followed legal advice.
News Corp's British newspaper arm News International had long argued that the hacking of phones to secure stories was carried out by one rogue reporter, Clive Goodman, with the help of private investigator Glenn Mulcaire. That defense crumbled earlier this year.
"Mr Murdoch had been kept in the dark and deprived of vital evidence showing phone hacking went far wider than the Goodman/Mulcaire issue," Thurlbeck said in a statement, adding that he had sent a memo to the then editor Colin Myler and legal manager Tom Crone which also implicated another senior executive at the paper. He said he had also recorded another reporter and another executive discussing the case and asked to speak to the News International Chief Executive Rebekah Brooks, but had been rejected.
"Myler and Crone failed to disclose this critical evidence to Mr Murdoch," Thurlbeck said.
Murdoch, 38, son of media mogul Rupert and seen as his heir apparent, told a parliamentary hearing last week he was innocent of covering up phone-hacking at the tabloid.
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