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News Corp. Subsidiary Under Fire For Hacking Dead Girl's Voicemail

Hugh Pickens writes "Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. came under pressure from UK Prime Minister David Cameron to respond to 'really appalling' allegations that its News of the World tabloid hacked into the voicemail of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler. The tabloid printed a story based on a voicemail left on Dowler's mobile phone on April 14, 2002, when she had been missing from her home in Surrey, southwest of London, for more than three weeks. According to a Guardian newspaper report, a private detective working for the tabloid gained access to Milly Dowler's phone messages after she was abducted in March 2002 and the detective, Glenn Mulcaire, is alleged to have deleted voicemail messages on Dowler's phone, giving her parents 'false hope' she might still be alive and thereby complicating the police investigation. According to one source, when her friends and family discovered that her voicemail had been cleared, they concluded that this must have been done by Dowler herself and, therefore, that she must still be alive."

9 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. Newscorp isn't in the business of news by milbournosphere · · Score: 5, Informative
    It's a tabloid and a rag with a political agenda, thinly disguised as news, and it was designed that way: http://gawker.com/5814150/roger-ailes-secret-nixon+era-blueprint-for-fox-news

    It's a long article, but is really worth a read. It talks about Ailes and his plans for what would be Fox News. It uses primary sources, and goes into some depth about an interesting bit of history. Murdoch may not have come up with the idea, but he sure has done well with the execution.

    1. Re:Newscorp isn't in the business of news by SpongeBob+Hitler · · Score: 5, Informative

      You mean there's a single source of news without a political agenda ? Which one ?

      Too bad for them they didn't just hack a republican's email address, that would have brought them heaps of praise.

      There is a world of difference between having a political agenda and deliberately lying and distorting the news. In the first, you describe things from your own biased point of view. In the latter, you actually make shit up. It's like the difference between a witness in court that tells a story from his/her own particular viewpoint and a witness that actually commits perjury. Most news sources are like the witnesses telling their accounts from their own viewpoints. Fox "News", on the other hand, is the perjurer.

      --
      Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg?
    2. Re:Newscorp isn't in the business of news by Artifakt · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In 2002, Columbia School of Journalism studied how various news sources handled titles and signifiers. For example, if somebody was described as a retired Major, Columbia checked to see if both they were commissioned and made rank, and if they had enough time in to count as retired. If somebody was described as a psychiatrist, did they really have the full MD related degree, or were they maybe a psychologist instead. Sources that got titles and related right got higher scores. For this study, Columbia ignored everything else, just this one measure of accuracy, one that has few or no subjective components. NPR and the BBC both did pretty well, about 4.0 on a 1 to 5 scale. Incidentally, PRI did a bit worse than NPR, at about 3.2, which also put it about on par with the Christian Science Monitor. MSNBC, CBS News, the New York Times, and such all fell about in the middle of the pack - with the Times doing a little better than the Washington Post, but all scoring pretty close to 2.5. Fox and Al-Jazeera tied for last place at 1.2.
            There've been other studies, from Columbia on other subjects, one from MIT on information science related reporting, one from somebody I don't recall offhand on whether the news source attributes famous quotations correctly, and various other types, and Fox invariably does no better than average, usually much worse. The titles study stuck in memory because once the study's authors decided how to count a few things (i.e. Is calling the assistant dean of women's studies at Stanford just "Dean So and So" in the scrolling bit at the bottom a hit or a miss?), there wasn't a lot of room for errors and political biases.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
  2. Re:Let's Put This In Perspective by pmc · · Score: 5, Informative

    One reporter and the private investigator have already gone to prison for this: I think wrong-doing has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt by convictions in a criminal court.

    In addition News International have setup up a ~£20million fund to pay compensation to those who they have admitted they hacked. I think wrong-doing have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt by a confession and an apology.

    What is up for debate here is exactly how evil and corrupt they are - it has been proved that they are evil and corrupt already.

  3. Confusion... by damburger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The summary says the investigator deleted the voicemail messages. In the news report I saw, the allegation is that the NotW journalists deleted the messages.

    (alleged) chain of events is:

    1. NotW hires investigator to gain access to voicemail

    2. NotW listens to voicemail to get soundbites from loved ones for their shitty, amoral rag.

    3. Once voicemail is full, they delete stored messages so they can get more juicy copy from distraught friends and relatives of a murdered 13-year old girl

    4. They then interview parents of said girl, the mother speaking about the hope that her daughter is still alive based on the deleted voicemails.

    Do not try to excuse this. The people doing this are pitiless psychopaths.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
  4. Re:Let's Put This In Perspective by mean+pun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Aww, come on! Do you really believe that? NOTW are also accused of a whole string of similar hacks on royalty and celebrity phones. One such incident they can explain away, but all of them? Especially because they have a well-deserved reputation for other dirty tricks.

    And no, Rupert Murdoch didn't personally hack those phones. Osama Bin Laden also didn't personally fly one of those airplanes. Still, OBL was considered a mass murderer. Rupert Murdoch is no mass murderer, but he IS a ruthless psychopath.

  5. Re:News Corp org structure by biodata · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hacking websites of the rich and powerful for the sake of lulz or political protest is one thing - this is anon attacking big money. Being emplyed by the rich and powerful to hack the voicemail of innocent dead teenage girls is a different thing - this is big money attacking anon. The difference is obvious.

    --
    Korma: Good
  6. Bit of background by DaveGod · · Score: 5, Informative

    This might be the straw that's very likely going to break the camel's back, but it's been a long running story now. Back in 2005 they were rumbled for hacking into voicemail of aides to the royal family, a good article from a US source, the NYT, here. The tl;dr version of that article is a minor uproar ensues but Newscorp contains it and is more or less successful claiming it as a one-off, rouge scenario, offering up the resignation of Andy Coulson, the editor, though he claims not to have known anything about it of course.

    Now Andy Coulson makes the mistake of getting a job - head of communications, think Toby Ziegler in the West Wing - in the Conservatives, who get into government. This, combined with statements made by the private investigator who's decided he's not going down alone, adds enough fuel to get the fire burning again. The Guardian and Channel 4 get digging and out comes a documentary. A handful of celebrities are sniffing around it now, lo and behold Hugh Grant throws gas on the fire by bugging the bugger. All is forgiven Hugh, well played.

    Accusations just keep mounting up and the picture is forming pretty solidly of a newsroom where such things were par for the course. An oft-repeated point directed at Coulson I'll paraphrase as "either he knew and he broke the law, or he didn't and he's grossly negligent" (not sure who started that, I think Ian Hislop). Coulson is given the boot.

    The shit is flying pretty thick now and it just keeps coming. But it's all the royals, celebs and politicians. There is a sense that whilst it's overstepping the mark considerably, these are all public people and fair game. Milly Dowler, on the other hand, was a child and a tragedy. This is a recent turn in events and very quickly major advertisers have started to step away. I'll applaud Ford for being the first of the big advertisers to drop them, though I'm quite surprised it took so long. I suspect more shuffled away quietly.

    News is now coming in that the police investigating the phone hacking have contacted the parents of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, the girls killed by the Soham Murderer. This was one of the biggest stories and national tragedies I can remember.

    The News of the World really must not be allowed to survive this, it is a stunning failure of ethics, governance and plain decency on a huge scale with substantial evidence. If they can't be brought down for this, they clearly cannot be taken down for anything. Yet it's even proving difficult to remove the editor.

  7. Re:News Corp org structure by joggle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The previous leaks didn't delete the source information after distributing it. These guys recorded the phone messages then deleted them, potentially interfering with a police investigation and causing the family to believe their daughter had deleted the messages so must have still been alive. See the difference?