Phone Hacking Trial: Andy Coulson “authorised cash payments for NOTW private detective” – Martin Hickman

interesting disclosure from Clive Goodman that Andy Coulson actually authorised payments to hacker and private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire. Even more interesting is that he says emails authorising this would not exist now except for a decision to download them himself in 2006.

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Coulson and MulcaireDay 71: Andy Coulson personally authorised cash payments to the News of the World’s private detective which led to the phones of three royal aides being hacked, a court heard today.

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NewsPics : High Court orders company to be wound up and receiver to be appointed

NewsPics, the company run by photographer Matt Sprake and his wife, is to be wound up after it failed to pay Exaro and my legal costs now totalling £24,000.  The decision was taken by a registrar in the High Court yesterday. There is a full report on the Exaro News website and  an item in the Guardian Diary about the present situation. A receiver will be appointed in due course to distribute the firm’s assets.

There is also a report on the UK Press Gazette site of the hearing.

Phone Hacking Trial: Clive Goodman received royal phone books from fellow journalists – Martin Hickman

So now Clive Goodman ” the Royal rogue reporter ” changes his story and says he got the Royal phone books from freelance journalists not the police.

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Clive GoodmanDay 70: Clive Goodman received three royal phone directories from fellow journalists, he told the phone hacking trial today.  Mr Goodman, the News of the World’s former royal editor, said that one of the sources for which he arranged cash payments was a freelancer, while the other was a newspaper executive.

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The bullying and menacing back stabbing culture of Andy Coulson’s News of the World – Clive Goodman

As well as the dramatic disclosure that the late Princess Diana gave Clive Goodman a Royal phone directory, the main part of Clive Goodman’s evidence centres on  the nasty atmosphere at the News of the world where menacing and bullying and back stabbing behaviour appears to be the norm.

He claims a News of the World executive engaged a private detective agency to follow him so he could find out who his police contact was, so he could blackmail him to provide the paper with information if Goodman left for the Mirror.

 The full story by Martin Hickman is on the hacked off website.

Here are some extracts:

By Martin Hickman

Andy Coulson was “bullying” and “menacing” while editing the News of the World, former royal reporter Clive Goodman told the hacking trial today.

Mr Goodman said that he and Mr Coulson had been friends for years, with each attending each other’s wedding, but added that Mr Coulson had become aggressive after becoming editor in 2003.

Mr Coulson’s behaviour was made worse by the arrival of his new deputy editor, former People editor Neil Wallis, Mr Goodman said.

Describing a hyper-competitive, backstabbing culture under Mr Coulson’s editorship, Mr Goodman told the Old Bailey: “My relationship with him changed, and he became more aggressive, more combative and more bullying.”

In wide-ranging testimony about his 20 years at the NoW, Mr Goodman denied he had paid palace police officers to obtain three royal phone directories found at his home by detectives.

He also told the court that Princess Diana had posted him one of the 15 directories he had in his possession in total as part of an attempt by her “to show the forces ranged against her” in her battle with Prince Charles.

After being jailed for four months in 2007 for eavesdropping voicemails of the Royal Household while at the NoW, Mr Goodman took the rap as the lone “rogue reporter” who had hacked phones.

Breaking his seven-year silence at the hacking trial this afternoon, he was asked by his counsel, David Spens, QC, how he had got on with leading figures at the NoW.

Rebekah Brooks (then Wade), Mr Goodman said, was “co-operative, willing to listen, said what she wanted, not interested in getting into feuds or spats.”

By contrast, his relationship with Mr Coulson became strained where once it had been good.

“He was aggressive,” Mr Goodman told the court.

“He demoted me down the list and then took me off the list altogether. I was forever being berated about the quality of my stories.”

He added: “It sounds quite petty, but it was meant to degrade you in the eyes of others.”

The paper between 2003 and 2006 was “extraordinary competitive, quite bullying, menacing,” Mr Goodman said,….

An executive, on learning that Mr Goodman was considering taking a job with a Mirror title, ordered a private detective from the Southern Investigations agency to follow him to a meeting with a top contact, he said.

The plan was that after following Mr Goodman to the meeting, the detective would then follow the contact after it to establish his identity. If Mr Goodman had left the NoW, the executive, he surmised, planned to “blackmail the contact to continue working for the NoW” or to blow his cover so that he would no longer give information to anyone.

He told the court he discovered this by chance when he happened to pass by the executive’s computer and read about the incident.

……Mr Goodman also said had that Princess Diana had sent him a 1992 copy of the Green Book directory listing phone numbers and addresses for senior members of the Royal Household.

He told the court an envelope had arrived at the front gate of the NoW’s offices in Wapping bearing his name.
Mr Spens asked: “After it arrived, did you receive any phone call about it?”, to which Mr Goodman replied: “Yes, from the Princess, asking whether I received it.”

Asked why she had sent it to him, Mr Goodman explained: “She was going through a very difficult time. She told me she wanted to me to see this document because she wanted me to see the scale of her husband’s household compared to hers.”

He went on: “She was in a very bitter situation with the Prince of Wales at the time, and she felt she was being swamped by the people close to his household. She was looking for an ally to take him on, to show the forces that were ranged against her.”

Asked if any of the 15 phone directories had been supplied to him by police officers, he replied: “None.”
Had he ever received information from a royal protection officer? “No,” he said.

Mr Goodman, who denies conspiring to commit misconduct in a public office, continues giving evidence tomorrow.

Mrs Brooks, NoW editor between 2000 and 2003, Mr Coulson editor between 2003 and 2007, and Mr Kuttner deny conspiring to hack phone messages.

Phone Hacking Trial: Help from Blair and Mandelson, Brooks the “phone hacking mastermind” – Martin Hickman

Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson both offered to help an embattled Rebekah Brooks who was facing questions from the police. She also said she never knew about the activities of hacker Glenn Mulcaire – paid £1m by News International – until he was arrested. And she condemned hubbie Charlie for an ” impulsive ill thought out decision” in stashing away his computers and a bag full of lesbian DVD porn.

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Rebekah BrooksDay 67:   Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson privately offered to help Rebekah Brooks prepare for a grilling by MPs at the height of the phone hacking scandal, the Old Bailey heard today.

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Phone Hacking Trial: Brooks interested in Milly case, but denies knowledge of hacking – Martin Hickman

Very interesting. Rebekah Brooks now admits her extreme interest in Milly Dowler’s disappearance but says nobody tells her of the police’s disclosure to News International that Milly Dowler’s phone had been hacked by journalists at the News of the World

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Dowler and NoWDay 66:   Rebekah Brooks agreed today she was “ extremely interested ” in Milly Dowler’s disappearance – but denied she knew the News of the World had hacked her phone.

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Phone Hacking Trial: Brooks: The Sun had no written rules on payments to public officials – Martin Hickman

Interesting conundrum that The Sun had no rules about payments to public officials because it knew they were illegal yet Rebekah Brooks is happy to pay out tens of thousands to people without asking who was receiving the money.

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Sun Day 65:   The Sun under Rebekah Brooks’s editorship had no written rules controlling the payment of money to public officials, she told the phone hacking inquiry today.

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Phone Hacking Trial: Brooks had no knowledge of husband’s stashed bags – Martin Hickman

Extraordinary Rebekah Brooks says she knew nothing about Charlie Brooks stashed bags containing lesbian porn DVDs and a newsletter about pedigree pigs

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Rebekah and Charlie Brooks Day 62, Part 2:  Rebekah Brooks had no knowledge of an attempt by her husband Charlie to hide his bags at the time she was arrested, the Old Bailey heard today.

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Phone Hacking Trial: ‘Toxic’ NOTW closure mooted month before Guardian’s Milly Dowler revelations – Martin Hickman

So The Guardian cannot be blamed for closing the News of the World over Milly Dowler. There already was plan to close it as part of the move to take over BSkyB.Interesting admission.

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News-of-the-World-006 Day 61, Part 2:  Rupert Murdoch’s UK newspaper group considered closing the News of the World a month before the Guardian disclosed it had targeted missing girl Milly Dowler, the phone hacking trial heard today.

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Phone Hacking Trial: Brooks on legitimate Sun Stories and turning down MPs’ Expenses – Martin Hickman

Rebekah Brooks: Turning Down MPs expenses story ” pretty high error of judgement”, while Cabinet minister Charles Clarke responsible for another leak, she claims Scotland Yard told her!

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sun-getccccty Day 60:  Stories for which the Sun paid a civil servant thousands of pounds could have come from a variety of legitimate sources rather than a public official, the paper’s former editor Rebekah Brooks said today.

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