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Unauthorised Tapping Into Or Hacking of Mobile Communications
House of Commons Home Affairs Committee Unauthorised tapping into or hacking of mobile communications Thirteenth Report of Session 2010–12 1. This report is strictly embargoed and is not for broadcast or publication, in any form, before 05.00hrs, Wednesday 20 July 2011. 2. This report is issued under the condition that it should not be forwarded or copied to anyone else. 3. Under no circumstances should you distribute copies to anyone else or speak to the media before the publication time about the content of this report. 4. The report is subject to parliamentary copyright and you are not permitted to distribute, replicate, or publish further copies either in hard copy or on the internet either before or after publication. 5. If these instructions are unclear in any way please contact Alex Paterson on 020 7219 1589 or email [email protected] HC 907 Unauthorised tapping into or hacking of mobile communications 3 House of Commons Home Affairs Committee Unauthorised tapping into or hacking of mobile communications Thirteenth Report of Session 2010–12 Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 19 July 2011 HC 907 Published on 20 July 2011 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £0.00 The Home Affairs Committee The Home Affairs Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to examine the expenditure, administration, and policy of the Home Office and its associated public bodies. Current membership Rt Hon Keith Vaz MP (Labour, Leicester East) (Chair) Nicola Blackwood MP (Conservative, Oxford West -
Before the Murdoch Takeover: New Evidence Indicating the Need for a Further “Fit and Proper” Review
Before the Murdoch takeover: new evidence indicating the need for a further “Fit and Proper” review AVAAZ, 8th March 2017. Submission for Karen Bradley, Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport Introduction An acquisition of Sky Plc. by 21st Century Fox (21CF) would result in a major expansion of the influence of the Murdoch Family Trust (MFT) over Sky. In 2012 Ofcom was highly critical of the role of James Murdoch who was CEO and Chairman of News International during the period of criminal and other reprehensible conduct at that organisation. This submission details a long list of wrongdoings and criminal misgovernance that has emerged since Ofcom reviewed the licenses held by BSkyB in 2012. It also draws attention to an unfolding sexual harassment epidemic being unearthed at Fox News in the US. The Secretary of State notes in her 6th March 2017 letter1 to 21CF and Sky that 21CF’s record of compliance with the broadcasting code might reflect on the culture or corporate governance at 21CF. The “huge failings of corporate governance” at News Corporation, the precursor company to 21CF were noted in the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on News International and Phone Hacking and the Secretary of State herself acknowledges that James Murdoch’s actions during this time was a “failure of corporate governance.” The shocking scale of corporate misgovernance and criminal conduct make it incumbent upon the Secretary of State to exercise her powers under Section 58(3) of the Communications Act 2003, to refer the Sky bid on broader public interest grounds than those she currently says she is minded to exercise. -
Press Freedom Under Attack
LEVESON’S ILLIBERAL LEGACY AUTHORS HELEN ANTHONY MIKE HARRIS BREAKING SASHY NATHAN PADRAIG REIDY NEWS FOREWORD BY PROFESSOR TIM LUCKHURST PRESS FREEDOM UNDER ATTACK , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY FOREWORD EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. WHY IS THE FREE PRESS IMPORTANT? 2. THE LEVESON INQUIRY, REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS 2.1 A background to Leveson: previous inquiries and press complaints bodies 2.2 The Leveson Inquiry’s Limits • Skewed analysis • Participatory blind spots 2.3 Arbitration 2.4 Exemplary Damages 2.5 Police whistleblowers and press contact 2.6 Data Protection 2.7 Online Press 2.8 Public Interest 3. THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK – A LEGAL ANALYSIS 3.1 A rushed and unconstitutional regime 3.2 The use of statute to regulate the press 3.3 The Royal Charter and the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013 • The use of a Royal Charter • Reporting to Parliament • Arbitration • Apologies • Fines 3.4 The Crime and Courts Act 2013 • Freedom of expression • ‘Provided for by law’ • ‘Outrageous’ • ‘Relevant publisher’ • Exemplary damages and proportionality • Punitive costs and the chilling effect • Right to a fair trial • Right to not be discriminated against 3.5 The Press Recognition Panel 4. THE WIDER IMPACT 4.1 Self-regulation: the international norm 4.2 International response 4.3 The international impact on press freedom 5. RECOMMENDATIONS 6. CONCLUSION 3 , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY 4 , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY FOREWORD BY TIM LUCKHURST PRESS FREEDOM: RESTORING BRITAIN’S REPUTATION n January 2014 I felt honour bound to participate in a meeting, the very ‘Our liberty cannot existence of which left me saddened be guarded but by the and ashamed. -
Police Culture
POLICE CULTURE Police culture has for over half a century attracted interest from academics, students, policy-makers, police institutions and the general public. However, the literature of this area has proven to be diverse, sprawling and prone to contradiction leading to an enthralling yet intricate body of knowledge that, whilst continuing to provoke interest and debate, has largely escaped any wider commentary. This book provides a comprehensive overview of the area of police culture primarily by situating it in the context of the literature of POLICE organizational culture. From this starting point, the idea of police culture is developed as an occupationally-situated response to the TOM COCKCROFT uniqueness of the police role and one in which our understanding is, at times, hindered by the challenges of definitional, operational and analytical concerns. The book then charts the development of our CULTURE understanding of the concept, through traditional explanations to the contemporary, highlighting in turn the tensions that exist between the THEMES AND CONCEPTS elements of continuity in the police world and those of change. Police Culture: Themes and Concepts draws on research from the 1950s to the twenty-first century from the UK, USA and elsewhere to show how the historical trajectory of police work from its early origins through to the late modern present has imbued it with a complexity that is undermined by deterministic explanations that seek to simplify the social world of the police officer. This book will be of interest to academics, practitioners and students studying the sociology of policing. Tom Cockcroft is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Law and Criminal Justice Studies, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. -
A Question of Trust
A QUESTION OF TRUST REPORT OF THE INVESTIGATORY POWERS REVIEW by DAVID ANDERSON Q.C. Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation JUNE 2015 Presented to the Prime Minister pursuant to section 7 of the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act 2014 A QUESTION OF TRUST REPORT OF THE INVESTIGATORY POWERS REVIEW by DAVID ANDERSON Q.C. Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation JUNE 2015 Presented to the Prime Minister pursuant to section 7 of the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act 2014 © Crown copyright 2015 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected]. Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at www.gov.uk/government/publications Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation at [email protected] or by post to David Anderson Q.C. at Brick Court Chambers, 7-8 Essex Street, London WC2R 3LD. This document is also available from the Independent Reviewer’s website at https://terrorismlegislationreviewer.independent.gov.uk Print ISBN 9781474119450 Web ISBN 9781474119467 ID 20051503 06/15 Printed on paper containing 75% recycled fibre content minimum Printed in the UK by the Williams Lea Group on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office OUTLINE CONTENTS Page EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 DETAILED CONTENTS 10 PART I: BACKGROUND 1. -
Consultation on the Leveson Inquiry and Its Implementation
CONSULTATION ON THE LEVESON INQUIRY AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION SECTION 40 OF THE CRIME AND COURTS ACT 2013 AND PART 2 OF THE LEVESON INQUIRY Launch date: 1 November 2016 Respond by: 10 January 2017 1 Contents Foreword………………………………………..……………………………............3 Chapter 1. Introduction……………………………….………..……………………4 Chapter 2. About this consultation…………………………………………….......6 Chapter 3.The Leveson Inquiry: background and action to date ………………8 Chapter 4. Incentives to join a recognised regulator – Section 40 ..………….13 Chapter 5. Part 2 of the Leveson Inquiry......…………………………………….18 Annex A - Terms of Reference for the Leveson Inquiry Annex B - Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 Annex C - Further information about this consultation 2 Foreword from the Culture Secretary and Home Secretary A free press is an essential component of a fully functioning democracy. It should tell the truth without fear or favour and hold the powerful to account. Yet the press has a significant power itself, which it must use responsibly. We know that some parts of the press have abused their position in the past - and ignored not only their own Code of Practice but the law. Police officers and public officials have been found guilty of serious offences. We therefore owed it to the victims of the past to make sure that what happened before cannot happen again. The Leveson Inquiry was therefore established in July 2011 by the Coalition Government, to look into the role of the press and the police in phone hacking and other illegal practices in the British press. The first part of the Inquiry heard evidence from more than 300 people, including some of those who had been affected by the most egregious behaviour. -
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1 Brad Greenspan, Pro Se 2 14938 Camden Ave Suite 47 3 San Jose, CA 95124 4 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 6 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 7 8 9 EUNICE HUTHART, ) Case No. CV 13-4253 MWF ) 10 Plaintiff, ) Honorable Michael W. Fitzgerald 11 v. ) ) 12 ) 13 ) ) 14 ) NOTICE OF ERRATA 15 REGARDING MOTION TO INTERVENE 16 NEWS CORPORATION, NI GROUP 17 LIMITED f/k/a NEWS ) INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, ) 18 19 NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS ) LIMITED, and JOHN and JANE ) 20 DOES 1-10 ) 21 ) Defendants. ) 22 ) 23 ) 24 25 26 27 28 1 NOTICE OF ERRATA 1 2 TO THE COURT, ALL PARTIES, AND THEIR ATTORNEYS OF RECORD: 3 PLEASE TAKE NOTICE 4 Petitioner respectfully submit the following corrections to certain limited portions of 5 6 the pleadings Entered into the Court filing system on May 6, 2014. 7 Specifically, petitioner wishes to correct certain pleadings as set forth below. 8 Plaintiff Motion to Intervene Conclusion section And Exhibits. 9 10 Because of the last minute clerical changes to the numbering of certain exhibits and 11 conversion of pleadings from a Word document - prior to filing the document – the 12 spacing and formatting and certain sections were omitted and inserted erroneously 13 14 from incorrect versions. Plaintiff did not realize the error in these citations until after 15 the Pleadings were filed and Defendant’s May 19, 2014 claims were reviewed. In 16 particular, Plaintiff wishes to make the following corrections to certain Documents in 17 18 the pleadings 19 20 A. Correction #1 – on page 22 of filed May 2, 2014 Motion To Intervene: 21 22 “39. -
Report of the Investigatory Powers Review
A QUESTION OF TRUST REPORT OF THE INVESTIGATORY POWERS REVIEW by DAVID ANDERSON Q.C. Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation JUNE 2015 Presented to the Prime Minister pursuant to section 7 of the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act 2014 A QUESTION OF TRUST REPORT OF THE INVESTIGATORY POWERS REVIEW by DAVID ANDERSON Q.C. Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation JUNE 2015 Presented to the Prime Minister pursuant to section 7 of the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act 2014 © Crown copyright 2015 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected]. Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at www.gov.uk/government/publications Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to the Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation at [email protected] or by post to David Anderson Q.C. at Brick Court Chambers, 7-8 Essex Street, London WC2R 3LD. This document is also available from the Independent Reviewer’s website at https://terrorismlegislationreviewer.independent.gov.uk Print ISBN 9781474119450 Web ISBN 9781474119467 ID 20051503 06/15 Printed on paper containing 75% recycled fibre content minimum Printed in the UK by the Williams Lea Group on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office OUTLINE CONTENTS Page EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 DETAILED CONTENTS 10 PART I: BACKGROUND 1. -
Leveson's Illiberal Legacy
LEVESON’S ILLIBERAL LEGACY AUTHORS HELEN ANTHONY MIKE HARRIS BREAKING SASHY NATHAN PADRAIG REIDY NEWS FOREWORD BY PROFESSOR TIM LUCKHURST PRESS FREEDOM UNDER ATTACK , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY FOREWORD EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. WHY IS THE FREE PRESS IMPORTANT? 2. THE LEVESON INQUIRY, REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS 2.1 A background to Leveson: previous inquiries and press complaints bodies 2.2 The Leveson Inquiry’s Limits • Skewed analysis • Participatory blind spots 2.3 Arbitration 2.4 Exemplary Damages 2.5 Police whistleblowers and press contact 2.6 Data Protection 2.7 Online Press 2.8 Public Interest 3. THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK – A LEGAL ANALYSIS 3.1 A rushed and unconstitutional regime 3.2 The use of statute to regulate the press 3.3 The Royal Charter and the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013 • The use of a Royal Charter • Reporting to Parliament • Arbitration • Apologies • Fines 3.4 The Crime and Courts Act 2013 • Freedom of expression • ‘Provided for by law’ • ‘Outrageous’ • ‘Relevant publisher’ • Exemplary damages and proportionality • Punitive costs and the chilling effect • Right to a fair trial • Right to not be discriminated against 3.5 The Press Recognition Panel 4. THE WIDER IMPACT 4.1 Self-regulation: the international norm 4.2 International response 4.3 The international impact on press freedom 5. RECOMMENDATIONS 6. CONCLUSION 3 , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY 4 , LEVESON S ILLIBERAL LEGACY FOREWORD BY TIM LUCKHURST PRESS FREEDOM: RESTORING BRITAIN’S REPUTATION n January 2014 I felt honour bound to participate in a meeting, the very ‘Our liberty cannot existence of which left me saddened be guarded but by the and ashamed. -
The BJTC Media Law, Regulation & Ethics Handbook 2021
The BJTC Media Law, Regulation & Ethics Handbook 2021 By Tim Crook Above Logo for UK Broadcast Journalism Training Council http://www.bjtc.org.uk and Royal Courts of Justice in the Strand, London. Image by Tim Crook. Published March 15th 2021 by Kultura Press ISBN 978-1-908842-17-6 1 Contents 2 Contents 3 Author 4 Key Principles on a Page: Avoiding the six media law sins 5 Brief tabulated overview of legal system of England and Wales 6 Basic information about the legal system 8 Introduction to main themes of media law: SPECTACULAR Professional moral values and ethics 21 BBC Values 21 Respecting the rule of law 22 Impartiality 26 Professional skills to a high standard Primary Media Law in detail 27 Open Justice 60 Contempt 66 Reporting court cases 70 Reporting Restrictions and the problems in challenging them or breaching them 79 Defamation also usually known as libel 82 Libel defences 87 Malicious Falsehood 88 Privacy 95 Case History Discussion: Sir Cliff Richard v BBC 110 Background to privacy law development 116 Making editorial privacy decisions in relation to images 120 Data Protection Acts and EU General Data Protection Regulation 124 Copyright/Intellectual Property Additional briefings 131 Reporting Courts-Martial 134 Reporting Inquests 138 Questions to ask yourself in relation to your reporting 142 Analysis of Ethics and Law- case history from the past Secondary Media Law- regulation by statutory and industry bodies 145 Introduction to regulation as secondary media law 146 Ofcom Regulation and the BBC 148 The Ofcom Broadcasting Code 154 Accuracy, Opportunity to reply, Due Impartiality 162 Sources 164 Important UK existing media law relating to journalists’ sources 166 Case History Discussion: Robert Norman v United Kingdom 176 Case History Discussion. -
The Murdoch Media Empire and the Spectacle of Scandal.Pdf
International Journal of Communication 6 (2012), Feature 1169–1200 1932–8036/2012FEA1169 The Murdoch Media Empire and the Spectacle of Scandal 1 DOUGLAS KELLNER University of California, Los Angeles The press, designed for freedom's best defence, And learning, morals, wisdom to dispense, Perverted, poisoned, lost to honor's rules, Is made the sport of knaves, to govern fools. ~ Philadelphia Public Ledger, 1839 In July 2011, dramatic revelations concerning misdeeds by Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World (NOTW), one of the most successful tabloid newspapers in history, erupted, creating a vast media spectacle that was compared to Watergate and that threatened the existence of Murdoch’s global media empire (Bernstein, 2011). Richard Nixon’s Watergate crisis implicated the president in a series of scandals that led to the famous Senate Watergate Hearings, a major media spectacle of 1973, followed by his resignation from office, a first for a U.S. president. The cascading scandals in Rupert Murdoch’s media empire were thus referred to in some circles as “Murdochgate” (see Bernstein, 2011), a series of outrages and crimes that are continuing to undermine his media power and empire in 2012 and the foreseeable future. For years, there had been accusations that employees of Murdoch’s various tabloid newspapers had hacked telephones to gain information and pay police and other informers for news stories. In 2007, a News of the World reporter, Clive Goodman, and a convicted hacker, Glenn Mulcaire, were sent to jail for hacking the cell phones of members of the Royal Family, and reports surfaced in subsequent years that celebrities like Hugh Grant, Sienna Miller, and Jude Law were also hacked, as well as figures connected to sports, always an important domain of the spectacle. -
Exhibit a in the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware
EXHIBIT A IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE In re NEWS CORPORATION ) Consolidated SHAREHOLDER DERIVATIVE ) C.A. No. 6285-VCN LITIGATION ) VERIFIED SECOND AMENDED CONSOLIDATED SHAREHOLDER DERIVATIVE AND CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT Co-Lead Plaintiffs The Amalgamated Bank, as Trustee for the LongView LargeCap 500 Index Fund, LongView LargeCap 500 Index VEBA Fund, LongView Quantitative LargeCap Fund, and LongView Quantitative LargeCap VEBA Fund (“Amalgamated Bank”) and Central Laborers Pension Fund (“Central Laborers”), and plaintiff New Orleans Employees’ Retirement System (“NOERS”) (“Plaintiffs”), by and through their undersigned counsel, assert this action derivatively on behalf of News Corporation (“News Corp” or the “Company”) and directly on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated public shareholders of News Corp against defendants Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch, Lachlan Murdoch, Chase Carey, David F. DeVoe, Joel Klein, Arthur M. Siskind, Roderick Eddington, Andrew S.B. Knight, Thomas J. Perkins, Peter Barnes, José María Aznar, Natalie Bancroft, Kenneth E. Cowley, Viet Dinh, and John L. Thornton (the “Individual Defendants,” “Defendants” or the “Board”). Plaintiffs make the following allegations upon knowledge as to themselves and upon information and belief (including the investigation of counsel and review of publicly available information) as to all other matters, and allege as follows. SUMMARY OF THE ACTION 1. This case arises because the Board News Corp has disregarded its fiduciary duties by allowing the Company’s founder, CEO, Chairman and controlling shareholder, Rupert Murdoch, to use News Corp as his own personal fiefdom. The Board has not lifted a finger to engage in any oversight of Murdoch’s rule, even when it was provided with clear and unmistakable warnings that News Corp’s business practices were not only unethical, but also illegal.