Metropolitan Police Drop Action Against the Guardian | Media | the Guardian Page 1 of 3

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Metropolitan Police Drop Action Against the Guardian | Media | the Guardian Page 1 of 3 Metropolitan police drop action against the Guardian | Media | The Guardian Page 1 of 3 Printing sponsored by: Metropolitan police drop action against the Guardian Scotland Yard forced into abrupt climbdown over attempt to make Guardian reporters reveal phone-hacking sources Owen Bowcott and Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 20 September 2011 21.50 BST larger | smaller Metropolitan police claimed that Amelia Hill could have 'incited' a source to break the Official Secrets Act. Photograph: Katherine Rose for the Guardian The Metropolitan police has dropped its attempt to order the Guardian to reveal confidential sources for stories relating to the phone-hacking scandal. The Met had been hoping to force Guardian reporters to reveal confidential sources for articles disclosing that the murdered teenager Milly Dowler's phone was hacked on behalf of the News of the World. But after an intervention by the Crown Prosecution Service and widespread outrage, Scotland Yard was forced into an abrupt climbdown. The Met claimed that one of the paper's reporters, Amelia Hill, could have incited a source to break the Official Secrets Act and broken the act herself. At an Old Bailey hearing scheduled for this Friday, the Met had been due to apply for a production order to obtain all the material that the Guardian holds that would disclose sources for the newspaper's coverage of the phone-hacking inquiry this year. The statement put out by the Met announcing its retreat left open the possibility that the production order could be applied for again, but the Guardian's lawyers have been told that the police have dropped the application. A senior Yard source said: "It's off the agenda." The police application was formally being made under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, but with an assertion that Hill had committed an offence under the Official Secrets Act by inciting an officer from Operation Weeting – the Met's investigation into phone hacking – to reveal information. The Yard source said: "There will be some hard reflection. This was a decision made in good faith, but with no appreciation for the wider consequences. Obviously, the last thing we want to do is to get into a big fight with the media. We do not want to interfere with journalists. In hindsight the view is that certain things that should have been done were not done, and that is regrettable." http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/sep/20/metropolitan -police -drop -action -guardia ... 9/21/2011 Metropolitan police drop action against the Guardian | Media | The Guardian Page 2 of 3 The Guardian's editor -in -chief, Alan Rusbridger, said: "We greatly welcome the Met's decision to withdraw this ill-judged order. Threatening reporters with the Official Secrets Act was a sinister new device to get round the protection of journalists' confidential sources. We would have fought this assault on public interest journalism all the way. We're happy that good sense has prevailed." Many lawyers had expressed astonishment at the police resorting to the Official Secret Act. Their surprise was reinforced on Monday when the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer QC, revealed that the Crown Prosecution Service had not been contacted by officers before the application was made. Neil O'May, the Guardian's solicitor, said: "This was always a misconceived application for source material. Journalists' sources are protected in law. For the Metropolitan police to turn on the very newspaper which exposed the failings of the previous police inquiries and reported on hacking by the News of the World was always doomed to failure. The Metropolitan police need to control the officers who are involved in these sensitive areas." In a statement , the CPS said: "[On] Monday the Metropolitan police asked the CPS for advice in relation to seeking a production order against Guardian Newspapers . "The CPS has asked that more information be provided to its lawyers and has said that more time will be needed fully to consider the matter. As a result, the scheduled court hearing will not go ahead on Friday. [The Metropolitan Police] will consider what application, if any, it will make in due course, once it has received advice from the CPS." The Met said in a statement: "The Metropolitan police's directorate of professional standards consulted the Crown Prosecution Service about the alleged leaking of information by a police officer from Operation Weeting. "The CPS has today asked that more information be provided to its lawyers and for appropriate time to consider the matter. In addition the MPS has taken further legal advice this afternoon and as a result has decided not to pursue, at this time, the application for production orders scheduled for hearing on Friday 23 September. We have agreed with the CPS that we will work jointly with them in considering the next steps. "This decision does not mean that the investigation has been concluded. This investigation, led by the DPS, not Operation Weeting, has always been about establishing whether a police officer has leaked information, and gathering any evidence that proves or disproves that. Despite recent media reports, there was no intention to target journalists or disregard journalists' obligations to protect their sources. "It is not acceptable for police officers to leak information about any investigation, let alone one as sensitive and high profile as Operation Weeting. "Notwithstanding the decision made this afternoon it should be noted that the application for production orders was made under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE), NOT the Official Secrets Act (OSA). "The Official Secrets Act was only mentioned in the application in relation to possible offences in connection with the officer from Operation Weeting, who was arrested on August 18 2011 on suspicion of misconduct in a public office relating to unauthorised disclosure of information. He remains on bail and is suspended. "Separately, the MPS remains committed to the phone hacking investigation under Operation Weeting."The picture painted by Met insiders is that a relatively junior officer took the decision to take on the Guardian without consulting his superiors, setting off a calamitous chain of events that saw the Met condemned for an attempted assault on press freedom. Police sources said the senior investigating officer who was inquiring into whether a member of the Weeting team had leaked information had taken the decision to seek the http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/sep/20/metropolitan -police -drop -action -guardia ... 9/21/2011 Metropolitan police drop action against the Guardian | Media | The Guardian Page 3 of 3 production order on his own. The senior source said that not even Deputy Assistant Commissioner Mark Simmons had been told about the decision in advance. Simmons is the head of professionalism issues at Scotland Yard and is seen as a rising star within the force. The senior source said: "There was not a lot of happy people at our place over the weekend because it was a decision made by the SIO. There was no referral upwards, and you would have thought on something as sensitive as this there would have been." Simmons and the incoming commissioner, Bernard Hogan-Howe, did discuss the issue, as the criticism grew, but the source said the commissioner had left it to Simmons to take the decision, and that there was no instruction or directive. The Met stressed that Hogan-Howe, despite being in charge of professional standards as deputy commissioner, was not involved in the original decision to seek a production order. Simmons took the decision to review the application by the SIO. Geoffrey Robertson QC said: "This is a victory for common sense and freedom of speech. Had the police continued with this ill-considered action, journalists might have been forced to disobey a court order so as to protect their source. "Putting journalists into that dilemma and possibly in jail would only bring discredit on police and the law. It should now be accepted that journalists are entitled to protect their sources of information, otherwise that information will dry up and there will be less public interest information, such as the hacking of Milly Dowler's phone." The Met's move had been condemned by all Britain's major newspapers, including the Times and Sunday Times, and the Daily Mail's columnist Richard Littlejohn.Isabella Sankey, director of policy for Liberty, said: " "It would have been perverse in the extreme for early prosecutions in the phone-hacking scandal to be against those who blew it open rather than those who covered it up. "We hope that editors and journalists never forget how important human rights are to a free press." Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary of the National Union of Journalists, said: "We are delighted that common sense has prevailed and the Met has woken up to the fact that they cannot get away with such flagrant abuse of the Official Secrets Act.This was an outrageous attack on a central tenet of journalism – the protection of our sources. This is a victory for journalism, democracy and press freedom." The Yard pursued its action against the Guardian without consulting the CPS, until Monday, or the attorney-general Dominic Grieve. © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/sep/20/metropolitan -police -drop -action -guardia ... 9/21/2011.
Recommended publications
  • 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
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • The Information Commissioner's Response to the Leveson Report on the Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press the Report Of
    The Information Commissioner’s Response to the Leveson Report on the Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press The report of the Leveson Inquiry into the Culture, Practice and Ethics of the Press was always going to be of great interest to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). After all, it was the Information Commissioner who took the lead in raising questions about the involvement of the press in the unlawful trade in personal data after ICO staff raided the home of the private investigator Steve Whittamore in 2003 - the start of what became known as Operation Motorman. Almost ten years on, the Inquiry’s conclusions are also of much significance for today’s ICO. Because, as well as tasking the judge with inquiring into the culture, practice and ethics of the press, the Inquiry’s terms of reference also directed him to “inquire into … the extent to which the current policy and regulatory framework has failed including in relation to data protection”. Part H of the Report, in particular, deals with the press and data protection. This includes a section setting out an analysis of Operation Motorman, a section on the ICO and the press today, and a section dealing with issues around the legal framework. It concludes with a series of recommendations for the ICO and for the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). While recognising some of the constraints placed on the ICO by the limitations of the legal framework for data protection and the resistance of the press to external regulation, there is no escaping the fact that Leveson is critical of the work of the ICO in so far as it involves regulation of the press.
    [Show full text]
  • Feral Beast": Cautionary Lessons from British Press Reform Lili Levi University of Miami School of Law, [email protected]
    University of Miami Law School University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository Articles Faculty and Deans 2015 Taming the "Feral Beast": Cautionary Lessons From British Press Reform Lili Levi University of Miami School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.miami.edu/fac_articles Part of the Communications Law Commons, and the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons Recommended Citation Lili Levi, Taming the "Feral Beast": Cautionary Lessons From British Press Reform, 55 Santa Clara L. Rev. 323 (2015). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty and Deans at University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by an authorized administrator of University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TAMING THE "FERAL BEAST"1 : CAUTIONARY LESSONS FROM BRITISH PRESS REFORM Lili Levi* TABLE OF CONTENTS Introdu ction ............................................................................ 324 I. British Press Reform, in Context ....................................... 328 A. Overview of the British Press Sector .................... 328 B. The British Approach to Newspaper Regulation.. 330 C. Phone-Hacking and the Leveson Inquiry Into the Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press ..... 331 D. Where Things Stand Now ...................................... 337 1. The Royal Charter ............................................. 339 2. IPSO and IM
    [Show full text]
  • N E W S R E L E A
    N E W S R E L E A S E For immediate release Contact: Simon Greenberg or 7th July 2011 Daisy Dunlop 020 7782 6019 News International today announces that this Sunday, 10 July 2011, will be the last issue of the News of the World. Making the announcement to staff, James Murdoch, Deputy Chief Operating Officer, News Corporation, and Chairman, News International said: “I have important things to say about the News of the World and the steps we are taking to address the very serious problems that have occurred. It is only right that you as colleagues at News International are first to hear what I have to say and that you hear it directly from me. So thank you very much for coming here and listening. You do not need to be told that The News of the World is 168 years old. That it is read by more people than any other English language newspaper. That it has enjoyed support from Britain’s largest advertisers. And that it has a proud history of fighting crime, exposing wrong-doing and regularly setting the news agenda for the nation. When I tell people why I am proud to be part of News Corporation, I say that our commitment to journalism and a free press is one of the things that sets us apart. Your work is a credit to this. The good things the News of the World does, however, have been sullied by behaviour that was wrong. Indeed, if recent allegations are true, it was inhuman and has no place in our Company.
    [Show full text]
  • Unauthorised Tapping Into Or Hacking of Mobile Communications: Follow Up
    House of Commons Home Affairs Committee Unauthorised tapping into or hacking of mobile communications: follow up Oral and written evidence 4 September 2012 Deputy Assistant Commissioner Sue Akers QPM Ordered by The House of Commons to be printed 4 September 2012 HC 562-i Published on 7 November 2012 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £4.00 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 and Abingdon) James Clappison MP (Conservative, Hertsmere) Michael Ellis MP (Conservative, Northampton North) Lorraine Fullbrook MP (Conservative, South Ribble) Dr Julian Huppert MP (Liberal Democrat, Cambridge) Steve McCabe MP (Labour, Birmingham Selly Oak) Rt Hon Alun Michael MP (Labour & Co-operative, Cardiff South and Penarth) Bridget Phillipson MP (Labour, Houghton and Sunderland South) Mark Reckless MP (Conservative, Rochester and Strood) Mr David Winnick MP (Labour, Walsall North) Powers The Committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of which are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No 152. These are available on the Internet via www.parliament.uk. Publication The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery Office by Order of the House. All publications of the Committee (including press notices) are on the Internet at www.parliament.uk/homeaffairscom. Committee staff The current staff of the Committee are Tom Healey (Clerk), Dr Richard Benwell (Second Clerk), Ruth Davis (Committee Specialist), Eleanor Scarnell (Committee Specialist), Andy Boyd (Senior Committee Assistant), Michelle Garratty (Committee Assistant).
    [Show full text]
  • Police Logs Raise Questions Over Deletion of Milly Dowler Voicemails
    Police logs raise questions over deletion of Milly Dowler voicemails • Inquiry confirms teenager's phone was hacked by NoW • Surrey force knew in 2002 about paper's interception • Nick Davies and David Leigh • The Guardian, Saturday 10 December 2011 • Article history Fresh details of the hacking of Milly Dowler's phone by the News of the World have been obtained by the police, the Guardian has learned. According to sources familiar with the case, officers from Operation Weeting have unearthed logs detailing the hacked messages from tearful members of the murdered girl's family. It is understood that while News of the World reporters probably were responsible for deleting some of the missing girl's messages, police have concluded that they were not responsible for the particular deletion which caused her family to have false hope that she was alive. Detectives told Milly's parents in April that the paper's journalists had intercepted and deleted messages on the murdered teenager's phone. Evidence has now revealed that Milly's phone would automatically delete messages 72 hours after being listened to. This means the paper's journalists would have inadvertently caused some voicemails to be deleted after they began listening to them, but police found that some messages had also been deleted before the News of the World began hacking into her voicemail. The paper's activities hampered Surrey police inquiries at the time, promoting a wild goose chase. David Cameron described the way journalists listened to Milly's friends and family pleading with her to get in touch as "disgusting".
    [Show full text]
  • News of the World Hacked Milly Dowler‟S Phone During Police Hunt
    News of the World hacked Milly Dowler‟s phone during police hunt 5 Jul 2011 The Guardian Nick Davies and Amelia Hill Exclusive Paper deleted missing schoolgirl‟s voicemails, giving family false hope „It is distress heaped on tragedy to learn that the News of the World had no humanity at such a terrible time‟ Mark Lewis, Dowler family lawyer The News of the World illegally targeted the missing schoolgirl Milly Dowler and her family in March 2002, interfering with police inquiries into her disappearance, an investigation by the Guardian has established. Scotland Yard is investigating the episode, which is likely to put new pressure on the then editor of the paper, Rebekah Brooks, now Rupert Murdoch‟s chief executive in the UK; and the then deputy editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned in January as the prime minister‟s media adviser. The Dowlers‟ family lawyer, Mark Lewis, issued a statement yesterday describing the News of the World‟s activities as “heinous” and “despicable”. He said the Dowler family was now pursuing a damages claim against the News of the World. Milly Dowler disappeared at the age of 13 on her way home in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, on 21 March 2002. Detectives from Scotland Yard‟s new inquiry into the phone hacking, Operation Weeting, are believed to have found evidence of the targeting of the Dowlers in a collection of 11,000 pages of notes kept by Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator jailed for phone hacking on behalf of the News of the World. In the last four weeks the Met officers have approached Surrey police and taken formal statements from some of those involved in the original inquiry, who were concerned about how News of the World journalists intercepted – and deleted – the voicemail messages of Milly Dowler.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Media Law After Leveson: a View from the Coalface
    Regulation, Regulators, and the Crisis of Law and Government Media Law after Leveson: Brief Policy A view from the coalface Gillian Phillips The Foundation for Law, Justice and Society in association with the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies www.fljs.org and Wolfson College, University of Oxford The Foundation for Law, Justice and Society Regulation, Regulators, and the Crisis of Law and Government This programme examines the regulatory system in the wake of the global financial crisis, assessing its current weaknesses, the role of legislative and judicial bodies, and identifying measures for future reform of both markets and regulatory regimes. It aims to shed light on the recent failures of regulators, often captive of the very industries they are meant to regulate, and examine ways to improve the accountability and effectiveness of the regulatory system. This policy brief was written in April 2013, before the Defamation Bill was passed as an Act of Parliament. © The Foundation for Law, Justice and Society 2013 Executive Summary This policy brief aims to present a post-Leveson view on media law from the perspective of the in-house lawyer at the coalface. n The media are beset by more law and regulation than they have been at any other point in history. There is a strong consensus emerging from academics and others, prompted or encouraged by the Leveson Report, that now is payback time: the UK media have abused their privileged position, have got off too lightly, and (primarily the print press) need to be made subject to more rigorous controls. n The phone-hacking scandal was about unlawful conduct, much of it criminal; it is unlikely that any regulator would have been able to engage with or prevent it, yet the aftershocks from Leveson are continuing to be felt and are having an impact on the media law landscape.
    [Show full text]
  • News International Statement
    N E W S R E L E A S E For immediate release Contact Daisy Dunlop 020 7782 6019 6th July 2011 News International statement News International notes that the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) has opened a new investigation into police payments. Lord Macdonald QC, the highly regarded former Director of Public Prosecutions, has been appointed by the News Corporation board to advise News International (NI) on the extensive co-operation it is providing to the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) regarding any inquiries into police payments at the News of the World. The appointment, which was made in May, is one of a series of measures to address these issues since January 2011 when information was voluntarily disclosed by News International that re-opened the investigation into illegal voicemail interception known as Operation Weeting. NI cannot comment on the detail of the information voluntarily disclosed on June 20 because we do not want to prejudice any on-going inquiries. But the fact that these developments came as a result of voluntary disclosure demonstrates not only full co-operation with the MPS but also NI’s determination as a company to deal responsibly and correctly with the issues that have arisen. We also welcome today’s cross-party calls for a broad public inquiry into standards and practices in the industry. In the meantime we have already been taking the following practical steps, some already announced by Chief Executive Rebekah Brooks, to co-operate fully with the police and institute what we hope will become an industry-leading governance, compliance and standards structure at the News of the World, and NI as a whole: 1) In April we announced an unreserved apology to victims in civil litigation and admitted liability in a number of cases.
    [Show full text]
  • For Distribution to CP's MODI 00023474
    For Distribution To CP's The Leveson Inquiry Witness Statement for Part 1, Module 1 WITNESS STATEMENT OF TOM ROWLAND I, TOM ROWLAND, c/o Collyer Bristow LLP, 4 Bedford Row, London, W C1R 4DF will say as fo llo w s : Docum ents referred to 1. I make this statement in connection with my role as a Core Participant in the Leveson Inquiry. 2. I am a Claimant in the voicemail interception cases currently being heard by Mr Justice Vos In the Chancery Division of the High Court. B a c k g ro u n d 3. I am a journalist I was on the staff at the Daily Telegraph for 10 years from 1987 to 1997 first as sub editor, then a feature writer and for seven years as property correspondent and editor. 4. I left the Dally Telegraph and worked for Bazal Productions developing formats for TV programmes and as a presenter. I wrote and presented a series of programmes, Including ‘House Hunters’. 5. I continued to write for newspapers and magazines including the Evening Standard, The Mail on Sunday, the Independent and The Times and The Sunday Times, focusing on property, health, technology, the arts, and marine subjects including super yachts. 6. I am a published author in the field of security and technology, and my books indude studies of British technology policy during the 1970s and 1980s. Phone hacking 7. I first became aware that my phone had been hacked in August 2011 when I was informed by my former mobile phone provider, T- Mobile, that they had given evidence in respect of m y account to the Metropolitan Police Service, T Mobile suggested I contact officers at operation Weeting, which I did.
    [Show full text]