Rebekah Brooks, the former boss of News Corp's British newspaper arm, has been found not guilty by a London court of being part of an illegal conspiracy at a Rupert Murdoch tabloid to hack into phones and make illegal payments.
Though Brooks was acquitted by the jury of all charges, Andy Coulson, prime minister David Cameron's former media chief and ex-editor of one of Murdoch's British titles, was found guilty of being part of the phone-hacking conspiracy.
Both were former editors of Murdoch's News of the World, the 168-year-old tabloid the media mogul closed in July 2011 amid a public outcry over revelations that journalists had hacked into the voicemails on the mobile phone of a murdered schoolgirl.
Mr Cameron today he was wrong to hire Coulson as his media chief in 2007. “I’m extremely sorry that I employed him, it was the wrong decision,” he said in a clip to British TV, recorded less than two hours after the verdict was announced.
“I asked him questions about if he knew about phone hacking and he said that he didn’t and I accepted those assurances and I gave him the job,” he added.
The hacking scandal sent shockwaves through Britain’s political elite, with prime ministers from both main parties shown to have been close to Murdoch and his senior staff including Ms Brooks. Mr Cameron, who ordered a public inquiry into press ethics in the immediate aftermath, faces embarrassment over Coulson’s conviction.
Ms Brooks (46) was cleared of being part of a conspiracy to hack into phones to find exclusive stories, of authorising illegal payments to public officials and of trying to hinder the police investigation.
On hearing the verdict at London’s Old Bailey, she showed little immediate emotion but was later led out of the court by a nurse. Her husband Charlie was also cleared of any attempt to hinder the police investigation.
Reuters