'A must read for anyone who wants to understand not only our media, but power in Britain'– OWEN JONES, author The Establishment
'Top court reporting' – NICK DAVIES, THE GUARDIAN
Go behind the doors of Court 12 of the Old Bailey for what was billed as 'the trial of the century' – the phone hacking trial of journalists from Rupert Murdoch's two biggest British tabloid newspapers.
Every twist and turn of the longest-running criminal trial in English legal history is covered by Peter Jukes in this edition, crowdfunded by members of the public.
Heard in London in 2013 and 2014, the phone hacking trial had a heady brew of criminal eavesdropping, media rights, political intrigue, and Hollywood stardust. Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson were accused of phone hacking and corrupting public officials while editing the Sun and the News of the World newspapers respectively. Brooks and her husband Charlie and her former PA, Cheryl Carter, were also accused of perverting the course of justice in an attempt to thwart detectives investigating the hacking.
The trial took place after years of cover up of phone hacking at Britain's biggest newspaper group News International (now News UK), the country's biggest police force, the Metropolitan Police, and the Conservative government led by David Cameron, who employed Coulson as his director of communications. After they were sworn in, the judge, Justice Saunders, told the jury: ‘British justice is on trial’.
The long-running trial laid bare the intense illegal surveillance of individuals carried out by the politically-connected News of the World. Employing an array of private detectives, pried deeply into the private lives of anyone who mattered to them at the time: a Hollywood actress, a missing schoolgirl, a Cabinet minister. Sometimes the surveillance was based on well-founded intelligence that revealed a legitimate story, sometimes it was on a whim or the result of a malicious tip-off.
The trial pitted London's most extravagantly paid barristers against each other. Rupert Murdoch's millions hired top Queens Counsel to represent the seven defendants. The £5, 000-a-day barrister, Jonathan Laidlaw, for instance, represented Rebekah Brooks. The multi-million pound case tottered on the brink of collapse several times as a result media misbehaviour, illness and delay.
Drawing on verbatim court exchanges and exhibits, Jukes reveals the daily reality and grand strategies of this major criminal case. He reveals a secret about Rebekah Brooks' 14 days in the witness box. He explains why a defence lawyer gave him a wry smile during a cigarette break. And he discloses the failings of the Crown Prosecution Service which contribute to the verdicts.
Like Dial M for Murdoch by Tom Watson and Martin Hickman and Hack Attack by Nick Davies, this book will fascinate anyone wanting to know about the phone hacking scandal. It is also ideal for anyone who wants to know the twists and turns of a major criminal trial.
REVIEWS
'Remarkable. I feel I now know all the key players and why some defendants were found guilty and some not, despite never having spent a minute at the trial.'
– PROFESSOR STEWART PURVIS, FORMER ITN EDITOR
'Written in a chatty, gossipy style that brings the courtroom drama alive.'
– NIGEL PAULEY, DAILY STAR JOURNALIST
Table des matières
PREFACE: THE UNTOLD STORY. Weeks before the phone hacking trial begins in October 2013 the Daily Telegraph commentator Peter Oborne bills it as ‘the trial of the century.’ Yet it has taken almost the whole of the century so far to arrive, two years since the closure of the News of the World
CHARGES. Full list of the charges and particulars facing IAN EDMONDSON, REBEKAH BROOKS, ANDREW COULSON, STUART KUTTNER, CLIVE GOODMAN, CHERYL CARTER, CHARLES BROOKS and MARK HANNA. The various charges may be summarised as hacking, bribing and hiding evidence
LEGAL TEAMS. Prosecution: Andrew Edis QC, Mark Bryant-Heron QC. Rebekah Brook: Jonathan Laidlaw QC. Andrew Coulson: Timothy Langdale QC. Stuart Kuttner: Jonathan Caplan QC. Clive Goodman: David Spens QC. Cheryl Carter: Trevor Burke QC. Charles Brooks: Neil Saunders. Mark Hanna: William Clegg QC
1. NOT WAR AND PEACE. We get the full story about the phone hacking trial, such as the unreported pre-trial hearings at Southwark Crown Court. The defence teams argue that under human rights law, the prosecution should not reveal an affair between two defendants: Andy Coulson and Rebekah Brooks
2. PASSION AND PREJUDICE. The judge, Justice Saunders, a leading advocate of live coverage of criminal trials and ‘open justice', allows reporters to live tweet proceedings. He says: 'In this case in a way not only are the defendants on trial, but British justice is on trial'
3. SEX, LIES AND VOICEMAIL. The jury hears the News of the World hacked Sven-Goran Eriksson, Faria Alam, Andy Gilchrist, David Blunkett, Kimberly Quinn, Delia Smith, Wayne Rooney, Patricia Tierney, Laura Rooney, Tessa Jowell, David Mills, Lord Prescott, Mark Oaten, Paul Mc Cartney, Heather Mills
4. DEMOLITION JOB. The trial is taken deep inside the machinery of the News of the World: the paper paid private investigator and phone hacker Glenn Mulcaire £100, 000 a year. Court 12 hears from witness Andy Gadd, another private investigator or ‘trace agent’ employed by News of the World
5. MISTRIAL OF THE CENTURY. The long trial is under strain. Jurors take time off for doctor appointments and funerals. Stuart Kuttner, who has suffered a heart attack and a brain stem stroke since the hacking scandal broke, is rarely in the dock. Clive Goodman suffers from heart problems
6. I’LL BE THE JUDGE OF THAT. The judge overturns defence objections to rule the jury can hear from News of the World reporter turned prosecution witness, Dan Evans. Hollywood actors Jude Law and Sienna Miller will testify about the impact of Rupert Murdoch's newspapers
7. HOSTILE WITNESS. The courts hears how Wapping was rife with hacking. Among the many victims of Glenn Mulcaire, police found evidence in his logs and notebooks that he had gone after the phone call voicemails of senior editors at News International, including Andy Coulson and Rebekah Brooks
8. THE OFFICE CAT. After months of anticipation among defendants and journalists, Daniel Evans, phone hacking star reporter at the Sunday Mirror then News of the World steps into the witness box on 27 January 2014. He says even the office cat at Rupert Murdoch's Sunday newspaper knew about its hacking
9. INTERLUDE: THE TRIAL THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. After the prosecution rests its case on 5 February after 13 weeks of evidence. Unbeknownst to the jury who are sent home, the defence teams begin a concerted attempt to throw out the trial, arguing that there is no case to answer. They fail
10. HOLDING COURT. Rebekah Brooks, former News of the World and Sun editor, now chief executive of News International, gives evidence. She is flawless. Jukes says: 'If it was a carefully scripted performance (as Andrew Edis QC later implied) it was the performance of her life.'
11. ROGUE MALE. Wracked by ill-health, Clive Goodman enters the witness box to deny allegations he corrupted public officials while Royal Editor of the News of the World.
A propos de l’auteur
Peter Jukes is a British journalist and screenwriter. His television credits include devising and writing In Deep (subsequently developed with Paul Haggis for the USA network), the first two episodes of the the first series of the Emmy award winning Waking the Dead, BAFTA award winning Sea of Souls, and the first episodes of Inspector Lynley with original storylines.
As a journalist he has written regularly for various newspapers and magazines, including Newsweek, New Statesman, The Daily Beast, Politico, The New Republic and was nominated for several awards for his coverage of the phone hacking trial in London, the longest and most expensive criminal trial in British history, recounted in his book Beyond Contempt.
He is co-author of Untold: The Daniel Morgan Murder Exposed and director of the Byline Festival. His 2012 book, The Fall of the House of Murdoch, was described by the former Sunday Times editor Sir Harold Evans as “a roaring great read.” His account of living in the modern city, A Shout in the Street (Faber & Faber, 1990), was called “a dream of a book” by John Berger. He lives in London.