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    UK govt defends Murdoch ties as scandal spirals

    LONDON (AP) — Britain's Conservative-led government denied Saturday that it was too close to Rupert Murdoch's scandal-hit media empire, as the mogul apologized for phone hacking by one of his tabloids in full-page newspaper ads across the country.

    Government records show that Prime Minister David Cameron has had scores of meetings with media executives in the past year, including 26 with Murdoch or his employees.

    British police, too, faced growing pressure over the links between senior officers and Murdoch executives.

    Rupert Murdoch's son James, his former British CEO Rebekah Brooks and ex-News of the World editor Andy Coulson all stayed at the prime minister's country home, Chequers.

    Coulson's stay in March came two months after he resigned as Cameron's communications chief amid the spiraling phone hacking and police bribery scandal. Critics said that invitation showed poor judgment on Cameron's part and revealed the cozy relationship between political leaders and Murdoch's powerful media empire. Coulson was arrested in the scandal last week.

    But Foreign Secretary William Hague said Saturday he was not embarrassed "in any way" by the government's relationship with Murdoch executives.

    "It's not surprising that in a democratic country there is some contact between leaders" and media chiefs, he told the BBC,

    "I'm not embarrassed by it in any way, but there is something wrong here in this country and it must be put right," Hague said. "It's been acknowledged by the prime minister and I think that's the right attitude to take."

    Cameron acknowledged last week that the relationship between politicians, the media and the police in Britain had grown too close and must be changed.

    Hague said Cameron had invited Coulson to Chequers "to thank him for his work, he's worked for him for several years, that is a normal, human thing to do."

    Coulson is one of nine people arrested and questioned by police over what they knew about phone hacking at the News of the World, the 168-year-old tabloid shut down by Murdoch last week after the scale of its illegal hacking became clear. No one has been charged.

    Murdoch is struggling to contain the scandal, which has scuttled his bid for lucrative TV broadcaster BSkyB and knocked billions off the value of his News Corp. empire. On Friday, the scandal claimed the jobs of Brooks and another senior Murdoch aide, Wall Street Journal publisher Les Hinton.

    News Corp. made a public act of contrition Saturday, placing an ad in seven British national newspapers with the headline "We are sorry." Signed by Murdoch, it apologized "for the serious wrongdoing that occurred."

    "We are deeply sorry for the hurt suffered by the individuals affected. We regret not acting faster to sort things out," it said.

    The company plans to take out more ads in the coming days outlining its next steps — part of a new strategy by the once all-powerful mogul. A front-page headline in the Murdoch-owned The Times on Saturday read "Day of atonement."

    Murdoch on Friday met with the family of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler, whose phone was hacked by the News of the World in 2002. The revelation that journalists had accessed her phone in search of scoops while police were looking for the missing 13-year-old fueled an explosion of interest in the long-simmering scandal about illegal eavesdropping.

    The 80-year-old mogul said "as founder of the company I was appalled to find out what had happened and I apologized."

    The phones of celebrities, royal aides, politicians and top athletes are also alleged to have been hacked, and police are investigating whether the scandal also reached to the victims of London's 2005 terrorist bombings and the families of dead British soldiers.

    Hinton, 67, was the first Murdoch executive in the U.S. to be affected by the scandal. A staunch ally who has worked for Murdoch for more than half a century, Hinton announced he was stepping down immediately as publisher of the Wall Street Journal and chief executive of Dow Jones & Co.

    Hinton was chairman of Murdoch's British newspaper arm during some of the years its staffers are alleged to have hacked into cell phones. Still, he had testified to a parliamentary committee in 2007 and 2009 that he had seen no evidence that abuses had spread beyond a single jailed reporter, Clive Goodman.

    Hinton said Friday that "the pain caused to innocent people (by hacking) is unimaginable."

    "That I was ignorant of what apparently happened is irrelevant," he said.

    Murdoch's British lieutenant, Rebekah Brooks, also stepped down Friday. Brooks said she was stepping aside because her status as "a focal point of the debate" was interfering with "our honest endeavors to fix the problems of the past,"

    Tom Mockridge, the head of Sky Italia, was installed to replace Brooks as CEO at News International, the British newspaper arm of Rupert Murdoch's global News Corp.

    The loss of two top aides ended a rough week for Murdoch, who faces more pressure Tuesday when he, his son James and Brooks all face questioning by a U.K. parliamentary committee investigating phone hacking and police bribery.

    Cameron also has appointed a judge to conduct a sweeping inquiry into criminal activity at the News of the World and in the British media.

    British police are also under pressure to explain why their original hacking investigation failed to find enough evidence to prosecute anyone other than Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire. Detectives reopened the investigation earlier this year and now say they have the names of 3,700 potential victims.

    Records show that senior officers — including Paul Stephenson, the current chief of the London force — have had numerous meals and meetings with News International executives in the past few years.

    The Guardian newspaper, which has covered the story extensively and broke news of the Dowler hacking, said Saturday that senior officers tried to persuade its editors in 2009 and 2010 to tone down the paper's coverage of the scandal, saying the stories were inaccurate and exaggerated the scale of phone hacking.

    Neil Wallis, a former News of the World executive editor arrested and questioned this week about phone hacking, was employed as a part-time PR consultant by the police force at the time.

    The government says the judge-led inquiry will look into the police decision to hire Wallis.

    Murdoch is eager to stop the crisis from spreading to the United States, where the FBI has opened an inquiry into whether 9/11 victims or their families were targeted by News Corp. papers.

    Murdoch's News Corp. empire includes Fox News, the 20th Century Fox movie studio, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and three British newspapers — The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times.

    Newspaper analyst Ken Doctor said Friday's departures of Brooks and Hinton show Murdoch is "trying to build a firewall between the past and the future of News Corp."

    It also suggests that Murdoch doesn't want the Wall Street Journal, one of the world's most respected newspapers, to get tarred in a scandal involving the tawdry behavior of journalists at a British tabloid.

    Protecting the Journal's reputation has become more important to Murdoch now that his political influence in Britain has been diminished. Doctor believes it's likely News Corp. will sell all of its British newspapers.

    "He has lost his power in Britain and he is never going to get it back in this lifetime, so there is no longer a reason for him to own News International," Doctor said. "The movie studio and cable TV is what's really important to protect now."

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    337 comments

    • Rockie  •  10 months ago
      I'm not suprised. That's how you get the media to say what you want them to say. Special Perks. The only time you're suppose to see them is when you have a photo op or you have something to say to the public.
    • Hit Girl  •  10 months ago
      It wasn't just about having a relationship with media owners. The public is upset about the amount of influence Murdoch has had on their government. It wasn't just about his illegal tactics. His agenda is at question here. Has he used his influence to, in effect, undermine democracy in Britain? THAT is the real story.
    • Scott  •  10 months ago
      @IQ, I'll come clean, my bro and family did go to England (London & environs) and had a great time, not attacked by hooligans. He didn't make it to Ireland but his priest has!
      Bro & family went to France (Paris), etc. and had a great time there too. French aren't snooty like the stereotype.
      Staying on topic, I want people to prank call FOX news. Really.
      Cheers, Albert.
      • Scott 10 months ago
        Wait, I thought YOU were "Albert"! Isn't that your avatar pic??
        Anyway, you have a good weekend, cousin!
      • Scott 10 months ago
        My bad, I put a comma in there so it sounded like I was Albert. Cheers, chum.
    • Rudi  •  10 months ago
      I must commend Yahoo for simplifying its chatroom availability. It's much easier to post an initial comment. However, I've noticed that replies to other posters keep disappearing. Can't count the number of times I've clicked to read four or more replies and nothing displays. Perhaps Yahoo should work on that as they can't all be so offensive as to merit censorship.
      • In the middle 10 months ago
        This is still "beta" software (under development).

        I have found that deleting all Yahoo-related cookies and then restarting my browser seems to correct most of the missing-message problems.
      • Rudi 10 months ago
        Thank you, I'll try that.
    • Scott  •  10 months ago
      If Murdoch was 112 years younger, he'd be a skinhead soccer hooligan. He'd do less damage that way. Did y'all know that the dumb Brits call soccer "football"? And they drive on the wrong side of the road, and their steering wheels are on the other side. Pathetic.
      • Scott 10 months ago
        Hey prof 33 1/3, I'll give you 50 Cent to buy a sense of humor. I'd love to go to Britain. My fave band is The Who! And Stones and Beatles!
      • Ashlie 10 months ago
        The light switches are upside down too.. and the "aint ya got a sense of humour" defense is an old and sad one.
      • Scott 10 months ago
        I've got 50 Cent for you too, Ash. And another thing, maybe.
    • Scott  •  10 months ago
      Brits are weird and funny, but Frogs even more so, as in
      "The French they are a funny race,
      They fight with their feet and "do something" with their face."
      • Scott 10 months ago
        You kiss mah f'n black ace, dat what da F you do, Einstein!
      • Scott 10 months ago
        You double posted, IQ 17. You seem upset. Too much coffee or meth?
    • Kevin  •  10 months ago
      The brits are such pansies, omg
      • In the middle 10 months ago
        So how would a real man like you handle hacking, bribery of the police, hush money paid to victims, etc.?
    • Edwin  •  10 months ago
      If it were Ted Turner this would be no story whatsoever. This is why Fox News exists and always will because the rest of the media is leftists to it's rotten core.
    • PATRICIA AS  •  10 months ago
      Deceive and they will believe. Well the returds believe there lies.
      Hey returds because how much I hate liars, when I hire people at my business I make sure they aren't a repud, Just don't like to be around liars
    • PATRICIA AS  •  10 months ago
      The spin by Rupert has begun. Now you will hear Fox News this week start saying its the liberal media just picking on them. Like always the repuds will try lying if they think it will help them. And some repuds say they are christians, they mean christians by name only,(CINO). Hitler was a christian too
    • hitlerandobama  •  10 months ago
      fox and sky news = a cesspool the reporters if you call them that are bunch of meatball propagandist
    • PATRICIA AS  •  10 months ago
      Funny how after being caught you still have returds defending murdock. But they are people today that still like hitler too. The repud party does remind me of the nazis of germany
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 months ago
      I just think it is funny how Rupert now is apologizing to some after he closes a paper, people lose their jobs, a few already in jail and some of his proteges step down quickly. Then he has the nerve to try and kiss butt. It takes the loss of some money and power to grovel to victims, like that is going to make it better and show he is a good man. Is he sorry for doing wrong or sorry for getting busted?
    • Rudi  •  10 months ago
      Seems to me we are still suffering, in part, from "80s hangover", the Gordon Gekko syndrome: "Greed is good." Anything goes in pursuit of the news. . .er, profit and a scoop. The system is so corrupt and we're all so infected that much of the time we don't even notice any longer until something like this comes along. Murdoch and his employees did this to themselves in pursuit of power and money but anyone who contributes to his profits is equally guilty. I don't watch Fox News so don't know if its talking heads have addressed this. Perhaps one of you can catch me up on the latest doings of O'Reilly, Hannity, Wallace, et al.
    • Puberty Crisis  •  10 months ago
      Do you Progressive Limey dogs here wanna fight! F U swivel-eyed ugly LIMEYS!
    • Mrs Gladys Pepperpot  •  10 months ago
      My eyes are shut and my ears are plugged! As a good Christian I will not allow the propaganda of Satan to influence my mind against a honest and decent man, Rupert Murdock. Give me a thumbs down if you hate America.
    • Mrs Gladys Pepperpot  •  10 months ago
      If this investigation is allowed to go forward, our freedom is lost!
    • Mike  •  10 months ago
      Watch out ! Speak out against the libs and they will do everything they can to crucify you... I think u got it backwards, if you pay close attention it's the dems who want to take away your freedom... today they threaten your social security , tomorrow they control you with your health care... it's all about controlling the people.... and your too #$%$ dumb to figure it out ! That's sad...
    • NA  •  10 months ago
      UK, fair and balanced, LOL
    • Dagney  •  10 months ago
      Since America is on to Soros' lousy press here in the states, he will stop at nothing to bring Europe down. Soros has already brought Europe down be devaluing their currency and will not stop there....

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