Hipwell spoke to
The Independent claiming that phone hacking had been "endemic" at the
Mirror during his time there under the editorship of
Piers Morgan. He also alleged that phone hacking took place at some of the
Mirror's sister publications.
Trinity Mirror, which publishes the
Daily Mirror, contested Hipwell's claims. A spokesman said: "Our position is clear...Our journalists work within the criminal law and the Press Complaints Commission code of conduct." In an interview for the BBC's
World at One radio programme on 28 July 2011 Hipwell said there was "no doubt" that
Piers Morgan knew that his journalists were using phone hacks as a method to get stories. In an interview with BBC TV's
Newsnight he said that phone hacking had been an "accepted technique" to get a story at the
Daily Mirror while he worked there. On 21 December 2011 Hipwell appeared before the
Leveson Inquiry and told the hearing that he had witnessed several incidents in which people's privacy was infringed while working for the
Mirror, and that phone hacking appeared to be a "bog-standard journalistic tool" for gathering information at the paper. In the official report, Lord Justice Leveson said Hipwell's account of phone hacking at the
Mirror was "clear, firm and convincing", while Piers Morgan's assertion that he had no knowledge of alleged phone hacking was described as "utterly unpersuasive". ==Max Clifford Associates==