The Guardian 2009 Beginning on 8 July 2009,
The Guardian made a series of allegations that the phone hacking activities at the
News of the World went far beyond the activities for which the
News of the World royal editor
Clive Goodman was jailed in 2007, those activities being limited to members of the royal household. The paper alleged that hacking victims included public figures such as former deputy prime minister
John Prescott,
Manchester United manager
Alex Ferguson,
Tessa Jowell when she was
Olympics Secretary,
Boris Johnson when he was the opposition's spokesman on higher education, publicist
Max Clifford and even
Rebekah Brooks, then editor of the
News of the World's sister paper
The Sun. In addition to this
The Guardian reported that News Group – the ''News of the World's
parent company – paid out more than £1m to settle legal cases that threatened to reveal evidence of News of the World'' journalists using criminal methods (accessing mobile phone voicemails of various public figures) to obtain stories. The article further reported sources as stating that News Group staff used private investigators to access several thousand mobile phone accounts. The
News of the World denied
The Guardian's claims, and its parent company, News Corporation, implored its competitor newspaper to share any evidence it had with police. Prescott in particular was outraged at the fact that the police did not inform him of the phone tapping, but Assistant Commissioner
John Yates stated that there was no actual evidence that Prescott's phone had been tapped. Contrary to claims made by
News of the World in 2007,
The Guardian in July 2009 claimed that phone hacking activities were known to a range of staff at the tabloid including its then editor
Andy Coulson. At the time
The Guardian made these claims, Coulson had left News International and was director of
Conservative Party communications and planning. Due to this, some claimed that the reporting was politically motivated. The Conservative Party was quick to stand by Coulson.
The Guardian also reported that the
News of the World had made payments in excess of £1 million to three people subject to phone hacking, including
Professional Footballers' Association chairman
Gordon Taylor, with the out-of-court settlements subject to secrecy clauses. Around the same time,
Private Eye revealed that
The Guardian had, in order to avoid "all out war" with the
News of the World, chosen not to tell the same Culture, Media and Sport Committee that the £700,000 payment to Taylor was signed off in June 2008, by the directors of News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary owning the
News of the World - thus showing awareness of the matter at the highest levels. The reports led the
Press Complaints Commission to reopen its inquiry into the matter (finding that it had not been "materially misled", leading
The Guardian's editor
Alan Rusbridger to resign from the PCC) This started a new series of both newspaper stories, and subsequent further written questions from the Commons Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport, to both News International and its executives. In February 2010
The Guardian revealed that under Coulson the
News of the World had rehired a private investigator shortly after his release from a seven-year prison sentence for blackmail. The
News of the World had used the investigator prior to his imprisonment, at a time when Coulson was deputy editor. In February 2010,
The Guardian could not name
Jonathan Rees as he was involved in a new criminal trial. In September 2010
The Guardian revealed that in 2009 plans by the Home Office to ask
Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary to review the police investigation into the phone hacking scandal were cancelled "after intense internal lobbying", with a senior Home Office official warning that the Metropolitan Police would "deeply resent" an inquiry. Several days later the paper revealed comments by former
News of the World journalist Paul McMullan on how widespread phone hacking had been under Andy Coulson; McMullan was one of six former
News of the World journalists "who have independently told the Guardian that Coulson ... knew that his reporters were engaging in unlawful acts.".
The New York Times In September 2010,
The New York Times published the results of an investigation it had begun in March which revealed further details about the extent of the
News of the World's phone hacking, and about editor
Andy Coulson's alleged knowledge of it. The investigation also revealed that a journalist at the
News of the World had been attempting to hack into the voicemail messages of a "television personality" in 2010. The journalist was suspended from reporting and faced legal action by the personality. The
Times piece cited
Sean Hoare, a former colleague, as saying that Coulson had "actively encouraged" phone hacking. ==Press Complaints Commission investigations==