Imprisonment of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards (1967) In early 1967, the newspaper ran a three-part feature entitled "Pop Stars and Drugs: Facts That Will Shock You". The series described alleged
LSD parties hosted by
the Moody Blues and attended by top stars including
the Who's
Pete Townshend and
Cream's
Ginger Baker, and alleged admissions of drug use by leading pop musicians. The first article targeted
Donovan (who was raided and charged soon after); the second installment (published on 5 February) targeted the
Rolling Stones. A reporter who contributed to the story spent an evening at the exclusive London club Blaise's, where a member of the Rolling Stones allegedly took several
Benzedrine tablets, displayed a piece of
hashish and invited his companions back to his flat for a "smoke". The article claimed that the member was singer
Mick Jagger, although the reporter had in fact been eavesdropping on guitarist
Brian Jones. On 10 May 1967, Jagger,
Keith Richards, and their friend art dealer
Robert Fraser were arrested at Richards'
Redlands estate in
West Wittering and charged with possession of
cannabis and
amphetamines, while bandmate Jones' London house was also raided by police and he was arrested and charged with cannabis possession along with his friend Stanislas "Stash" Klossowski, son of French artist
Balthus. Jagger and Richards were tried at the end of June. On 29 June, Jagger was sentenced to three months' imprisonment for possession of four amphetamine tablets; Richards was found guilty of allowing cannabis to be smoked on his property and sentenced to one year in prison. Both Jagger and Richards were imprisoned at that point, but were released on bail the next day pending appeal. The
News of the World was rapidly identified by the
hippy counterculture as the prime culprit for the imprisonments, which were seen as an attempt by the establishment to send a collective message to a hedonistic young generation.
International Times and activist and musician
Mick Farren organised protests outside the Fleet Street offices of the newspaper. Protesters informed the paper's staff that their objective was "freeing the fucking Stones and closing down the fucking
News of the World". Farren later credited his colleague
Sue Miles with identifying the paper as a target for protest because, as she put it, "they were the bastards who started this" (with their feature on drugs in music). Farren reported that a second night of protests was broken up by officers from
City of London Police, who beat him up and made a number of arrests. Criticism of the sentences also came from the
News of the World's future sister publication
The Times, which ran an editorial entitled "
Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?" in which conservative editor
William Rees-Mogg surprised his readers by his unusually critical discourse on the sentencing, pointing out that Jagger had been treated far more harshly for a minor first offence than "any purely anonymous young man". On 31 July, the appeals court overturned Richards' conviction, and Jagger's sentence was reduced to a
conditional discharge. Brian Jones' trial took place in November 1967; in December, after appealing the original prison sentence, Jones was fined £1,000, put on three years' probation and ordered to seek professional help. Commenting on the closure in 2011 of the newspaper against which he had led protests 44 years earlier, Farren was in triumphant mood:
"Chequebook" journalism The paper became notorious for
chequebook journalism, as it was often discovered attempting to buy stories, typically concerning private affairs and relationships, of people closely involved with figures of public interest such as politicians, celebrities and high-profile criminals. With this intention, the paper on occasion paid key witnesses in criminal trials such as the 1966
Moors murders case, and the 1999 trial of
Gary Glitter on charges of assaulting an underage teenage fan.
Anti-paedophile campaign (2000) The paper began a controversial campaign to
name and shame alleged
paedophiles in July 2000, following the abduction and
murder of Sarah Payne in West Sussex. During the trial of her killer
Roy Whiting, it emerged that he had a previous conviction for abduction and sexual assault against a child. The paper's decision led to some instances of action being taken against those suspected of being child sex offenders, which included several cases of mistaken identity, including one instance where a
paediatrician had her house vandalised, and another where a man was confronted because he had a
neck brace similar to one a paedophile was wearing when pictured. The campaign was labelled "grossly irresponsible" journalism by the then-
chief constable of
Gloucestershire, Tony Butler.
Phone hacking scandal From the nineties until the newspaper's demise in 2011, reporters at the paper used private investigators to illegally gain access to hundreds of mobile phone voicemail accounts held by a variety of people of interest to the newspaper. In 2007 the paper's royal correspondent,
Clive Goodman, pleaded guilty to illegal interception of personal communication and was jailed for four months; the paper's editor,
Andy Coulson, had resigned two weeks earlier. In 2009/2010, further revelations emerged on the extent of the phone hacking, and how it was common knowledge within the
News of the World and its
News International parent. According to a former reporter at the paper, "Everyone knew. The office cat knew", about the illegal activities used to scoop stories. On 17 January 2011,
The Guardian reported that Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator paid by the paper, testified that he had been asked by the newspaper's leadership to hack voicemail accounts on its behalf. In April 2011, attorneys for the victims alleged that as many as 7,000 people had their phones hacked by the
News of the World; it was further revealed that the paper's owner,
Rupert Murdoch, had attempted to pressure Prime Minister
Gordon Brown and
Labour Party MPs to "back away" from investigating the scandal. Three journalists on the newspaper were initially arrested:
Ian Edmondson and
Neville Thurlbeck on 5 April and
James Weatherup on 14 April. The newspaper "unreservedly" apologised for its phone hacking activities during April 2011. On 4 July 2011, it was disclosed that potential evidence had been deleted in spring 2002 from the hacked voicemail account of
Milly Dowler, then missing, but later found to have been murdered.
2006 reward for information on murders On 13 December 2006, the newspaper announced that it was offering a record-breaking reward of £250,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for
the murders of five prostitutes around
Ipswich, Suffolk. The reward went unclaimed;
Steve Wright was arrested on suspicion of murder six days later following the use of unrelated information to link him to the murders. He was found guilty of all five murders at his trial 14 months later and sentenced to
life imprisonment.
The Victoria Beckham 'kidnap plot' In 2002,
Mazher Mahmood, an undercover reporter working for the
News of the World, also known as the Fake Sheikh, allegedly exposed a plot to kidnap
Victoria Beckham. Five men were arrested but the trial later collapsed when it emerged the
News of the World had paid its main witness Florim Gashi £10,000 to work with Mazher Mahmood. Florim Gashi later admitted working with Mahmood to set up the kidnap plot. This led to an investigation by
Scotland Yard on the
News of the World called Operation Canopus.
"Fake sheikh" cricket scandal In August 2010, Mahmood posed as the "Fake Sheikh" to expose a cricket bookie named
Mazhar Majeed who claimed Pakistani cricketers had committed
spot-fixing during Pakistan's 2010 tour of England. In November 2011,
Salman Butt and
Mohammad Asif were found guilty by a London court on criminal charges relating to spot-fixing.
Mohammad Amir and Majeed had entered guilty pleas on the same charges.
Links to police corruption In a September 2010 interview broadcast on 7 July 2011 on the BBC Radio 4 news programme
The World at One, former
News of the World features editor Paul McMullan made an admission relating to police corruption. He told of having used material obtained by a colleague's bribery of a police officer as the basis of a series of articles published over several years on Jennifer Elliott, the daughter of the actor
Denholm Elliott. The articles described Jennifer Elliott's destitute situation and stated that she had worked as a prostitute. She took her own life in 2003. In 2011, the paper knowingly used private investigators to gain stories from corrupt police officers.
Libel actions won damages for the newspaper's invasion of privacy and incorrect assertion about the Nazi theme in
Mosley v News Group Newspapers Limited. • In 1988, the parents of actor
David Scarboro, who played
Mark Fowler on the BBC soap opera
EastEnders, commenced libel proceedings with solicitor Michael Shelton due to the alleged hounding of Scarboro whilst he suffered from mental illness. During this time the
News of the World and its sister paper
The Sun published negative stories about Scarboro and suggested that he took cocaine. According to the parents of David Scarboro this escalated Scarboro's depression resulting in his suicide on 27 April 1988. Due to the suicide the libel action was forced to cease. • In 2005, British television personality
Ahmed Aghil won an apology from the
News of the World in a libel case. • In 2005, England footballer
David Beckham and his wife
Victoria brought a legal action against the paper seeking libel damages over an article that carried the headline "Posh and Becks on the Rocks"; suggesting that their marriage was under pressure. The legal action was withdrawn in 2006 and "resolved on a confidential basis", according to the couple's spokeswoman Jo Milloy. • In April 2006, England footballer
Wayne Rooney received £100,000 in damages from the publishers of the
News of the World and its sister paper
The Sun over articles falsely reporting he had slapped his fiancée
Coleen McLoughlin. • In June 2006, England footballer
Ashley Cole received an estimated minimum £100,000 in damages from the publishers of the
News of the World and its sister paper
The Sun. The
News of the World had published a false story about two footballers having a gay orgy with a DJ; while not naming any of them, it used a pixelated photograph of Cole to illustrate the story. • In July 2006, Scottish politician
Tommy Sheridan initiated
a libel case against the News of the World in Edinburgh. Sheridan denied allegations, made by the newspaper in November 2004 and January 2005, that he had an affair, engaged in
group sex and attended a
swinger's club in Manchester. Sheridan won the case and was awarded £200,000 in damages. The newspaper appealed against the jury's decision, and refused to pay out the money; Sheridan and his wife Gail were charged with perjury; the court case commenced on 4 October 2010. Charges against Gail Sheridan were dropped and she was acquitted on 17 December 2010. Sheridan was subsequently convicted on 23 December 2010. The case was the longest perjury trial in Scottish history. • In 2008 in the invasion of privacy case
Mosley v News Group Newspapers Limited the President of the
FIA Max Mosley challenged the
News of the World which had alleged on 30 March 2008 that he had been involved in a
sadomasochistic sex act involving several female prostitutes, when they published a video of the incident recorded by one of the women, and published details of the incident. The case resulted in Mosley being awarded £60,000 in damages. • In 2009
Barry George, a man who had been falsely convicted of murdering television presenter
Jill Dando, won a libel claim filed against the publisher of the
News of the World after the paper fabricated quotes to suggest he had stalked other women. • In January 2010,
Norwich City Football Club started legal proceedings against the
News of the World after they published an article, "Canaries on Brink" on 24 January 2010 claiming that the club had begun the processes of going into administration. • In February 2010, actor
Brad Pitt and his partner, actress
Angelina Jolie made plans to sue the
News of the World after it published allegations about their
relationship. • In June 2011, the UK Press Complaint Commission (PCC) gave
Yasir Hameed, a Pakistani cricketer, a victory by ordering the
News of the World to remove a video and story about him from its website. • Also in 2011, Polish footballer
Artur Boruc won an out-of-court settlement against the
News of the World after the newspaper made false allegations that he was unfaithful to his girlfriend. Boruc was paid £70,000 and a full apology was issued. == Awards ==