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Timeline: Three weeks during which The Times’ Nightjack scandal was laid bare

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 8 February 2012 at 13:51
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers, New Media, Newspapers, Online

The possibility that there was an email-hacking scandal brewing at The Times first emerged in a few lines of written evidence published by the Leveson Inquiry on 10 January, and exploded yesterday as Times editor and News International issued a comprehensive mea culpa about the affair.

Here is a recap of how the story emerged: (more…)

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New guidelines for officials provide handbook for journalists on how to get around FoI delays

Posted by Cleland Thom on 8 February 2012 at 12:26
Tags: Freedom of Information, Journalism, Journalism education, Law

Journalists who get frustrated by delays and obstructions when they use the Freedom of Information Act have a valuable new tool.

Ironically, it’s been issued to public authorities by the Information Commission.

They have produced a new ‘plain English’ guide for public authorities. It sets out their obligations and gives practical advice on dealing with problems.

(more…)

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Reuters: News Corp clean-up squad has 100 staff reviewing emails, expense claims and phone records

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 3 February 2012 at 11:48
Tags: Law, National Newspapers, Newspapers

Reuters has a fascinating report looking at News Corp’s Management and Standards Committee - the body which handed over information to police which resulted in four very senior serving and former Sun journalists being arrested on Saturday morning. (more…)

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Is it time to end the online comments free-for-all on news websites?

Posted by Cleland Thom on 30 January 2012 at 08:50
Tags: Journalism, Journalism Technology, Law, National Newspapers, New Media, Newspapers, Online, Regional Newspapers

A relaxation in the rules on handling user-generated content on media websites is proving to be a mixed blessing.

It is just over two years since the High Court ruled that newspaper and magazine websites qualified as internet service providers (ISPs) and were NOT responsible for readers’ posts on talk boards. (more…)

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Ten ways for journalists to protect themselves and their contacts online

Posted by Cleland Thom on 24 January 2012 at 11:15
Tags: Journalism, Law

Protecting a source used to be easy. You just kept your mouth shut – even if it meant being fined or being threatened with prison.

The internet has made it harder. It’s easy to disclose a source without even realising it. And that could have serious consequences for someone who had leaked you some information in confidence.

This checklist will help to keep you out of trouble: (more…)

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Police reject photographer’s ‘victimisation’ claims

Posted by Cleland Thom on 19 January 2012 at 14:19
Tags: Journalism, Law, Magazines, National Newspapers, Newspapers, People, Photography, press freedom

Greater Manchester Police today rejected suggestions its officers were targeting a magazine photographer who claims he has been assaulted by officers three times while doing his job.

Stuart Littleford, editor of the Government and Public Sector Journal, has filed three complaints against the force, including two in the last four weeks. (more…)

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Photographer booked for obstruction makes police assault complaint

Posted by Cleland Thom on 18 January 2012 at 09:43
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers, Newspapers, Photography, Regional Newspapers, press freedom

A magazine photographer claims he has been threatened and prevented from doing his job by Greater Manchester Police officers in Oldham - for the third time.

Stuart Littleford, editor of the Government and Public Sector Journal, says an officer pushed his camera away and intimidated and abused him for over ten minutes.

The officer then booked his car for obstruction and started checking his tyres and tax disc.

The incident happened on the afternoon of Monday, 16 January, in Oldham. (more…)

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Telegraph pays composer ‘£20,000′ after failing to report he was cleared of assault

Posted by Press Gazette on 17 January 2012 at 09:40
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers

The Guardian reports that the Daily Telegraph has paid composer Simon Boswell damages of around £20,0900 after it failed to report that he had been cleared of assaulting his former partner - Lysette Anthony. (more…)

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Ummm … what, exactly, is a journalist?

Posted by Cleland Thom on 10 January 2012 at 07:30
Tags: Journalism, Journalism education, Law, Magazines, National Newspapers, New Media, Newspapers, Online, Regional Newspapers, press freedom

A libel case in Oregon, US, has highlighted an issue that is already troubling the media in this country – what, exactly, is a journalist?

It used to be clear enough. You got paid badly, worked for a newspaper, magazine or broadcaster and fiddled your expenses. (more…)

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Clearing of Corrie star Michael Le Vell prompts call for sex case suspects to have anonymity

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 5 January 2012 at 11:31
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers

Brian Reade writing in the Daily Mirror today argues that men accused of serious sexual offences should have anonymity until proven guilty because of the terrible stigma associated with such charges.

It follows the news that Coronation Street actor Michael Le Vell has been cleared after accusations that he sexually abused a schoolgirl proved groundless. (more…)

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When accessing those mobile phone messages might be legal

Posted by Cleland Thom on 20 December 2011 at 12:42
Tags: Freedom of Information, Law, Regional Newspapers

Journalists can request information from peoples’ private email accounts and mobile phones following new guidance issued  last week.

The Information Commissioner has stressed that information held in private accounts can be subject to Freedom of Information law if it relates to a public authority’s official business.

For example, a journalist may ask a local council for information on dangerous potholes. They would normally expect to receive minutes, background papers and reports on the subject.

But the Cabinet member for highways may have emailed officials about the issue, and some of them may have left messages on his mobile phone about it. This information would have to be made available under the FOIA as well.

So journalists may find it beneficial to include a line like this in their FOIA request letter:

‘Please also provide me with any information that applies to this subject, that is held in members’ / officials’ private email accounts and other electronic messaging systems.’

The IC has urged authorities to set up procedures to ensure private emails, audio recordings and text messages on mobile phones are included when information requests are received.

He has warned public officials they can be prosecuted if they conceal or delete information.

Communication between a councillor and a constituent will not usually be covered, as it is political business.

The IC’s guidance is a clarification on what the law says already, since there has been confusion in the past.

Cleland Thom is consultant and trainer in media law.
See website

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Guardian faces Fleet Street backlash over changing story on Milly Dowler message deletions

Posted by Andrew Pugh on 14 December 2011 at 11:05
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers, Newspapers

The Guardian today found itself on the receiving end of widespread press criticism over new evidence that the News of the World was apparently not responsible for the deletion of voicemail messages which gave Milly Dowler’s parents false hope the missing girl was alive in 2002.

The Daily Mail devoted a full page in today’s paper to coverage of The Sun managing editor Richard Caseby’s attack on The Guardian, that paper’s coverage of the phone-hacking scandal and the role of the Dowler family’s lawyer Mark Lewis.

The Mail quotes extensively from Caseby’s stinging criticism at the Joint Committee on Privacy Injunctions yesterday and his claim that The Guardian was guilty of “sexing up” its phone-hacking coverage. (more…)

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Guest blog: Media regulation is being overtaken by technology

Posted by Lara Fielden on 12 December 2011 at 17:12
Tags: Broadcast, Law

We’ve come a long way in the few short months since the full Hackgate scandal exploded, writes Press Gazette guest blogger Lara Fielden.

The immediate aftermath saw seismic criticism of self-regulation under the Press Complaints Commission, the departure of its chairman and demands for statutory press regulation. Punitive fines and effective licensing, akin to the model for broadcasting regulation, were the order of the day. (more…)

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John Cleese disappointed in the British press and at not being hacked

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 6 December 2011 at 10:06
Tags: Broadcast, Law, Radio

Former Monty Python John Cleese has expressed his disappointment in the accuracy standards of the British Press and at not being among the News of the World’s estimated 5,700-strong list of phone-hack targets.

Interviewed by Mark Lawson for Radio 4’s Front Row, Cleese was asked if he had been told that his phone may have been hacked. “No, but I live in hopeful expectation because I would love to get money out of that bunch of bastards.” (more…)

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Goldsmith, Coogan, Grant and Mosley testify to Parliament’s privacy committee

Posted by Press Gazette on 5 December 2011 at 14:03
Tags: Law

Zac Goldsmith MP, Steve Coogan, Hugh Grant and Max Mosley are testifying today before the joint parliamentary committee on privacy.

Goldsmith has spoken about why he sought a super-injunction in 2008 to prevent details of a private email being made public - in which issues surrounding his impending divorce were discussed.

He spoke of his anger after journalists “shouted over my garden wall when I was playing with my children saying ‘is it true you are divorcing your wife’”. (more…)

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Sunday Times apology to Louise Mensch over drugs, plastic surgery and ’sex sheath’ mistakes

Posted by Press Gazette on 5 December 2011 at 10:49
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers, Newspapers

The Sunday Times has published a lengthy clarification and apology to MP Louise Mensch after she complained to the Press Complaints Commission about an interview with her published on 6 November. (more…)

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Suggestions sought on how PCC Editors’ Code of Practice can be improved

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 5 December 2011 at 09:30
Tags: Journalism, Law

The Editors’ Code of Practice Committee has asked for suggestions about how the Code - which underpins the work of the PCC - can be improved.

The annual review comes at a time when the phone-hacking scandal and the Leveson Inquiry have put the future of self-regulation in question. While Editors’ Code has not come in for major criticism, it is likely to be subject to come in for as much scrutiny as the PCC itself. (more…)

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Weekend catch-up: The ten biggest UK journalism stories of the week

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 2 December 2011 at 16:19
Tags: Broadcast, Journalism, Law, Magazines, National Newspapers, New Media, Regional Newspapers

It’s been a busy week for journalism industry-related news - with most of the action going on over at the Royal Courts of Justice and the Leveson Inquiry. Here is a catch-up of what we think have been the 10 most significant stories of the week (click here for all our Leveson coverage): (more…)

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PCC rejects Ian Brady complaint over Daily Mirror publication of private letters

Posted by Press Gazette on 2 December 2011 at 15:34
Tags: Journalism, Law, National Newspapers, Newspapers

The Press Complaints Commission has ruled that the Daily Mirror did not infringe the privacy of Moors murderer Ian Brady by publishing material taken from his private letters.

On 23 May, the Mirror published a front-page story headlined: “Inside the mind of a madman” based on letters sent by Brady to another individual who provided them to the Mirror. (more…)

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Following AG’s new advice: How journalists can avoid Contempt of Court when reporting crime

Posted by Press Gazette on 2 December 2011 at 11:29
Tags: Journalism, Law

The Attorney General announced stricter approach to the Contempt of Court Act yesterday. Here are some tips to keep you safe, writes media law trainer Cleland Thom.

A. When someone’s arrested

  1. Police are sometimes unwilling to confirm if someone has been arrested, for operational reasons. If they say ‘a man is helping with inquiries’, assume that proceedings are active, and make the necessary deletions to his story. (more…)

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