A tale of two inquiries
At the start of the Leveson inquiry into media standards, Channel 4 News Political Editor Gary Gibbon looks at the progress made by Sir John Chilcot’s Iraq inquiry.
267 items found
As the Leveson inquiry hears evidence from people who say their lives have been destroyed by dubious newspaper practices, Channel 4 News examines a changing media landscape.
The mother of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler tells the Leveson inquiry that the hacking of her daughter’s phone left her thinking she was still alive.
Giving evidence at the Leveson inquiry, actor Hugh Grant has linked the Mail on Sunday to phone hacking and complained about the treatment of the mother of his baby.
At the start of the Leveson inquiry into media standards, Channel 4 News Political Editor Gary Gibbon looks at the progress made by Sir John Chilcot’s Iraq inquiry.
Phone hacking by the News of the World was “wrong, shameful and should never have happened,” News International’s lawyer tells the Leveson inquiry.
Roy Greenslade has refined his accusation about News International snooping on Select Committee members who were investigating them but it still makes pretty amazing reading.
Court of appeal judges reject seven out of 10 appeals against sentences for crimes during the August riots, including four-year terms for incitement via Facebook.
Newspaper bosses come out in force to defend their industry at the first seminars of the Leveson Inquiry, set up in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal.
Hugh Grant tells Channel 4 News he “doesn’t buy” the prime minister’s tough line on the media, and is looking for genuine reform in the wake of phone hacking scandal.
Defendants, including two men jailed for inciting rioting via Facebook, face appeal court judges in a bid to overturn their sentences following the summer disturbances.
News International is set to pay around £3m to settle phone-hacking claims by the family of murder victim Milly Dowler against the News of the World, as Simon Israel reports.
Dozens of alleged phone hacking victims, including Milly Dowler’s parents and Harry Potter creator JK Rowling, are named as “core participants” in the first stage of the inquiry into the scandal.
The Prime Minister admits that he got too close to media proprietors in light of the phone-hacking scandal and calls for the relationship between politicians and the media to be “reset”.
Exclusive: Channel 4 has learnt that the Metropolitan Police is launching a new formal investigation into computer hacking.
Lord Justice Leveson launched his media inquiry with a “look but don’t touch” no questions press conference. I wonder if he was influenced by Sir John Chilcot’s experience, blogs Gary Gibbon.