Cocoa, Coco, Coulson, Co…Why hacks are in a spin
What a time to be a journalist – the last few days alone have produced a maelstrom of news that has left seasoned hacks wondering where on earth to turn next.
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The News of the World prints a public apology to the victims of the phone-hacking scandal, promising to compensate individuals, as Sienna Miller vows to fight the “outrageous abuse” of her privacy.
Relations – both international and domestic – are at the centre of exchanges at Prime Minister’s Questions. But one key player is notable by his absence, as Peter McHugh reports.
The Press Complaints Commission (PCC) and its chairman pay £20,000 in libel damages to one of the lawyers at the centre of the phone hacking scandal, reports Andy Davies.
Siobahn Kennedy on the pub landlady whose legal fight to use a foreign satellite to screen Premier League matches could cost Sky millions of pounds.
The acting head of the Metropolitan Police faces questioning over the handling of phone-hacking allegations at the News of the World after a fresh criminal investigation is launched.
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt gives News Corp more time to meet concerns over its bid to take over BSkyB, as MPs and the deal’s opponents tell Channel 4 News there are still questions to be answered.
What a time to be a journalist – the last few days alone have produced a maelstrom of news that has left seasoned hacks wondering where on earth to turn next.
The Prime Minister’s private dinner with News Corporation executives raises questions over his impartiality in the light of News Corp’s attempt to take over BSkyB, one MP tells Channel 4 News.
Andy Coulson’s resignation as David Cameron’s communications chief is the latest, and almost certainly not the last, twist in a story that began in 2005. Channel 4 News looks at where it all started.
Secret recordings by undercover newspaper reporters reveal a Liberal Democrat minister saying the Chancellor “get’s up one’s nose” – Channel 4 News looks at the cracks in the Coalition.
Tommy Sheridan has been found guilty of perjury. The former Member of the Scottish Parliament lied under oath during a defamation case against the News of the World in 2006, as Jane Deith explains.
It was when Vince Cable slouched into Number 10 wearing Twickenham’s version of John Wayne’s Stetson that you realised he was in trouble. Peter McHugh writes on the new Cablegate.
Secret recordings reveal some Lib Dem ministers are privately voicing concerns about Government policies they are backing in public, as one MP tells Channel 4 News the Coalition is doing good work.
Police have questioned David Cameron’s Communications Director Andy Coulson over phone hacking allegations while he was editor at News of the World.
Banksy has done the opening couch sequence to the new episode of The Simpsons. Krishnan Guru-Murthy, one of the few journalists to have met Banksy in the flesh asks : is it Bart?