Now, when did I last see Granny?
Beyond your immediate work colleagues, your immediate family and or lovers, can you think of anyone you might have seen 26 times… or even 16 times in the past year? Jon Snow blogs.
A 30-year-old man has been arrested in North London in connection with the News of the World phone hacking scandal.
A 51-year-old detective has been arrested over leaking information during the phone hacking investigation.
The Murdochs are facing fresh allegations over phone hacking after a letter emerged from former News of the World reporter Clive Goodman claiming it was “widely discussed” at editorial meetings.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission is investigating Surrey Police over allegations one of their officers gave the News of the World information about the Milly Dowler murder case.
News Corporation reports a rise in its annual profits as Rupert Murdoch says the phone-hacking scandal has had “no material impact on our other operations”.
The comedian who threw a foam pie at Rupert Murdoch has had his jail sentence reduced on appeal. Jonathan May-Bowles, 26, will now serve four weeks behind bars instead of six.
The protester who threw a foam pie at Rupert Murdoch has been jailed for six weeks. Jonathan May-Bowles went for the News Corp boss when he was giving evidence to MPs about the phone-hacking scandal.
A former manager at the News of the World, understood to be Stuart Kuttner, has been quizzed over phone hacking. As Carl Dinnen reports, payments to Glenn Mulcaire would have gone through his office.
Glenn Mulcaire, who went to jail over phone-hacking, acted “on the instructions of others” according to his lawyers, as MPs ask News International’s James Murdoch to clarify his evidence in writing.
From a family holiday in Disney World, Florida, Louise Mensch issues an apology to CNN’s embattled celebrity anchor Piers Morgan, and reveals a colourful past.
The man who launched a foam pie attack in Parliament on Rupert Murdoch mimics the media magnate after he leaves court with an assault conviction.
The first public hearings in the inquiry into phone hacking will be held in September, and will focus initially on the relationship between the press and the public, Lord Justice Leveson confirms.
Beyond your immediate work colleagues, your immediate family and or lovers, can you think of anyone you might have seen 26 times… or even 16 times in the past year? Jon Snow blogs.
Our Political Editor trawls through the list of meetings Cabinet Ministers have held with newspaper proprietors since the General Election – and finds some interesting figures.
David Cameron’s new rules on transparency were rushed in on the same day Rebekah Brooks quit. The PM slung out the details of his meetings with media moguls, leaving Ed Miliband racing to match his new spirit of openness. And today we are treated, for the first time in British history, to details of who all the ministers are busy meeting (see full list on Number 10’s website).