Tuesday, 15 November 2011
(10.00 am)
Housekeeping
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The message on Mr Sherborne's screen
has been investigated. It was no more than the
operation of anti-virus software that is a consequence
of using a system that allows access to the Internet and
permits use of removable media devices such as USB
sticks. It does not mean that the Inquiry systems were
accessed unlawfully but rather demonstrated the system
was working as it should, and might mean no more than
the presence of a corrupt file on the local machine.
I'm very keen to make it clear that the only
documents which will be on the system which can be
accessed in court are those that are or will shortly
become publicly available. Material that is
confidential to the Inquiry is not held on the hearing
room system but is only available through the
government's secure intranet.
I am grateful to Mr Sherborne for bringing this
matter to my attention. The systems will be routinely
scanned for potential threats, but in the meantime, if
there are any concerns in the future, they should be
brought to the attention of a member of the Inquiry
team, who will immediately initiate appropriate
investigations.
Right. Mr Davies.
Opening submissions by MR DAVIES
MR DAVIES
Good morning, sir. At this Inquiry, I appear
with Anthony White and Anna Boase instructed by
Linklaters for NI Group Limited. The letters "NI" stand
for News International, and that is what I am going to
call it.
News International is the company which owns News
Group Newspapers Limited, which published the Sun
newspaper and which used to publish the
News of the World until that paper ceased publication on
10 July this year. News International also owns Times
Newspapers Holdings Limited, which itself owns Times
Newspapers Limited, which publishes the Times and the
Sunday Times.
News International welcomes this Inquiry. It
intends to co-operate fully with the Inquiry and it
looks forward to contributing to the debate on the
future regulation of the press in the United Kingdom.
It is right that at the formal opening of this Inquiry
and in public, I should repeat on behalf of
News International the apologies that have been made to
all those whose phones were hacked or whose families,
friends or associates' phones were hacked by or at the
behest of staff working at the News of the World.
That phone hacking was wrong. It was shameful. It
should never have happened. News International
apologises for it unreservedly. Nothing that it has
said on its behalf during this Inquiry is intended to
detract from or qualify that apology in any way.
I must add that we accept that phone hacking at the
News of the World was not the work of a single rogue
reporter. We accept that there was no public interest
justification for it and we further accept that it was
not the subject of a proper and thorough investigation
until the Metropolitan Police began Operation Weeting
in January this year, following the supply of certain
material to them by News International.
In addition, we regard as wholly unacceptable the
commissioning of a private investigator to carry out
surveyance of lawyers acting for claimants or of Members
of Parliament on the Select Committee. I should say
that watching what people are getting up to is an
old-fashioned and perfectly proper journalistic practice
in many circumstances, but in this instance it wasn't
journalism at all and it was unacceptable.
The question of exactly who was involved and in what
way at the News of the World is the subject of the
continuing police investigation, and I cannot go into
that whilst those investigations are continuing,
although there is one point which I am going to refer to
in a moment.
Before I do that, I can and must say that not
everyone who worked at the News of the World was
involved. There were many fine reporters and staff who
worked at that newspaper who had no involvement in phone
hacking and who have suffered in the fallout through no
fault of their own.
In his opening address yesterday, Mr Jay referred
frequently to News International. We make no complaint
about that but it is necessary to bear in mind that
News International has and had several horses in its
stables, and each has or had a stable of its own.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, I think on one occasion
I actually corrected him and said News of the World.
MR DAVIES
Yes, sir, you did, and we were pleased to hear
it.
As you know, before the News of the World closed,
there were four major titles: the Times, the
Sunday Times, the Sun and the News of the World. At all
times, each title has been run by its own editor, quite
separately from its stable mates, and each paper has
had, below its editor, its own editorial staff and its
own journalists. There has been some sharing of support
services but in journalistic terms they are separate and
quite often competitive operations.
As I have already mentioned, the Times and the
Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited,
while the Sun and formerly the News of the World are
published by News Group Newspapers Limited. Despite or
perhaps because they were published by the same company,
the Sun and the News of the World not only operated
separately; they positively competed against each other.
Very recently, it had been intended that they should
share a managing editor, but that arrangement had
scarcely begun before the News of the World was shut.
So it is perfectly correct to say that the four
papers are or were under the same roof, but they are or
were very different papers with, crucially, different
editors and different staff. It is, therefore,
necessary to be very careful before extrapolating from
some people at the News of the World to everyone at the
News of the World and necessary to be very careful again
before extrapolating from the News of the World to other
papers under the News International roof.
If I now return specifically to the
News of the World, just before lunch yesterday, Mr Jay
reviewed in a numerical fashion the information to be
derived from the Mulcaire notebooks. I must say
immediately that we have never seen the whole set of
Mulcaire notebooks. I believe the only people who have
are the police.
When summarising them, Mr Jay said that the
notebooks showed 2,266 taskings, and he gave the number
attributed via the corner names to each of four
News of the World staff, to whom he referred by the
cyphers A, B, C and D. The taskings attributed to these
four added up to 2,143. Some arithmetic shows that that
leaves 123 taskings not accounted for by those four
individuals. Those 123 taskings must include
Mr Goodman, who we know was at least reasonably active
and who was not included in the four given the cyphers
A, B and C and D. I should say that Mr Goodman's is the
only name which I intend to use.
The 123 must also include the corners marked
"private", and it must also include those that are
eligible. We don't know how many that leaves but it
doesn't seem likely to be very many.
However, Mr Jay also said that, ignoring the
"private" corner name and the eligibles, we have at
least 27 other News International employees. That is
a quote from yesterday's transcript. This is a context
where News International means the News of the World,
but apart from that, the statement has occasioned some
surprise on our side. As I have said, we do not have
all the notebooks, but we knew that there were five
legible corner names which could be correlated with
names of News of the World journalists, those being
Mr Goodman and A to D. We also know that the police
believe that there are a number of others who can be
correlated to News of the World journalists but we do
not know the names and we are in no position to assess
that one way or another, nor do we know how many, but
our understanding is that it certainly does not add up
to 27. Given the arithmetic which I went through just
now, it does sound a little surprising if that rump of
123 taskings in fact contained at least another 21
News of the World journalists whom we are unable to
identify.
I don't want to present this as more important than
it is. 2,266 taskings is 2,266 too many, five
journalists known to have been commissioning them from
the News of the World is five too many, and the corner
names may not be the beginning and end of evidence of
involvement. It may be possible to be involved without
being a corner name at all. But nonetheless we think it
is necessary to be accurate as far as possible and we
would like to have this information rechecked. I'm sure
that we can discuss with the Inquiry team and the police
how that might be done.
There is one other point I wish to mention, which
concerns the Sun. Mr Jay also referred to a claim made
by Mr Jude Law alleging phone hacking by or for the Sun.
Mr Jay said that Mr Law alleges that his phone was
hacked by the Sun and that part of the evidential matrix
in support of his case is a corner name in the Mulcaire
notebook which simply states "the Sun", without
specifying the individual working there.
As a result of Mr Law's claim, we do have the pages
of Mr Mulcaire's notebook which we think are those
referred to. We have them because Mr Law, as
I understand it, obtained them from the police by
a disclosure order and then disclosed them to us.
But the reference to them came as a bit of
a surprise, because we only have them under the terms of
the strict confidentiality undertakings given to
Mr Justice Vos. They are not, so far as we are aware,
in the public domain.
That gives rise to a difficulty, because it means
that I cannot respond to what Mr Jay said without going
further into material which is not in the public domain.
All I can say is that it is quite true that Mr Law has
made a claim in respect of hacking by the Sun. That
claim is disputed, and we do not accept that the
documents referred to by Mr Jay provide it with any
cogent support.
We will have a discussion with the Inquiry team as
to how all concerned can avoid incremental disclosures
of material which is not in the public domain through
one party referring to it, another wanting to refer to
a bit more to deal with the assertion and then perhaps
the first party wanting to refer to a bit more again and
so on. There is a risk of a spiral there, and we should
and we will have a discussion as to how to avoid it.
I must now turn to the steps which have been taken
within News International to put matters right. First,
in July this year the decision was taken to close the
News of the World, and that newspaper published its last
issue on Sunday, 10 July this year.
Secondly, a management and standards committee was
established in July 2011. The committee has an
independent chairman, Lord Grabiner QC, and a reporting
line which runs up to Mr Viet Dinh, an independent
member of the main board of News Corporation and
previously an assistant Attorney General of the
United States. The terms of reference of the management
and standards committee require it to ensure full
co-operation with this Inquiry and with the police
investigations and to carry out any necessary internal
investigations. They further require it to review
existing compliance systems within News International
and to recommend and oversee the implementation of new
policies, practices and systems to create an updated and
robust governance and compliance structure for
News International.
The committee has appointed Linklaters, a leading
firm of solicitors with wide experience of investigation
work, to carry out a full internal investigation at
News International and the newspapers. That
investigation is being carried out under protocols
agreed with the Metropolitan Police and relevant
material is being passed to the police as and when
required. The committee has also appointed Olswangs,
a leading firm of media lawyers, to advise on best
practice systems of governance.
Thirdly, News International is not sitting still and
waiting for the outcome of those reviews. A new chief
executive, Mr Tom Mockridge, was appointed in July this
year following the resignation of Rebekah Brooks.
Mr Mockridge has previously worked in New Zealand,
Australia, Hong Kong and Italy, but he has not been
based in the UK before, so he is a fresh pair of hands.
Under his guidance, close attention is being given to
compliance matters. Amongst other things, a hard copy
of News Corporations' standards of business conduct has
been issued to all staff.
That document has been provided to the Inquiry. It
sets out the standards of ethical and lawful conduct
expected of staff and includes a procedure for reporting
breaches of those standards, if necessary anonymously.
By reminding staff of those policies, by approving and
implementing new policies on matters such as compliance
with the Bribery Act and whistle-blowing, and by
a process of training, steps are being taken to ensure
that every member of staff at News International,
including all staff of the three newspapers, understands
that they are expected to abide by the law and by the
highest ethical standards of professional conduct and
with the Editors' Code of Practice published by the PCC.
News International believes that the staff at the
Times, the Sunday Times and the Sun do not require to be
reminded of appropriate standards of lawful and ethical
behaviour, but we wish to ensure that there can be no
repetition of what occurred at the News of the World.
The Inquiry will know that since 1981, the corporate
governance structure of Times newspapers Holdings
Limited has incorporated arrangements set out in the
Articles of Association of the company which are
designed to ensure the editorial independence of the
Times and of the Sunday Times. Under these
arrangements, Times newspapers Holdings Limited has six
independent national directors. Amongst their functions
is that of resolving any disputes between the editors
and the company. The independent national directors
remain in place, and their role is in no way diminished
by the corporate governance improvements which are being
made.
Fourthly, civil claims for damages have been raised
against News Group Newspapers in consequence of phone
hacking. Some of these claims have resulted in
proceedings being issued and the claims are being
managed as a group by Mr Justice Vos in the High Court.
We are trying to take a sensible and constructive
approach to those claims, making admissions and
concessions where appropriate, and a number of such
claims have been settled either before or after
proceedings have been begun.
In addition, and in order to make it easier for
people to obtain compensation for admitted claims,
News Group has established a compensation scheme to pay
out amounts determined by Sir Charles Gray, a former
High Court judge, as being equal to what a court would
award with 10 per cent added on top.
By taking these steps, News International intends to
ensure that what happened at the News of the World will
not happen again, and that fair compensation will be
paid to those who suffered from it.
I am now going to turn from the past and indeed the
present to the future.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Just before you do, you've mentioned
a number of steps that have been taken -- indeed, the
independent directors have submitted a statement to the
Inquiry, as you probably are aware.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And you've mentioned the work being
undertaken by Lord Grabiner with the assistance of two
firms of solicitors. In the same way that I make it
clear that I've told the industry as a whole that
I would welcome any suggestions that can work for
everyone, including the public -- and I have made
similar comments during the course of the directions
hearing -- I welcome Lord Grabiner's assistance to such
extent as he is able to provide it, and I am very
pleased to hear that he is tasked also to assist the
Inquiry. This is a job which all of us have to do,
whatever our backgrounds in connection with the issues
that have given rise to it.
MR DAVIES
Yes. We had noted what you had said previously
and also what you said yesterday morning about welcoming
assistance from the industry, and I know that that has
been taken on board and I hope that it will prove
fruitful. Indeed, I will say a little bit about that
now.
The position of News International is that it
supports the principle of independent self-regulation
for the press. It considers that the PCC can be
improved, it will still not be perfect, but the
alternatives are not perfectly either, and we would
suggest suffer from much greater disadvantages. We have
addressed this area in our written opening submissions,
and I am not going to repeat now what is said there, but
there are three points which I wish to highlight.
First of all, as Mr Jay acknowledged yesterday, the
press is not above the law. Like all other citizens,
it's constrained by both the civil and the criminal law
of the land, and over the last 15 years or so, the law
of the land has developed to provide protection in many
of the areas where there has been concern over press
behaviour.
We now have the Protection from Harassment Act 1997,
which gives protection from harassment and makes it both
a criminal offence and gives rise to a civil claim for
damages. We have the Data Protection Act, which
protects personal data and provides criminal offences
obtaining or disclosing personal data without permission
or justification, and we have the common law of privacy,
developed by the courts since the Naomi Campbell case in
2004, which gives a right to sue for damages for
invasions of privacy. The press is subject to all those
laws and many more, as are all citizens.
That the law applies to the press is easily enough
seen from the phone hacking cases. Phone hacking is
a criminal offence under the Regulation of Investigatory
Powers Act 2000. I am not going to go into the
interpretation of section 2 of that act, which was
touched on yesterday, but the Inquiry will be aware that
phone hacking is, of course, an offence also under the
Data Protection Act. So even if there is any doubt
about the offence under RIPA, there is undoubtedly one
under the Data Protection Act.
If there was any doubt in the popular mind, or
indeed that of the press, that phone hacking was
criminal, it was dispelled when Mr Mulcaire and
Mr Goodman were arrested and pleaded guilty in 2006 and
when they were both sentenced to terms of immediate
imprisonment in February 2007. Those convictions and
sentences do appear to have had a salutary effect. It
was notable that when speaking at the Inquiry's seminar
on 12 October this year, the current
Information Commissioner, Christopher Graham, said that
in his two and a half years as the
Information Commissioner, he had not seen a single case
of an offence under section 55 of the Data Protection
Act which involved the press. That is the section which
makes it a criminal offence to obtain or disclose
personal data without consent or justification.
I am not going to give any guarantees that there was
no phone hacking by or for the News of the World after
2007. No doubt that will be explored during the
evidence, and we noted that Mr Jay said the police
thought the last instance was in 2009. Nonetheless, it
does look as if lessons were learnt when Mr Goodman and
Mr Mulcaire went to jail. If phone hacking continued
after that, it was not, as it appears, what Mr Jay
described as the thriving cottage industry which existed
beforehand.
The lessons for the Inquiry, we would suggest, are
that the ordinary law of the land protects against phone
hacking both by making it a criminal offence and by
giving a civil claim. The Inquiry should, we suggest,
be somewhat wary of making recommendations designed to
fight the last war, rather than the next one.
The second point I want to make concerns not,
I hope, a battleground, but certainly the terrain the
Inquiry needs to cover, and particularly the Internet or
the web or the blogosphere or whatever you wish to call
it.
As I am speaking now, it is still just possible to
identify fairly uncontroversially the constituents of
the press. We can all reel off the names of the
well-known national papers, most of us can probably also
name our local regional papers and maybe some other
regional papers, and most, if not all of them, are
represented at this Inquiry.
But if I were to list the papers by name, I would
swiftly have to add the reference to their websites,
because their websites have become part of the package
and the speculation now is not as to whether one of the
established papers will become an Internet-only
publication; it is as to which will be the first to take
that route, and by doing so, to join the influential
news sites which already exist solely on the Internet.
We are, therefore, already at the stage where the press
cannot be sensibly defined without reference to the
existence of titles which are or soon will be published
solely on the Internet.
What that means for this Inquiry is that any
regulatory solution which it recommends must tackle the
question of how to regulate publication on the Internet.
That is a problem which makes herding cats look like
a nursery school exercise, but it is a problem which
cannot be simply ignored. It cannot be ignored because
there can be no fairness, logic or coherence in a system
which regulates a publisher or a journalist who
publishes on paper, but shrugs its shoulders as soon as
he or she chooses to publish on the Internet instead,
and it cannot be ignored because the fragile economics
of the printed press should not be disadvantaged by
a regulatory cost which does not bear equally on its
Internet competitors.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's an easy problem to state,
Mr Davies, and if it matters, I entirely agree with you,
but I'm listening very carefully to what you're just
about to suggest.
MR DAVIES
Well, I and my clients are very well aware that
it is a much easier problem to state than it is to
solve.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Because it's not just a question of
solving it in relation to, say, one of our local
nationals, if you'll pardon that odd use of language,
simply saying, "Right, we'll stop printing, we'll just
go on the Internet", because the Internet provides
access to news material which is published anywhere in
the world.
MR DAVIES
Absolutely. It is a daunting problem and
I don't have a sparkling and brilliant solution to it in
my pocket which I am about to pull out.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm sure Lord Grabiner will provide
us with one.
MR DAVIES
I shall look forward to it.
There are two things I would say about that. One is
there is the related problem of cost. The Inquiry
should, so far as at all possible, avoid imposing costs
on the printed press which are not shared by its
competitors which are not in print, because to do that
risks achieving the destruction of the printed press
which is sought to be regulated.
The other point I would making is that it may be
right that it is easier to regulate at least parts of
the Internet through a self-regulatory system because
you have to be much less precise in defining your terms
with a self-regulatory system, and it is endlessly and
swiftly adaptable. Once one passes a statute that says,
"People with the following characteristics have to be
regulated", then it is necessary to define somehow which
parts of the Internet you are going to regulate and
which are outside. You have to draw a line somewhere
between a blogger and a professional journalist, a task
which in itself is almost impossible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's a line we're going to have to
draw anyway, because one could talk about even journals
such as the Huffington Post, but that creates different
problems to those that might be created by a blogger
such as Guido Fawkes, or a blogger who simply now can
communicate with a much larger audience than previously
was the case.
MR DAVIES
Indeed so, and I'm afraid I'm simply stringing
out problems, but one also has the case of a blog which
is normally read by 25 people and then, for some reason
or other, it catches the zeitgeist and it suddenly has
hundreds of thousands of readers. How is one to treat
that, inside the net or outside the net? These problems
are, I'm afraid, very intractable.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DAVIES
The third point I wanted to make is that the
constitutional principle that the press should be free
of government regulation is a very important one.
Governments have a poor record of resisting temptation
when it comes to regulating the press. As was pointed
out at the seminars, one only has to go to Italy or
Hungary now or less than 200 years back in our own
history to see that. I think as a matter of history,
after the massacre at Peterloo less than 200 years ago,
the government introduced repressive measures applying
to the press and there were a number of trials for
seditious libel as well.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm very grateful to you for taking
me back to 1643 in your written submissions and
I understand the lesson, but I am very keen to unpick
one thing at some stage, Mr Davies, and that's what we
mean by "regulation". It strikes me that at the moment,
a lot of people are talking about statutory regulation
as if it is binary. There is either statutory
regulation on the one hand or self-regulation on the
other, and I'm not sure that the boundary between the
two isn't very, very much more blurred. Indeed, some of
the commentary about systems which could be put in place
might be assisted by the statutory, for example,
recognition of a self-regulatory body, as happens in
other industries.
So I would be very keen to widen the debate from the
binary discussion of "statutory regulation bad,
self-regulation good" to understanding what is meant by
"statutory regulation", whether everybody is talking
about the same thing.
MR DAVIES
Yes. I think the concern that we have is very
much focused on anything which provides a mechanism for
governmental control over the press.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, subject to anything that
anybody else may say, you're pushing, in that regard, at
an absolutely open door. Of course, I'm only two days
in -- that's not strictly true; I'm three months in --
but I think I said that right at the very beginning and
I can't believe that anything will happen that will
change my mind about that, but that's only half the
issue, as I'm trying to investigate.
MR DAVIES
Yes. As I said, we had noted the remarks you've
made more than once now.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. Nobody seems to pay attention
to them because they all think that I'm going to do
something else.
MR DAVIES
I think one should not conclude from the absence
of a shining perfect solution in my pocket that people
are not paying attention to remarks from yourself or
from the Inquiry in general.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, well.
MR DAVIES
As I said, and as I think we've agreed, it is
a difficult problem and we haven't come up with
a perfect solution yet. We will not hold back if we do.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm very grateful for that
indication.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
Despite the open door which has been helpfully
mentioned, I should emphasise that we consider that the
need for a free press now is as great, if not greater,
than it has ever been.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. Don't let me in any sense, by
anything I say, limit or cause you to not say something
you want to say, for this reason: this is unlike any
other judicial hearing. By the very fact of the way
this Inquiry is being conducted, this is a debate which
is going on in confines that are much broader than this
room and with me, so I don't want, in any sense, people
to limit what they want to say simply because they think
it will irritate me because I've already said I agree
with them. They can limit them a bit but not entirely.
MR DAVIES
With both parts of that statement in mind, let
me simply say that we consider that the need for a free
press is very great at the moment. Not so long ago,
spin doctors were unheard of. We now have an industry
which exists to portray events in the manner desired by
its clients, whether they are the government, business
or pressure groups. Struggling to disentangle the facts
from the spin and to explain the world to its readers is
the job of the press, and it is a harder job now than
it -- well, certainly no easier than it has ever been.
The British press, including the Times, the
Sunday Times and the Sun, have a long and fine record of
reporting the news, of uncovering scandals and of
entertaining their readers. Tragically, the
News of the World managed to plumb both the depths and
the heights. The depths, I need hardly say, are taken
up by phone hacking. The heights are well illustrated
by the remarkable piece of investigatory journalism
which exposed very recently the willingness of certain
international cricketers to take money to fix events in
cricket matches and led to the convictions of three
cricketers. That investigation was vital to the future
integrity of professional cricket and to the trust of
the tens of millions who follow the game. It was an
investigation which no private citizen could have taken
on and which no government organ or professional body
showed any inclination to take on. Indeed, the police
frankly said after the convictions that, understandably,
they have higher priorities than cleaning up
professional cricket and that had the case not been
handed to them on a plate, they would not have pursued
it. This was a scandal that would have run and run if
the press, in the form of the News of the World, as it
happens, had not intervened.
There are many other notable examples of
investigative journalism, from thalidomide to MPs'
expenses and the link between Arthur Scargill and the
Libyan regime which Mr Jay referred to yesterday as
having been exposed by the Sunday Times and explained by
Mr Witherow in his recent article. Despite those
successes, the question that should perhaps be asked is
that proposed by the editor of the Times, James Harding,
in his statement to the Inquiry: not "why does the press
know so much?" but "why does it know so little?"
Why did it know so little about weapons of mass
destruction or the lack of them in Iraq? Why did it not
forewarn of the banking crisis? Why did it not fully
appreciate the dysfunction between 10 and
11 Downing Street during the last government? Why did
it not see the recent riots coming? It may be that what
we need as citizens is for the press to have not less
freedom but more. So our plea is for the press not to
be over regulated. It's not a plea for it to be above
the law.
In the course of this Inquiry, we cannot and will
not hide from the worst that has gone on in the past but
we hope to be able to assist in plotting a course which
will permit a free and vigorous press to flourish with
integrity in the future.
Now, that said, and as I have said I think twice
now, I don't have a shining example of a perfect
regulatory system in my pocket, but that is a matter
which we are thinking about very hard, and we will do
our best to assist the Inquiry in conjunction, I hope,
with the rest of the industry in that respect.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm very grateful. Of course, I've
mentioned the binary between statutory regulation and
self-regulation. There's another binary as well, and
that is between what is frankly contrary to the criminal
law --
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- and that which isn't contrary to
the criminal law, but which, as you readily conceded,
breaches fundamental ethical considerations of which the
recent example last week is a good one. So one can't
just leave it to the criminal law.
MR DAVIES
No, indeed, and there is the civil law as well,
and there are perhaps difficult issues as to how far
surveyance transgresses that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I agree. That's the point. But you
agreed that it's inappropriate.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's unethical, whatever words you
want to use.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Query whether it fits into some
invasion of a civil law right, and on top of that, one
has to graft the additional problem whether the
mechanisms for seeking relief in civil justice today,
with all the problems of access to justice about which
everybody in this room will be extremely familiar, don't
themselves cast a different light on what we have to do
to provide a mechanism that is efficient, effective,
fair and cheap, both to those who wish to complain and
indeed the industry.
I have said outside this room that ten, 15 years
ago, the problems about libel were very much those of
victims who could not get legal aid and therefore to
take on the big beasts of the press was a difficult
problem. Now it might be that the complaint has moved
slightly differently because conditional fees have meant
a complaint now from the press that they can't afford to
contest litigation because the cost of doing so, once
one adds up the consequence of conditional fee, itself
becomes ruinous.
I can't solve the problems of access to justice --
I have quite enough on my plate as it is -- but one of
the issues might be some mechanism to permit a speedier,
effective and sensible mechanism for all to use and for
all to take the advantage of, which does not involve the
panoply that otherwise exists in this building,
available through the High Court and the traditional
litigation route.
I merely put it on the table, as I have done,
because as you identify the problems, you might as well
throw that one into the mix as well.
MR DAVIES
Yes. That is also a problem which has crossed
our minds, and I'm afraid it's also in the camp of
problems to which I don't have a shining solution in my
pocket, and we had noted with a degree of horror that
I think one of the seminars was told by an ombudsman
from the financial services ombudsman's brigade that
their total budget was something over 100 million
a year. As you know, the PCC's budget is, I think, just
under 2. So there are enormous difficulties there.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand the cost consequences,
yes.
MR DAVIES
There is also a philosophical and constitutional
question, going back to the earlier problem, as to
whether the press ought to be limited beyond the limits
which apply to the ordinary citizen. If one does that,
one is saying that freedom of the press is somehow
narrower than freedom of speech and that is a question
in itself.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I take that point.
MR DAVIES
So I apologise if I have done more to sketch the
problems than to provide the solutions but --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, the problems are somewhat
easier to state than the solutions to find.
MR DAVIES
Having done that, unless there's anything else
I can add --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, Mr Davies, thank you very much.
Thank you.
Mr Caplan?
Opening submissions by MR CAPLAN
MR CAPLAN
Good morning. May I just introduce the team
that's representing Associated Newspapers. My name is
Jonathan Caplan. I'm assisted by Sarah Palin as junior
counsel and I have also sitting next to me Elizabeth
Hartley, the head of editorial legal at
Associated Newspapers Limited. We represent
Associated Newspapers. Their principal publications, as
you will know, are the Daily Mail, the Mail on Sunday,
Mail Online and the Metro.
At this stage, we would wish to make some rather
broadbrush comments dealing with some of the issues
raised by your terms of reference and raised by Mr Jay
yesterday. We obviously hope, during the course of the
Inquiry, to make more detailed submissions and to assist
you as fully as we can in relation to the kind of issues
which you have just been mentioning.
We make perhaps no apologies for going back to the
17th century because the British newspaper industry has
a proud history of some 350 years, going back to the
first English newspaper in the form of the Oxford
Gazette. Since then, there has been a rich and diverse
array of publications, both nationally and regionally,
usually offering a wide and stimulating range of
perspectives, all deciding independently what to report,
how to report it, according to differing social and
political stances. They all aim to connect with and
reflect their national or local readerships, which of
course may be in millions, they may be in hundreds, and
they all cater to vastly differing communities and
lifestyles.
Sir, your terms of reference are of fundamental
importance not just to proprietors and journalists but
obviously to our democratic way of life. No one
involved in this Inquiry or outside of this room could
sensibly doubt that a free press which is independent of
government is essential to any democracy. But your
terms of reference, if we may say so, raise broad and in
some respects imprecise issues.
For example, what is meant by "the culture of the
press" and can you properly define that culture? We
raise that as a question. How is it possible to
determine what the practices of the press are -- or are
we in this Inquiry, in truth, talking about "were" --
without conducting an extensive fact-finding exercise,
which in part may be precluded by current police
investigations? Even then, are we just talking about
the practices of some journalists and one organisation?
How do they translate to the practices of the press as
a whole? The press is not a single homogenous body and
obviously one will need to look carefully at the
evidence that is called before you to examine that issue
with care.
Also, insofar as you are called upon to look, as you
clearly are, at the issue of ethics, is that something
that can be considered totally from an objective
perspective or does it in part depend upon who you are
and where you stand? Do you believe in a strict right
to privacy? Do you regard public interest as an
overworked escape clause for investigative journalists?
If you choose to be in the public eye, then your answers
to those questions may be very different to those of the
readers of many newspapers.
When your terms of reference seek "recommendations
for a new, more effective policy and regulatory regime",
that, of course, should not be taken as an indication
that the existing model of the Press Complaints
Commission is broken or that self-regulation is
incapable of being beefed up in significant ways.
This Inquiry is the fourth into the press since the
Second World War. The first Royal Commission on the
Press was appointed in 1947, as you know, in response to
public and parliamentary criticism of declining press
standards and fears of monopolies with regard to
ownership. It recommended the establishment of the
General Council of the Press, which was self-regulating.
The second Royal Commission on the Press was chaired
by Lord Shawcross and reported in 1962. It recommended
a new constitution for the industry body, which changed
its name to the Press Council.
The third Royal Commission on the Press, under
Lord MacGregor, reported in 1977 and made a detailed
study of the Press Council, and one of its
recommendations was that the council should publish
a written code for journalists.
Finally, in 1990, the report of the Committee on
Privacy, chaired by David Calcutt, Queen's Counsel,
recommended that the Press Council be disbanded and that
a new authoritative, independent and impartial body be
established, to be called the Press Complaints
Commission.
That potted history demonstrates that concerns about
press standards and stories -- indeed, yesterday Mr Jay
took us back to Warren and Brandeis in the Harvard Law
Journal at the end of the last century --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You have to add Sir David Calcutt's
second go at it.
MR CAPLAN
Indeed. He had two reports.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But the second one suggested
a different solution entire which wasn't adopted.
MR CAPLAN
No, it wasn't. He was in favour of abandoning
self-regulation.
But that potted history demonstrates that concerns
about press standards and concerns about the kind of
stories that the press wrote are nothing new, but on
each occasion, with the exception of David Calcutt's
second report, statutory regulation -- and by that
I mean, obviously, the imposition of
a government-appointed body -- has been seen as a step
too far.
We need, we would respectfully suggest, to be
clearly aware as to how we have all arrived at this
point in the history of the British press before yet
another judicial Inquiry with the far-reaching powers
which are given to you, sir. As the editor in-chief,
Mr Paul Dacre, of the Daily Mail said a month ago at one
of the Inquiry's seminars, the banks didn't collapse
because of the News of the World and a nation didn't go
to war. We are here because the employees or agents of
News International have listened to the voicemail
messages on other people's mobiles and may have paid
serving police officers for information. That's
a matter under investigation.
The rumour mill is that other journalists working
for other proprietors may also have acted unethically or
illegally, and the flames have been fanned to some
extent by politicians, perhaps because of their own
agenda of holding the press to account for so
comprehensively exposing the scandal of parliamentary
expenses.
We have still to see a large amount of the evidence,
obviously, which has been given to this Inquiry, and we
look forward to seeing it and to participating in the
hearings and the debate which you have.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Caplan, I understand the point
that had it not been for hacking, and particularly for
what was revealed at the very end, this may never have
happened. But it wouldn't be a fair characterisation of
the position, would it, to suggest that hacking is alone
in the issues that actually have generated public
concern?
MR CAPLAN
No. I mean, we know that there has been
a considerable amount of public concern in relation to
the limits of the right to privacy and the issues of
public interest and the press. The point we make is
that we would not be here today but for the activities
or alleged activities of the News of the World.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, that may be right, and I was
present when Mr Dacre spoke so forcefully on this topic
at the seminar. I'm equally conscious that, because of
the police investigation, there are enormous limits on
what I said, I think, quoted yesterday at the Society of
Editors conference, about the cart being before the
horse. I readily recognise the analogy, which is mine.
But in one sense, that might help us all, because it
means that we won't be focusing on the microscopic but
can try and take a broader snapshot of what's going on,
to try and make it work better for everyone.
MR CAPLAN
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If it works better for the press,
that's fine, but it has to be everyone, as I've said
several times.
MR CAPLAN
Yes, and I'm going to come in a moment, sir,
to --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not trying to take you out of
your line.
MR CAPLAN
The debate is a far-reaching one which your
Inquiry is commencing, and we wish to participate fully
in it, as I'm sure do other people in this room and
outside of this room, and it is a debate that is
demonstrably worth having and an important debate to
all. I don't wish to, in any sense, detract from that.
The point I was seeking to make is in relation to
evidence of malpractice or potential evidence. We
clearly are aware, all of us, of the activities of
Mr Mulcaire, which, as far as we know, ended in the
middle of 2006. I'm going to deal with
Operation Motorman, which Mr Jay referred to yesterday,
and the investigation in 2003. We obviously will have
to see what evidence is placed before the Inquiry in
relation to other matters of complaint.
The point I simply make is that we need to be
clearly aware that any recommendations or restrictions
which come out of this Inquiry are not simply introduced
on the basis of historic transgressions which no longer
occur, and we will obviously consider the evidence which
is placed before your Inquiry, and that there is some
kind of systemic problem.
Sir, can I just state the position as far as
Associated Newspapers is concerned?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Before you do that, let me just pick
up on that which you've said. The analogy that Mr Jay
mentioned yesterday of Dr Shipman is not utterly
inapposite. Nobody at all suggests that there are lots
of doctors going around doing what Dame Janet Smith
found Dr Shipman had done, but the opportunity was taken
to improve the system. Of course, one has to keep in
mind what is vital, particularly in the context of this
Inquiry, but to say that one has to look only to the
future doesn't mean to say that one should not take
advantage of where we are to try to improve for all, and
that's really another way of saying what I just said
a moment ago.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you.
Can I just state quite clearly the position of my
clients, Associated Newspapers, and it is this: it
condemns the practice of phone hacking, and so far as it
is aware, no journalist at Associated Newspapers has
engaged in phone hacking. It does not bribe police
officers, and in particular, it condemns the shameful
practice of hacking the mobile phones of the victims of
crime or of their families.
Sir, the Inquiry is in progress, and as I've said,
having regard to the improvements which you have just
referred to, sir, which hopefully will come from this
Inquiry, and the huge ramifications for our national
press which are likely to result from your
recommendations, Associated Newspapers is committed to
assisting you as fully as it can, as a core participant.
We will do all that we can in a constructive way. We
look forward to participating in the debate which this
Inquiry will stimulate.
Associated Newspapers strongly believes in
maintaining a strong, ethical -- and I stress that
word -- and viable press which is equipped for the
significant challenge of being both the eyes and ears of
the public and ultimately its voice. Of course, there
is always room for improvement and for better practices.
We do wish, however, to stress that press standards
have vastly improved over the last 20 years under the
Press Complaints Commission and under the Editors' Code
of Conduct. It's been mentioned before, but we do
stress that most journalists are hard-working,
conscientious and honest, and they passionately believe
in what they do. We are anxious that the allegations of
phone hacking should not be allowed to besmirch the
profession as a whole.
This point can be made in another way, and that is
this: the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday are
commercially successful, we submit, precisely because
they connect with their readership and their values, and
that readership will stop buying those newspapers if
they feel that they cannot trust its integrity or
accuracy. Newspapers are held to account every day by
their readers, and it is their readership's taste and
attitudes and whether they are met or not that determine
the commercial viability of a newspaper.
Having said that, of course, even in the middle
market, newspapers at times need to be gossipy and
sensational if they are to attract large circulations.
Stories about celebrities and the course of human
relationships are a part of that attraction and they do
enable space to be provided elsewhere in the newspaper
for more serious articles providing analysis and comment
about perhaps more important issues of the day. But the
aim is both to entertain and critically to engage.
We must also remember that we live in a country
which is one of the major centres of the arts and
entertainment industry. Many people have become
celebrities and gone from relative obscurity to
international fame and wealth because of the vibrant
press which we have here, which has been able to capture
the imagination of its readership through stories about
their personal lives which are usually informative as
opposed to being intrusive, as well as stories about
their artistic talent.
With news and investigative journalism, those
stories, of course, are not plucked full grown from the
trees. They very often have somebody who is wealthy and
powerful and does not want that story to be printed, and
newspapers therefore require considerable resources and
resourcefulness both to investigate and then to
establish the truth and accuracy of what they have
printed, and they need to be commercially successful to
perform that role.
As you've heard only moments ago, the press, of
course, is increasingly having to compete with the
Internet and with other digital news platforms which are
often largely unregulated. The press is highly
regulated, and you're well aware of the laws covering
data protection, libel, the new Bribery Act, privacy,
contempt of court, harassment, regulation of
investigatory powers and official secrets. Therefore
the press is only free, of course, to the extent that it
is not already prescribed by law.
Sir, can I turn to Operation Motorman, which we do
regard as an important matter, because a certain amount
of comment has been made following the police
investigation in 2003 and the activities of the Inquiry
agent Stephen Wittamore, and following the findings of
the Information Commissioner in the two reports, "What
price privacy?" published in May 2006 and "What price
privacy now?" published in December of that year. The
reports drew attention to the extensive use of enquiry
agents to search for personal data by not just
journalists but by organisations in many different areas
of our society.
The last few years since the publication of those
reports have seen a growing awareness, we suggest, on
the part of all sections of society -- government,
business and the media -- regarding the importance of
data protection. In fact, newspapers are by no means
the worst offenders and no penalties have so far been
awarded against newspapers under the Data Protection
Act.
Yesterday, Mr Jay referred to Operation Motorman,
and we are keen to return to it because in our
submission it is in no way to be compared to the conduct
of phone hacking. It is especially important to draw
a clear distinction between phone hacking, which is the
illegal interception of private voicemails, and the kind
of conduct which was the subject of the
Information Commissioner's reports.
The activity which Stephen Wittamore was hired to
undertake almost a decade ago was primarily to obtain
addresses and telephone numbers, most of which -- not
all of which but most of which -- could legally have
been obtained if the individual had had the time to
research it. His assistance was required, as far as
Associated journalists were concerned, to help trace
people quickly, usually to verify facts or to comment on
stories that were written or were in progress prior to
publication.
It should also be stressed that Mr Wittamore did not
work simply for newspapers; he was hired by
organisations such as banks, local authorities and firms
of solicitors who similarly were seeking to locate
people. Whilst Mr Wittamore was prosecuted, you will be
aware, sir, that no journalist has ever been charged
because there simply is no evidence that they ever asked
Mr Wittamore to do anything illegal or that they knew he
was or might be illegally accessing databases.
Another key difference between phone hacking and the
data provision provided by Mr Wittamore is that
journalists using him were not engaged, we would
respectfully suggest, in fishing expeditions. When the
Commissioner's report was published in 2006, the editor
in-chief of Associated Newspapers, Mr Dacre, took
immediate action and banned from 2007 the use of all
enquiry agents. It was made quite clear that Associated
would not pay for them and that compliance with the Data
Protection Act was to become and is a term of
journalists' contracts with my clients.
Sir, Associated Newspapers will seek to demonstrate
in evidence to you that it operates its titles by
respecting and observing the law and regulatory
requirements and by applying the Editors' Code. It
invests in the training of its reporters, requiring
continuing professional development in significant
changes in law, such as the new Bribery Act.
All journalists employed by Associated are required
to comply with the Editors' Code and to abide by the
highest professional standards. Associated aims to set
strong ethical culture within each title and it closely
monitors payments to third parties for news and
information. It has and is supported by a strong
in-house legal team, and by specialist solicitors and
counsel.
That is not to say, of course, that Associated does
not make mistakes of judgment or simply mistakes.
Publishing to a deadline is a process that involves risk
and it can be said that a newspaper that never sets out
to expose itself to risk is not doing its job.
The Editors' Code provides a very good set of
binding professional standards and is a firm cornerstone
of the system of self-regulation. It is intended to
provide a clear view of what constitutes unacceptable
press behaviour. Mr Dacre has been chairman of the code
committee since 2008 and the code has evolved and been
amended many times in the 20 years existence of the
Press Complaints Commission.
For example, it was amended to impose an express
prohibition on hacking into the messages on mobile
phones or emails and to make it clear that editors and
publishers must ensure that its provisions are strictly
observed by even those non-journalists and external
contributors who may work on a story.
Sir, the code is, of course, subject to the public
interest exception but without it, many major stories of
corruption and abuse of power could never have been
written. I understand, of course, that that is an
issue, the definition of "public interest", which
obviously is likely to be an issue of some keen concern
to you, sir, and the subject of submissions and inquiry
before you.
But the public interest factor is often seen as the
press arrogating to itself a right to break the laws by
which we all live for their own commercial profit. We
suggest that that is completely to misunderstand the
role of a free press, which, in the words of
Lord Nicholls in the case of
Reynolds v Times Newspapers, is -- the vital function is
to act as a bloodhound as well as a watchdog.
Ultimately, of course, if the judgment call is wrong
of the journalist and the lawyers and the editor, then
it is the editor and the journalist who may have to pay
the price, possibly by even risking their personal
liberty. Sometimes, as you know, it will be necessary
to engage with whistle-blowers who may, in the process,
reveal confidential or even secret information, or who
may need financial payment to support themselves for the
future and in consequence of their actions. The
Official Secrets Act might make the communication of
such information unlawful. The Bribery Act might
prohibit payment.
Sir, in a letter to the Media Lawyers Association
in March of this year, the Lord Chancellor and Secretary
of State for Justice said in the context of the new
Bribery Act that he was confident that the
Director of Public Prosecutions and the Director of the
Serious Fraud Office "can take full account of the
considerations which may apply to a case involving
public interest reporting" when deciding, under the Code
for Crown Prosecutors, whether or not to prosecute in
a particular case. He added that he recognised:
"... the extremely important role played by the
media in our society and it is not the intention of the
Act to restrict legitimate and responsible journalism.
I hope you will be reassured that the public interest
will remain a key consideration in any individual case."
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Has anybody taken that up with the
director?
MR CAPLAN
I cannot comment about that, but we will provide
copies of that correspondence to the Inquiry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
MR CAPLAN
Sir, may I just turn to two short final topics?
The first is the question of anonymity. May I just say
a word about that.
There may well be journalists or ex-journalists who
are wishing to give evidence to you and who may be
dissatisfied with their employers or former employers,
and we understand from a previous Inquiry hearing that
they may wish to do so from the position of anonymity
and that it may be that neither their name nor the
newspaper group for whom they work or worked will be
made public. If they have important evidence to give,
then we -- and I hope other newspaper publishers
present -- would encourage that evidence to be given as
openly as possible, and to be tested against the
substantial body of evidence that the Inquiry is
receiving.
We have, however, expressed and continue to express
the most profound concern about the Inquiry receiving
evidence on the basis of anonymity, which, of course, is
contrary to open justice. We remain keen to explore
alternative avenues for meeting any concerns that may be
expressed by potential witnesses from whatever
publishing group they come and wish to stress that
Associated Newspapers is very keen to explore those
avenues, if they can be explored and met.
Associate, so far as it knows, has nothing to hide
and welcomes complete transparency, and of course, sir,
we will respond to the draft anonymity protocol which
has been distributed.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It is a problem, and I understand
your concern, and I understand the specific concern that
an anonymous witness might besmirch a reputation which
can't be answered without detail. I have recognised
that such evidence in any event would inevitably carry
far less weight, but we'll have to see how we progress
on the specific examples.
MR CAPLAN
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If there are any.
MR CAPLAN
If there are any.
Sir, if there is any malpractice, far better that
it's out in the open. We're all here to learn and
improve and to deal with it. If anybody has any
concerns, a working or former journalist, then we simply
say that we should respectfully seek to explore other
alternatives. It may be a contempt -- and I would
respectfully suggest it is -- of your Inquiry if anybody
was to take steps to penalise them for giving that
evidence, and it may be possible to give undertakings --
I don't know, we'd need to explore that -- which would
meet those concerns, but those are avenues which clearly
could be explored.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR CAPLAN
Finally this, please. The drafting of the
Inquiry's terms of reference includes the critical issue
of regulation. Of course the Press Complaints
Commission can be made more effective. Our position is
that we strongly advocate it does not need to be
replaced; it needs to be and is capable of being beefed
up.
We do say that the virtue of the current system is
that complaints by members of the public are generally
heard and resolved quickly, free of charge and without
the use of lawyers. Mr Dacre has already suggested at
one of your seminars that, for example, improvements
could be made by possibly introducing an industry
ombudsman who could be called in by the Commission or
work in tandem with it to investigate in serious cases,
with the power to impose some form of financial penalty
and costs orders.
Clearly, there needs to be more thought given to
corrections and better prominence.
Associated Newspapers has already begun that process and
has in fact instituted a system of giving speedy
corrections and prominence and there is obviously the
possibility of introducing lay participants onto the
Editors' Code committee.
We do say it is unacceptable that any newspaper
owner should be permitted to opt out of self-regulation,
and we suggest that a way may well need to be found to
ensure that all owners participate and fund in that
scheme.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But once you say that, how do you
achieve that laudable aim without somebody saying, "You
have to." And somebody saying, "You have to", sounds to
me very much to me like a law that says you have to.
MR CAPLAN
There are possibly other ways and obviously this
is an issue --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I'm all ears, Mr Caplan.
MR CAPLAN
We'll aim to provide some possible solutions.
But, we are firmly behind the suggestion that all
publishers or proprietors need to be involved in
a self-regulating scheme.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And a way that encourages Internet
publishers of news to involve themselves in a mechanism
that does allow some form of oversight or control,
equally. Well, there it is. That's the mission.
MR CAPLAN
That's the mission.
Sir, that is all we wish to say to you by way of
opening. We'd like to thank you for the opportunity --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much, Mr Caplan. I'm
grateful to all those who have spoken and will continue
to speak, I have no doubt, for the support that they'll
give me.
I think that's a convenient moment to give everybody
a break, and then we'll carry on in about -- does that
cause you inconvenience, Mr Millar?
MR MILLAR
Not if we carry on after the break. I did want
to mention the matter you mentioned yesterday.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We're very, very welcome and we
certainly are, but if you're all right for a few
minutes, then I think we'll give the shorthand writer
a break. Thank you very much.
MR CAPLAN
Can I just make one correction? If I said in
relation to Motorman that the attempts to locate people
was to check the accuracy of printed stories, I meant
prepublication stories. I'm sorry if there was any
confusion.
(11.19 am)
(A short break)
(11.29 am)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Millar, I wouldn't want to make
more of the point that I made yesterday than is there to
be made, but I didn't want there to be
a misunderstanding.
MR MILLAR
Absolutely. We considered your comments
yesterday afternoon about that sentence in paragraph 6
of our written submissions which quoted -- always
a dangerous thing to do -- a part but only a part of
a sentence --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's not normally dangerous to quote
what judges say themselves, is it?
MR MILLAR
It is if you cut and paste it in that way. Take
part of a judge's sentence out of context and you can
get yourself into a mess, sometimes.
What we've done is we've submitted a revised version
of the written submissions which omits the entire
sentence in our submission, and therefore the part of
your sentence, and we're happy for that to be the
published version of our written submissions. We hope
that avoids any further consideration of the problem.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. But I'm sure you understand,
from what you heard me say yesterday and what you've
read that I've said that the fundamental principles are
entirely clear to me, and I don't believe you take issue
with them.
MR MILLAR
Not at all, no.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's just a question of whether I've
committed myself to something.
MR MILLAR
Yes. I did, however, want to say this, hoping
that the deletion does resolve the matter: please accept
that we didn't intentionally spin part of your judgment.
That makes us more devious and perhaps more clever than
we are. We do understand that this was how it appeared
to you and we do, of course, therefore, apologise for
that, but it was inadvertent.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Millar, as I said right at the
beginning, I don't want to make more of it than it is.
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I just wouldn't want the concept
behind the thought to have gained currency.
MR MILLAR
Absolutely.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That was the point.
MR MILLAR
There will be plenty of scope for us to adopt
and we will adopt and make the submission that
a regulatory system different to the one we have at the
moment could -- that's the key word, "could" --
depending on its features, impact adversely on freedom
of expression or have a chilling effect on responsible
journalism. We will make our arguments to that end when
the appropriate time comes but we don't want to suggest
that that was a view that you'd formed. When one reads
the judgment in context, it's quite clear that that
wasn't a view that you --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm quite clear that it's easy to
conceive of many regulatory systems that would
undeniably adversely affect freedom of expression and
provide a chilling effect on responsible journalism.
I have no wish to go down that route. The trick is to
find the right balance that does not have those adverse
effects, but does provide the necessary protection that
certainly it appears is required. It's the trick.
MR MILLAR
Yes. That's a sentiment with which my clients
would not disagree.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much indeed.
Mr Jay, who is supposed to be speaking now?
MR JAY
I think on the programme we now have a little gap
until Mr Dingemans arrives at 3.15.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh, is nobody else willing to step up
to the plate?
MR JAY
Apparently not, no. But tomorrow morning we have
a relatively full programme.
I don't know whether anybody has any point they wish
to raise now, legal or other nature, which we could deal
with on the hoof, or whether we just break now and come
back at 3.15.
MR MILLAR
I'm wondering when we're going to get the full
set of statements for the first week of evidence,
because we haven't had them yet.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's a good question. There's
a fastball for you, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
Some of them have been made available. I will make
enquiry and give a timescale by 3.15 or at 3.15 for the
remainder.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Very good. Do we have a batting
order?
MR JAY
Yes, and that has been provided. That is for five
working days commencing 21 November. The core
participants have seen that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Have you seen none of the
statements, Mr Millar?
MR MILLAR
I've seen a few of them, but I think for the
majority of the listed witnesses for the first week we
still haven't seen the statements.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. We will check on that
now.
Is there anything else that anybody usefully can
raise at this stage? I would not want it to be thought
that once we get into hearing evidence I will be taking
a relaxed line to the time that we sit, because we
really do have to press on, but I do understand the
particular problems this week and I won't press them.
I know Mr Dingemans has a particular commitment which he
could not avoid.
All right. There it is. We'll resume at 3.15 pm,
when Mr Dingemans will provide opening submissions on
behalf of Northern & Shell, and then we'll deal with the
other opening submissions tomorrow.
Thank you very much.
(11.35 am)
(The luncheon adjournment)