(2.05 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Sherborne.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I arrived before the short adjournment
at the subject of kiss and tell stories and chequebook
journalism, the trademark feature of tabloid press, one
might say.
A number of the core participant victims will give
evidence about their experiences. Mr Flitcroft is one
such person, Garry Flitcroft. A name most of those
listening to this speech, even football supporters,
might have to scratch their heads about for a moment.
Indeed, I'm sure he won't mind me saying that he's
probably better known for his appearances in legal
textbooks than he is on his appearances on the football
pitch, that is to all but die-hard Blackburn Rovers
fans. He was the person, you recall, who put the A into
A v B plc. Probably the first kiss and tell injunction
to be decided by the English court following the
introduction of the Human Rights Act.
In one sense, his story is quite simple. That is
how no doubt the points would like to present it. He
obtained an injunction from a first instance judge in
2001 to prevent the publication of details of an affair,
an injunction which was later overturned by the Court of
Appeal in early 2002, with Lord Woolf delivering the
leading judgment, a judgment which has certainly been
much vaunted by the press over the years since it
blurred the distinction I mentioned between what is
truly in the public interest with what the public are
interested in, the Court of Appeal in 2002 deciding that
there was some legitimate interest in the general public
knowing the details of A's sex life since, as
a professional footballer, he was supposedly a role
model.
Far be it for me to criticise Lord Woolf, but it is
a judgment which is now widely accepted would be decided
differently today, even, I suspect, with the first
instance decision in the Rio Ferdinand case which, as
you've heard, is on its way to appeal.
For those who are interested in such things, you
should read the judgment of the later Court of Appeal in
the case of Loreena McKennitt v Niema Ash, probably one
of the leading statements of domestic law on privacy in
which the English court finally resolved the tension
between the decision in A v B on the one hand and the
Strasbourg definition of Articles 8 and 10 of the
European Convention on Human Rights, which are now
incorporated into United Kingdom law, on the other hand.
Resolved of course, as we know, in favour of the
decisions of Europe.
There is perhaps no surprise about this. It's been
a ruling not just of the Court of Appeal but the
House of Lords as well, since this was the inevitable
and indisputable consequence of introducing the European
Convention of Human Rights into United Kingdom law, and
before the anti-Europe brigade start to sound off, the
press cannot have it both ways. The freedom of speech
which they rely on is given to them by virtue of
Article 10 of the very same Convention as Article 8.
The fact that the Court of Appeal would almost
certainly have decided this case in favour of
Mr Flitcroft now is little consolation, I suspect.
Similarly, the fact that Mr Mosley won his case in front
of the High Court, but only after the material was
already published. But behind Mr Flitcroft's legal
case, there is a real story about a real person and the
impact which this kind of journalism can have, something
which as lawyers we rarely think about, but this Inquiry
needs to consider.
Mr Flitcroft will explain that whether the law was
right or wrong, the impact on him, as on others caught
up in such stories, was enormous. Following the very
public humiliation of him and the feeding frenzy in the
media when his name was finally revealed, with his
anonymity as just "A" being lifted amongst further
newspaper speculation as to his identity, his family was
ripped apart.
You may feel very sorry for him personally about
that, or you may not. His main concern, however, is his
family. He told his wife about the affair before the
injunction was lifted. You might say he was forced to.
But any chance they had of dealing with the problems
which this caused was shattered, however, by the
humiliation which they had to endure so publicly, both
of them. Journalists were camped outside his door, news
helicopters were flying over his house, tracking down
his family wherever they went. In the full glare of the
media spotlight, it is no wonder that they had
absolutely no chance of dealing with a situation which
those not in the public domain have the chance to sort
out in private, as such things should be.
He will tell you about the teasing, the gossip which
his children had to suffer at school. He will tell you
about the barrage of relentless and hounding publicity,
publicity which caused his father-in-law, who was
suffering from Parkinson's disease, enormous distress.
The publicity was so bad that his own father, who had
come to watch him play football from the age of 7, had
to stop going to see him because of the abuse that he
received. How his depression had worsened and he later
committed suicide. Uncomfortable perhaps for the press
to listen to? Well then, good, because these are the
stories behind the headlines, headlines which come and
go like yesterday's chip paper, but the damage which
they can do to real people, whatever their profession,
goes on and on.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's not necessarily so any more.
MR SHERBORNE
Indeed, and that's something the Inquiry
needs to consider, given that these stories permanently
reside on the Internet. Mr Mosley will give evidence to
you about how difficult it is to try and deal with that,
even where the English court has ruled that the
publication should never have taken place.
And what about the woman, sir, with whom he had this
affair and who was exercising her freedom of speech?
Her attempts to demand money from Mr Flitcroft through
sending a package to his parents' house asking for cash
in return for her not disclosing their relationship were
refused. She therefore exercised her threat because
Mr Flitcroft did not want to give in to such blackmail.
No doubt she got her money from the newspaper and
a sizeable cheque, I'm sure, and no doubt her motivation
was her belief that his wife ought to know about their
affair.
What of the newspaper? One wonders whether it was
all worth it after all. Was Mr Flitcroft's right to
privacy and the effect which invading this caused really
outweighed by some specious public interest which has at
its heart the commercial motive that without such
stories the tabloid press fears it will not exist? Is
the need to satisfy an insatiable public appetite for
salacious gossip more important? Perhaps we will never
know. I will come back to this, though, because it's
important, sir, in the context of prior notification.
What consolation, as I have said, for Mr Flitcroft
that the law might be considered wrong now, or not.
It's irrelevant. It's not going to give him back what
he's lost, and that's the very real problem with
invading people's privacy because once it's breached and
private things are made public, particularly in
a national newspaper and particularly with the Internet,
then that privacy is lost forever.
We do need to ask what price we place now on privacy
in our society. One we would like to think of, as
I said, as a mature and tolerant one.
If further examples are needed, Charlotte Church's
evidence will provide another one. Part of her
statement concerns a story which was published on the
front page of the News of the World in December 2005
under the headline, "Church: three in a bed cocaine
shock". You might be forgiven for thinking when you saw
that headline that it was some revelation about the
singer herself. It wasn't, although I suspect that was
the intention.
Instead, it was a story about her father having an
affair with someone who worked for him, and in several
pages lurid and sensational details of this private
relationship were plastered across the newspaper. The
effect on her parents, and particularly her mother,
someone the press would call the innocent party, was
absolutely devastating and Ms Church will tell you about
this. The newspaper was aware of that effect even at
the time. How do I say that? Because it subsequently
transpired that the Church family has discovered that
the story was the product of their voicemail messages
being illegally accessed by Mr Mulcaire.
Part of the information which they would have found
out was the fact that shortly prior to the story being
published Charlotte's mother was admitted to hospital
following an attempted suicide. The newspaper knew it.
In an act of great sensitivity, as Ms Church will
explain, following the article published, the newspaper
approached her mother directly and persuaded her to give
them an exclusive, despite her fragile condition, as
part of a Faustian pact that in return they would not
run another lurid follow-up story about her husband's
affair.
So when people talk of public interest in exposing
the private lives of well-known people or those close to
them, this is the real, brutally real impact which this
kind of journalism has.
There are, of course, less extreme examples, but
they still demonstrate how, in my submission,
unjustifiable such stories are, contributing nothing as
they do to what is truly in the public interest.
Steve Coogan, for example, will give evidence to
this Inquiry. Another individual whom the popular press
love to vilify. But look behind the silly tabloid
stereotypes for a moment. He is, I would say, perhaps
he would not say it himself, a talented writer, comedian
and actor, but most importantly, he has not sought
publicity for himself. He doesn't turn up to do
openings, he doesn't preach morality to anyone or set
himself up as a role model. Nevertheless, he has been
on the receiving end of numerous kiss and tell stories.
His evidence, whilst less dramatic than that of
Charlotte Church, is equally important to demonstrate
how this almost unique English journalistic culture of
kiss and tell stories can, over time, have an insidious
effect even on the most sanguine and impervious of
individuals. He will describe how not just him but his
family and friends have been affected by this, how he's
been doorstepped by journalists and so have partners,
members of his family, parents, grandparents, all in
an attempt to dig up stories about his private life.
He's had journalists camped outside his house, rooting
through his bins, bothering neighbours, following him in
cars and so on and so forth.
Yes, the obsession with well-known people and the
belief that details of their private lives, exclusive
details, sells newspapers, has led to yet another
excess, the hounding of celebrities. Not just from
intrusive stories, but also because of the market this
creates for the paparazzi, an aggressive breed of
unregulated males equipped with a camera, often used as
more of a weapon than a means of recording someone's
image. Their methods of stalking vary from driving
recklessly in the hot pursuit of their prey through the
streets of London with all the dangers this causes,
through crashing into cars to stop someone getting away
from them, to force a confrontation for which read
perfect photo opportunity, to camping outside someone's
home and refusing to leave, to chasing and jostling
their victim down the road, shouting out abuse in the
hope that a reaction can be provoked and a caption
generated for which a certain section of the press will
pay handsomely.
It goes without saying that without this kind of
willing market, there is no livelihood for this species
of journalistic activity.
A number of witnesses speak about this, at least in
general terms. However, in case anyone thinks that this
is just a problem for the rich and famous, I can safely
say that having been involved in obtaining every one of
the six injunctions which have been granted to stop this
kind of harassment to well-known people, it is a miracle
that no member of the public has got seriously hurt,
although many have been caused considerable nuisance, so
indescribably dangerous and oblivious is the behaviour
of these individuals, not to mention plain old
intimidating.
This hounding, this obsession with reporting on
every aspect of a well-known person's private life may
seem relatively innocuous, perhaps, unless of course you
are the person having to deal with it, and it doesn't
matter, it appears, whether you try to be intensely
private or not. JK Rowling is a good example of this.
She will explain to the Inquiry how, because of the
enormous success of her writing talent, she went from
being what one might call an ordinary person to what one
might call famous, but how despite this she and her
husband have gone to enormous lengths, lengths which
many would regard as not being necessary, to protect --
or should not be necessary -- to protect the privacy of
her family and to let the press know, that section of
the press so desperate to indulge their curiosity about
her private life, that that is the attitude they take.
The fact that Ms Rowling has tried to carve out and
protect some form, semblance of normal life for her
children but has failed to do so despite her best
efforts, just highlights the excesses of the press. It
should not need saying, and indeed it is part of the PCC
code, whatever good that has done her in the past, as
she will tell you, that just because children have
famous parents doesn't mean that they are public
property as well. Adults can make choices. Children,
of course, can't.
Whilst the most well-known of Ms Rowling's repeated
disputes with a certain section of the press, desperate
to overstep the boundaries between her private and
professional career, is the case that she brought
against Big Pictures, a photographic agency over
a photograph they took published in the Express of her
walking on a family outing sharing some special moments
with her husband and young children, this is by no means
the only example she will give of such intrusion.
There have still been photographers and press camped
outside her house. Her young children have had notes
placed in their school bag. Pictures of them have been
snatched whilst they've been enjoying quality time on
holiday.
So what, you may say. Just think for a moment.
What if you knew that whenever you take your family out
of the house, just to go to the park or to the shops,
things that you or I, as so-called ordinary people, do
without thinking, what if every time you did this you
had no idea whether a photographer was going to jump out
of the bushes and photograph your children? How would
you feel? Scared? Little bit like a prisoner?
Perhaps. But more importantly, why should you have to
tolerate this kind of hounding, this level of intrusion
into your private life? Especially if you are
well-known for guarding your privacy as fiercely as
Ms Rowling does.
She will explain the very real corrosive effect that
this has had on her children.
Finally, one other point she will deal with, which
may seem a small one, is the obsession with publishing
the address of people in the public eye, or sufficient
details of their homes so that they can be identified.
This is a complaint which she has in common with
a number of well-known people, although I think she is
the only person giving evidence to this Inquiry who
refers to it expressly. It's a problem she's had with
a number of publications over the years. It may, as
I've said, seem at first blush like a small point, but
it is one which is of importance to her, since she
deliberately chose to live in a remote part of rural
Scotland in order to keep her family's privacy.
In the past, one tabloid newspaper has even printed
the street name and photos of her house, photos which
apparently showed the CCTV cameras and other security
measures which she has had to employ to protect herself
and her children from those, for example, who are well
aware of her commercial success. And simply because her
address is not a secret in the sense you could probably
find it somewhere on the Land Registry if you carried
out the necessary searches, does not mean that it is not
private, and it doesn't mean that it justifies the
publishing of details in a national newspaper with all
the security risks that this creates.
Then there are the other core participant victims
who will give evidence of the way that they have
constantly had to fight against a steady stream of lies
or distortions published about them because it suits the
press to portray them in a certain way.
Sheryl Gascoigne is one of them, for example. She
will explain how the minute she married Paul Gascoigne,
she became a villain in certain sections of the press,
especially after their divorce, but even before, despite
being the well-documented victim of domestic abuse.
Regardless of the true position, she has been
persistently portrayed as the callous, money-grabbing
wife, blamed for her ex-husband's well-documented
problems in story after story, so many times indeed that
fiction has turned into accepted fact. Or at least was
until she decided in the end to bring a series of libel
actions, as she will tell you.
She is an example of someone who initially dealt
with the fame which she received when she started
a relationship with a national hero by deciding that the
best course was not to take on the press but rather to
maintain a dignified silence. It is a view which after
many years and countless press cuttings she was forced
to change, primarily because her children were angry at
what they read about their mother.
She will tell you how the decision to fight back, as
it were, in 2009 and to use her legal rights was an
effective one. It is something the Inquiry will
obviously consider when looking at how the press are
regulated in the wider sense. However, while she won
all of her libel actions, the best remedy for her would
have been for these lies not to have been published in
the first place.
As she will tell you, this decision to use legal
means has at times been risky. It nearly cost her her
family home, as she had to place it on the market to
fund her legal action to clear her name. Thankfully,
she won just before the house was sold, but her attempts
to try to set the record straight, if not for her, then
for her children, who have to read about these lies, is
one which has not been easy.
Charlotte Church is another core participant with
a similar complaint, albeit with her own unique set of
circumstances. Having started her professional life
when she was just 11 years old as a child prodigy, she
has had to enduring intense media scrutiny and in
particular what appears to be a concerted attempt to
disparage or denigrate her. Given that a lot of this
has happened as she was struggling, like most girls of
her age, with the pressures of becoming a teenager, some
of the reporting was deeply irresponsible, not to
mention plain wrong.
She also chose, like many, to take the course of
least resistance. The press, or at least various
newspapers, are going to publish what they publish; why
fight it? That is, until her children started to reach
an age where they could read the lies and distortions
published about her for themselves, published by those
intent on perpetuating the stereotypical image of her as
the voice of an angel who eventually fell from grace.
She will dismiss the myth of the so-called whingeing
celebrity, as well as the line trotted out in
self-defence by more tabloid journalists than I can
count that celebrities somehow need this publicity and
only complain when it's negative. I will let her deal
with that.
More importantly, she emphasises the particular
protection which young people need, especially those
who, because of a certain talent, enter the public eye
without any real idea of the consequences.
Just to show you how topical her evidence is, she
will recount how a week or so ago a story hit the
newspapers about how she is meant to have made an
exhibition of herself drunkenly proposing to her partner
in a bar while singing karaoke. It was a good story,
with all the favourite tabloid stereotypes about her:
a drunk Charlotte Church, karaoke singing in a Welsh
bar, a drunken proposal. Everything. The problem is it
was a complete fabrication. Not least because she
wasn't even there on the night in question. Did anyone
check with her? No. Did anyone think about whether
this was intrusive let alone true? Apparently not. To
use the Kelvin MacKenzie line, it sounds right so it
probably is right, so let's lob it in, bugger sources or
respect for people's private lives.
For the journalists, perhaps they decided not to let
the facts get in the way of a good story. These no
doubt are the same type of tabloid journalists
Trevor Kavanagh, the political editor of the Sun, was
referring to in the seminars when he described them as
the "finest creative professionals in the business",
although he was speaking without a hint of irony.
Ms Church will also describe the massive effect
which this kind of journalism has had not only on her
life but the lives of her family and friends, collateral
damage, one might call it, and the worst excesses of the
press came when she was between the ages of 16 and 20,
reporters cutting holes in the shrubbery and installing
secret cameras, being chased in a car, photographers
trying to open a car door while she was inside, trying
to take photographs up her skirt. On one occasion she
begged the News of the World not to reveal where she
lived as there was a threat to kidnap her at the time,
but they refused. Or the time the press revealed she
was pregnant when she hadn't even told her parents, so
desperate were the newspapers to get an exclusive scoop
on her private life.
Before I leave the topic of the damage which the
press can do in terms of false portrayals, let me give
you two further examples. Examples which seem to fit
the description Mr Peppiatt gave when he said that
tabloid newsrooms are often bullying and aggressive
environments in which dissent is often not tolerated, in
particular when it comes to big stories.
One doesn't need to explain that to Gerry and
Kate McCann. The disappearance of their daughter on
3 May 2007 was on any view a big story, and one which
had the press falling over themselves to cover, taking
up almost permanent residence in the beginning in Praia
da Luz.
When he gives evidence, Mr McCann will explain how
it felt for him and his wife to be thrust from what one
might call anonymity into the public limelight in the
worst possible circumstances, one with which any parent
would sympathise. It may be appropriate for me at this
moment to read out what clause 5 of the Press Complaints
Commission's code says, entitled "Intrusion into grief".
Clause 5 states in terms which appear to have no public
interest qualification:
"In cases involving personal grief or shock,
enquiries and approaches must be made with sympathy and
discretion and publication handled sensitively."
Mr McCann's evidence will be a perfect example of
how hopelessly inadequate this self-regulatory code is
as a means of curbing the excesses of the press. He
will refer to the blatant intrusion which he and his
family suffered throughout, particularly when they were
back in the United Kingdom, from the press camping
outside their door to how his children were terrified as
they were driven around by their parents. He will
explain how sensitively the media dealt with this.
Moreover, he will explain how in the months
following the abduction of Madeleine, the behaviour of
the press changed from an attitude of support to one of
hostility, a change which he suspects, and we say
rightly, was based on the commercial imperative to bring
home exclusive stories for editors greedily waiting back
in the United Kingdom watching the expenses bills of
their journalists mounting up. Apparently journalists
were being told, he will say, that they had to get
a front page story, or their job was on the line.
What happened in those days in late 2007 and into
2008, when stories about the missing toddler became thin
on the ground and the pack of journalists were sitting
idly in the bars, must be some of the darkest days for
this section of the press. Some of the headlines that
were published, either based on some nonsense supposedly
gleaned from the Portuguese police, often on nothing at
all, were a national scam, and I list some of those
headlines:
"DNA puts parents in frame. British experts insist
their tests are valid". "Parents' car hid a corpse. It
was under carpet in boot, say police". "It was her
blood in parents' hire car, new DNA tests report".
"Kate and Gerry's sabotage plot". "Maddy's grave,
McCanns buried her on beach". "Waiter can prove that
parents lied, says Maddy police. What Kate called out".
And finally "Maddy sold by hard-up McCanns".
And all this despite the fact that the couple had
tried through the police to circulate letters to the
editors begging them for restraint, especially given the
ongoing search for their little girl, but all to no
avail.
Of course, one thing did eventually work, you'll be
pleased to hear. I say you'll be pleased to hear, sir.
That depends on whether you are a believer in the Press
Complaints Commission or self-regulation. It was
a libel complaint that worked, worked at least in the
sense that the campaign to vilify this poor couple with
the sort of nonsense stories that I've read out stopped.
A massive payout, to use the tabloid phrase, was made by
the Express, the worst but by no means the only
offender, and this proved to the world that these
accusations were untrue. But there are still some
people out there who will no doubt believe that there is
no smoke without fire, perhaps, the ones who still ring
the McCanns' house or try and send them messages.
Money doesn't cure all the ills, as the Dowlers will
testify to, but unlike a privacy claim, it does prove to
the world, at least to the ordinary reasonable person,
that these outrageous lies are just that and at least
Express Newspapers published a front page apology.
If this was a one-off, an isolated case of the press
going too far, it might be forgivable. A lapse in
judgment, albeit that it was only the Express Group, but
it wasn't. The McCanns' experience is not an isolated
or unique experience, and it has nothing to do with too
much sun and sangria clouding the brain of a pack of
journalists, as my second example demonstrates.
He is someone called Christopher Jefferies. A year
ago, you would never have heard of him or seen him,
unless you were lucky enough to have been taught by him
during the 34 years he worked as an English teacher.
Yes, for 34 years he dedicated his life to teaching and
building up a reputation as an exemplary professional.
It took the tabloid newspapers only a matter of
moments to destroy that reputation in the last days
of December of last year.
Worse still, he was catapulted, like the McCanns,
from anonymity into the public spotlight in the most
terrifying way possible, as the man responsible, they
claimed, for the murder of Joanna Yeates, the Bristol
girl who rented one of the flats of which he was
a landlord and who disappeared on the weekend of
17 December and whose body was discovered on
Christmas Day 2010.
We all now know that Mr Jefferies was entirely
innocent and the murderer, Vincent Tabak, has now been
convicted. But it created a media feeding frenzy of
almost unparallelled proportions, a frenzy which, sir,
as you know led to two newspapers being found guilty of
contempt of court.
On one view, as he sat in a police station answering
questions, Mr Jefferies was thankfully unaware of the
clamour to convict him which occurred in the press as
they appointed themselves his judge, jury and
executioner. Once again, it is lucky that when he was
released on bail, he was cosseted by friends. Indeed he
only fully understood the breadth of the articles which
sought to vilify him some time later. Perhaps that is
all one can deal with in a situation like that.
Thankfully, I don't know.
But one reason why Mr Jefferies is an example to us
all is that this could happen to any one of us,
celebrity or not.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
This, again, is an example of
something that contravened the Contempt of Court Act,
since proceedings were then active against him.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, it does, but as I will show you with
some of the newspaper headlines, not all of them of
course were convicted of contempt of court, but we say
some of the headlines went far too far in any event,
whether or not they breached the Contempt of Court Act.
This had nothing to do with hacking mobile telephones,
bribing the police, blagging personal information or
blackmailing girls into giving kiss and tell stories.
Let me share some of the highlights of this appalling
coverage.
The Sun's headline:
"Verdict: weird, posh, lewd, creepy, loner with blue
rinse hair."
The Daily Mail:
"Was Jo's body hidden next to her flat? Murder
police quiz nutty professor, the teacher they called
Mr Strange."
And then the Mirror:
"Jo suspect is Peeping Tom. Arrest landlord spied
on flat couple, friend in jail for paedophile crimes."
So on and so forth. All in all, it represented
a frenzied campaign to blacken his character and
persuade the public that he was guilty, a frightening
combination of smear, innuendo and complete fiction
involving gratuitous dirt digging to the most shameless
extent possible. He was monstered in almost every sense
imaginable, wrongly accused of being a sexually
perverted voyeur, attacked for having had a malign
influence over his pupils, suggested he was involved in
a previous murder and linked to a convicted paedophile,
who I think was the man who owned the flat before the
man who owned this flat sold it to the man from whom
Mr Jefferies bought. Well, you get the picture.
Obviously he must have been guilty, then, of murdering
Jo Yeates. All of it was nonsense, and all of this
despite warnings from the Attorney General, warnings
that were largely ignored. Of course they were. It was
too tempting not to publish.
It was a devastating destruction of all aspects of
Mr Jefferies' life, from the professional to the most
deeply personal. For example, his relationship with his
late mother, the properties he owned, his conduct as
a landlord, his entire teaching career. Like clumsy
thieves, drunk on the frenzy of an intoxicatingly good
story, the press broke into his life and trashed
everything, everything that was precious to him, in
particular ransacking 34 years of dedication to his
profession in a desperate bid to find what they were
looking for, a way of establishing he was guilty.
It is perhaps no wonder Mr Jefferies described it
later in this way:
"My identity had been violated, my privacy had been
intruded upon, my whole life. I don't think it would be
too strong a word to say that it was a kind of rape that
had taken place."
Mr Jefferies is no celebrity, he is not
a politician. A year ago today, I don't imagine that
even in his worst nightmares Mr Jefferies would have
ever dreamt this could have happened to him. No one
ever thinks it will happen to them.
And the attitude of the press? One editor later
described it when interviewed on radio after the case as
a mistake. Really? Just a mistake? How reassuring.
I suppose the hacking into Milly Dowler's phone was just
an error.
But what does that say about the ethics of the
press, or at least a certain section of it? Is this the
kind of behaviour, I ask, which is the reason why we
have this Inquiry? Or do people still believe, as some
newspaper groups maintain, that there is no problem and
that we are only here because of political revenge
wreaked by the members of Parliament who have been
caught out fiddling their expenses?
Yes, Mr Jefferies brought libel proceedings and yes,
he was paid a significant sum, but does that really make
up for what happened to him? Does anyone here really
think that having to dip into their profits will make
these newspapers think twice?
It's an interesting feature of this story and one
I will leave you with, sir, that some of the journalists
who monstered Mr Jefferies were the very same
journalists responsible for the stories about the
McCanns. I'd love to name names, but I promised not to,
and tempting though it is to employ the same jigsaw
identification tactics which the press use to undermine
the orders courts grant to protect individuals from
unlawful publications, I am no John Hemming.
Perhaps it's fitting though to let Jo Yeates'
partner have the last word. In a public statement back
in January of this year, long before Mr Tabak was
arrested, he described the finger pointing and character
assassination by the news media of an as-yet innocent
man, Mr Jefferies, as "shameful". "It has made me lose
a lot of faith", he said, "in the morality of the
British press".
I don't suppose Mr Jefferies has a lot of faith in
their morality either, and neither might you, sir.
Before we leave this type of journalism, I should
briefly return to the McCanns, because they were to
suffer one final swipe.
Without any warning, in September 2008, the
News of the World published Kate's private diary that
she had written to her missing daughter Madeleine. It
was a diary in which she recorded her innermost
thoughts, things she had written to her daughter,
a document so private that even her own husband had not
seen it, but which was taken by the police in the course
of the investigation.
How did the News of the World get this from the
police? Did they buy the information? Obtain it
through some form of deception? We may never know now,
especially as the newspaper is defunct.
And on what basis did they think they could justify
such a staggering intrusion into the McCanns' privacy?
The publication of this material, under the headline
"Kate's diary in her own words", with a picture on the
front page suggesting she had provided this herself,
left her feeling "mentally raped", her husband says, and
is it any wonder? At if the McCanns didn't have enough
to deal with.
Does this suggest something is fundamentally wrong
with the culture, the ethics and practices of the press
or all three? Sometimes, it is hard to differentiate
between them. On any count, I would say, this was
wrong, wrong and wrong.
It should be quite clear now to the Inquiry that
a number of people are coming here of their own accord
to recount some highly personal and distressing
experiences, to put into the public domain very private
matters about themselves and to do so not because they
have anything to gain, which they don't, but because
they want to see something done to stop this type of
behaviour so that other people don't have to endure the
same suffering, whether great or not so great
comparatively.
However, they all have a fear, a very real fear,
sir, that you've recognised, that in doing so, not only
will they have to go through painful experiences again,
but that they will run the gauntlet of a certain section
of the press who will seek to vilify them for standing
up for their rights and for speaking out against such
types of behaviour.
I have already explained how it is routine fare for
newspapers to rubbish privacy claimants or so-called
whingeing celebrities, how they even go after the
judiciary as well, or certainly particular ones who make
decisions against them. It appears that the press do
not like it when people exercise the freedom of speech
which they constantly refer to against the press
themselves. For a media that is so quick to shame those
in positions of responsibility or power when they claim
that these responsibilities or powers have been
violated, it appears that this does not work in reverse,
despite the enormous power and responsibility that the
press holds.
What happens then to those who stand up to the
double standards of certain sections of the press?
Already, some of those who are giving evidence before
you have started to receive the red carpet treatment.
In one of the curtain raisers for this Inquiry, for
example, the Daily Mail wrote as follows:
"The Leveson Inquiry into phone hacking will ask
core participants to give evidence. The line-up looks
set to include the get your clothes off model
Abi Titmuss, S&M spanker Max Mosley, prostitute procurer
Hugh Grant, gold digger Cheryl Gascoigne, John 'pants
down' Prescott and the rent boy loving former MP
Mark Oaten. Gerry and Kate McCann are also expected to
appear along with the parents of murdered Milly Dowler.
What sleazy, degrading company for those who have truly
suffered."
Mr Grant will speak for himself, he's perfectly
willing and able to deal with these myths, the myths
that those whose self-interest requires it peddle
through the page of their newspapers. He can deal with
all these aspects without me needing to and he will do
so despite running the risk of merely feeding those
journalists poised with pen at the ready to dismiss
everything he says as the rantings of another whingeing
celebrity. See, I've written it for them. He can deal
with all of that admirably, but what he finds more
difficult to deal with, and who can blame him, is what
has happened to those close to him in the months since
he became such a vociferous critic of a certain type of
journalism as opposed to the public interest journalism
which he is very anxious to distinguish and support.
The story is told in his supplemental witness
statement. The fact that it comes as a supplement,
despite his main statement being only a week or so old,
is testament to how recent these events are. They
involve the mother of his recently born daughter,
a woman with whom, despite what the popular press love
to write, he has a good relationship, but he can deal
himself with the nonsense which has been published about
this relationship by the self-appointed moral guardians
of Fleet Street, the Daily Mail columnists.
Last Friday I had to make an emergency application
for an injunction to restrain a campaign of appalling
harassment which this lady was having to endure, simply
because she was his former girlfriend and just had his
child.
That's not strictly true. The real reason for the
harassment is probably far more sinister, and it is
revealed in the evidence which she gave, namely that she
has received threats because of the fact that the father
of her child has spoken out against the press. She
recalls how, whilst Mr Grant was appearing on
Question Time, discussing the closure of the
News of the World, Rupert Murdoch and press standards
generally, she received a barrage of telephone calls
from a withheld number from someone who managed to get
it from somewhere, and when she finally answered she was
threatened in the most menacing terms, terms which
should reverberate around this Inquiry:
"Tell Hugh Grant he must shut the fuck up."
Unsurprisingly, she was too stressed to call the
police.
After the birth of her child, the fact of which
appears to have been leaked somehow, this hounding
turned into a continued pursuit of her and her child by
paparazzi and other photographers. It became so nasty
that when her mother tried to get evidence of the
identity of one paparazzo in a car, he then tried to run
her over, hence the emergency injunction which was
granted by Mr Justice Tugendhat last week. A written
judgment is being handed down on Friday.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Has any of this gone to the police?
MR SHERBORNE
It has been notified to the police, yes.
You can say what you like about Mr Grant, and
believe me, enough of the newspapers have now, but then
as Mandy Rice-Davies said, they would say that, wouldn't
they? However, he has agreed to speak, as others have,
not because of any financial motive. He has chosen not
to sue for the hacking of his telephone. As the
newspapers sit here with their livelihood at stake, as
they tell us, the victims are here on their own time and
at their own risk.
The last core participant whose evidence I will
refer to and who can tell you about the risks of
standing up to such bullies and how very real they are
is Anne Diamond. She will give evidence to the Inquiry
about the vendetta which she believes was waged against
her because of a question she put to Mr Murdoch years
ago and the devastating consequences for her and her
family as a result.
Ms Diamond is a journalist and broadcaster as well
as a mother of five children, one of whom, as is
well-known, unfortunately died of cot death. She had he
the temerity to ask the owner of News International what
he thought about the fact that his newspapers ruined
people's lives, exercising her freedom of speech, you
might say. But, of course, you can't do that to
a newspaper mogul, and that was it, the start of a press
war against her from a particular newspaper section for
the best part of 20 years. How could she ever win, you
might think. She will describe a catalogue of
incidents, each more surprising than the last, stories
dredged up by the Sun newspaper with headlines such as
"Anne Diamond killed my father", paying her family nanny
to talk about the relationship she had with her husband
at the time and publishing, most shockingly, on its
front page a photograph which the Sun newspaper managed
to buy from a freelancer who had taken private images of
her and her husband whilst they held their son's coffin
at his funeral. Her account of the effect on her and
her family is a sobering tale.
Unless anyone thinks that this intimidating
treatment is reserved only for the well-known or the
victims who have chosen to speak out or even the
arbitrary judges who rule against the press, the Inquiry
has already had a taste of this themselves at the
seminars. Who can forget the unedifying spectacle of
Kelvin MacKenzie trying to rubbish the Inquiry by
attacking its chairman? I won't repeat his particular
brand of vilification, but there was nothing accidental
in this. It was a smear intended to undermine the
process, no doubt, as opposed to anything personal.
It appears that after the event, Mr MacKenzie
somewhat recanted, offering an apology, albeit
a somewhat muted one, one which did nothing to retract
the smears as opposed to regretting simply the
discourtesy that they represented, given how kind the
chairman was to him. This, we say, is another classic
example of how the tabloid press works. The apology
Mr MacKenzie offered was deep in the middle of his
column, somewhere buried in the inside pages of the
newspaper. A far cry from the prominence which the
comments themselves attracted in headlines throughout
the national press, as he was no doubt well aware they
would. The apology, by contrast, almost went without
mention.
And the rubbishing didn't end with the chairman.
Mr Dacre apparently dismissed the entire board of
assessors in one side swipe, stating that none of them
have the faintest clue about how newsrooms operate.
I think I've now had at least my allotted time, and
so I will draw my conclusions to a close, sir. I have
outlined at some length, perhaps, the various individual
but in some ways common complaints which my clients, the
core participant victims, have about the culture, ethics
and practices of the press as they have observed them
and has impacted, in many cases profoundly, on their
respective lives, families and friends.
I leave you obviously with the task of devising
a real and effective system of dealing with these
abuses, abuses which are largely if not almost
exclusively, as I've said, the province of a certain
section of the press.
I say only this, and it is of little comfort, no
doubt. I ask rhetorically: what kind of ethical lessons
can you teach to those journalists who authorised or
condoned the hacking into the voicemail of a murdered
schoolchild or who vilified the grieving parents of an
abducted toddler by accusing them of her murder? What
hope is there about the prevalent culture when the most
powerful press organisations in this country, as we've
heard, in the face of the incidents I've mentioned,
steadfastly maintain that what we need is a freer press
as opposed to any greater form of regulation? And what
light is there at the end of the tunnel in terms of the
change in practices when Britain's most popular Sunday
daily newspaper had to be shut down because it was
condoning criminal activity on an industrial scale, and
instead of getting to the bottom of how it happened,
those in positions of responsibility hired another set
of private investigators to follow the 14-year-old
daughter of the lawyer who had the temerity to sue it in
the hope that this tactic would deter further claims?
The victims who I represent don't want to stop
proper investigative or public interest journalism.
No one sensibly does. But if the relationship between
the press and the public is to recover, then this is the
time for it to start, and it must start now.
Self-regulation through the PCC, as one of my
clients says, is tantamount to handing the police
station over to the mafia. The press talk about
freedom, and with that we say comes responsibility,
responsibility particularly for the rights of others.
But even leaving that to one side for a moment, it was
Albert Camus who said "Freedom is nothing but a chance
to be better".
We've had press freedom for many years and they've
not got better, they've got worse. It is time, we say,
for change, and by that I mean real change.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Sherborne, there's a great deal of
power behind some of the things you've said, and the
balance has to be struck, as I'm sure you appreciate,
between the public interest, properly so-called,
obviously, and rights of privacy to which you've
referred, which can't necessarily exclude all
circumstances in which it's appropriate for the press to
look at individuals. I'm not trying to draw lines.
You've been present as I've said more than once that
a system has to be devised that has to work, and it has
to work for the press, but it equally has to work for
the public.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So I would hope that you and those
who instruct you will put the same sort of thought into
the issues that I have raised with the press, bearing in
mind that although of course you're acting for 51
individuals, and of course have a very clear message to
tell on their behalf, at the end of the day I have to
find a route that works for everybody.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes, indeed, you have.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I hope you'll take part in that
debate.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, we will. Can I just say this, and I say
this without having had the chance to take full
instructions from those I represent, but certainly
having listened to Mr Rusbridger, it may well be that
there is some common ground between the interests
I represent and the statements that have been usefully
put forward by Mr Rusbridger on behalf of the Guardian
as looking at a real way, a sensible and responsible way
of dealing with this area.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There is no immediate rush. It's
obviously important that we hear this evidence in proper
form at an appropriate pace, but the reason I have
mentioned it so frequently is because the time to start
at least contemplating the possibilities is now rather
than in six months' time.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes, indeed.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I have been very careful not to
express concluded views. I have called it various
things: thoughts, streams of consciousness, but simply,
as I'm sure the lawyers appreciate, I am preserving the
position with an entirely open mind and prepared to be
taken where the evidence leads me, but that's not to say
that I'm not thinking and I want everybody else to do
the same.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, of course.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you. Thank you very much
indeed.
We'll have a break for five minutes, then Mr Jay,
I wanted to know whether there was anything that you
wanted to pick up from the various submissions that
I have received, and then we'll see where we go from
there. I think there are one or two other matters we
have to deal with as well.
MR CAPLAN
Before we break, enquiries have been made. Some
of the matters which we're hearing about this afternoon
obviously are in witness statements of some of the
clients of Mr Sherborne that are being called next week
and we still do not have those statements. I'm thinking
of Mr Hugh Grant's further statement, Mr Coogan,
Sienna Miller. These statements still have not come
through. I don't know where the problem lies.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We'll find out in four minutes' time.
(3.00 pm)
(A short break)
(3.09 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Have you been told,
Mr Caplan?
MR CAPLAN
I'm afraid I haven't.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'll get the answer. Somebody will
tell me.
Discussion re procedure
MR CAPLAN
One other point whilst I am on my feet.
Mr Sherborne, shortly before we broke -- and it's really
for you, sir, more than anybody else -- at page 141 of
the transcript was talking about Mr Hugh Grant and his
recently born daughter and was making some criticism of
columnists in the Daily Mail. He then went on to say
that last Friday he was making an emergency injunction
in relation to some events of harassment in relation to
the mother of that child. I just wanted, having spoken
to him, because I haven't seen Mr Grant's supplementary
statement, but he confirms that that injunction was not
against Associated Newspapers. It was to do in fact
with some paparazzi photographers and it was
a harassment injunction in relation to those
photographers.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much. I'm very happy
for clarifications, where appropriate, to be provided
and made clear as and when. The advantage of not doing
part 2 at this stage is that one is looking at the
bigger picture, not the specifics of conduct, although
obviously when we move away from phone hacking, we can
be rather more particular than we can be in relation to
what is the subject of a criminal investigation. Thank
you.
Right, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
Sir, the latest intelligence, the statements of
Garry Flitcroft together with exhibits, or one exhibit,
and the statement of Mr Ian Hurst went onto the system
last night. The statements of Mr Coogan, Ms Church,
Ms Diamond, Ms Winter and Mr Grant's supplemental
statement have gone to Lextranet today with a request
for expedition, and therefore their evidence should go
on the system, I imagine, by close of play today. That,
I believe, covers the exhibits.
Otherwise, it is according to what I told you
yesterday, so certainly by close of play tomorrow,
everything that is available will be publicly
disseminated. We're still waiting for the statement
from Sienna Miller. Oh, that's just arrived.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Let's see if we can get
that on too.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If there is any difficulty at all
about affected core participants getting access to
statements, is there a mechanism whereby if somebody
comes to the team offices they will at least be able to
see them?
MR JAY
They're going to be provided separately by email to
the core participants, I'm told, to expedite that
process.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Good, right.
MR JAY
So any delay at Lextranet's end will be
short-circuited.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Good. Hopefully once we get into
this system, it will all come much -- we'll get into
a rhythm and there won't be the difficulty.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It was in part for this reason that
I was persuaded, contrary to my own initial desires, to
have a three-day week this week rather than a four-day
week.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But there it is.
MR JAY
Sir, indeed. As I said, the material is not that
voluminous, but obviously needs to be considered.
I think Mr Garnham has an issue he wishes to raise
in relation to numbers.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Yes, Mr Garnham?
MR GARNHAM
Sir, I have two matters to raise, and I will
deal with them at the time you think best, but first of
all --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
How about now?
MR GARNHAM
Then I'll deal with them both now, sir.
The first one is a misunderstanding that appears to
have crept into some of the information supplied by the
MPS, at least in the way it's been relayed.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, let's get it right. Yes?
MR GARNHAM
As Mr Jay correctly told you in his opening,
there are approximately 28 readable corner names in the
Mulcaire notebooks.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
But it is not correct to suggest that a fair
inference can be that they were all News of the World
employees.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's what Mr Rhodri Davies
suggested. Yes?
MR GARNHAM
Some of them probably are. For many others,
it's impossible, at least thus far, to say whether they
were or were not. It certainly cannot be said that the
MPS have established that all the taskings indicated by
corner names were made by News of the World employees.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That will get some other
representatives of the press jumping up and down, but
all right.
MR GARNHAM
I'll live with that, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
Secondly, the Mulcaire notebooks indeed run to
some 11,000 pages, and Mr Jay correctly told you that
they evidence some 2,266 taskings, but the police cannot
say, because they do not know, whether every tasking
targets a different individual. In fact, that's
unlikely, and that's plainly relevant to any estimation
of the number of victims and the sport of guessing the
number of victims is one that's been playing out in the
press and elsewhere.
All I would say is to counsel caution about trying
to estimate the number of victims from these figures.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right.
MR GARNHAM
A third suggested clarification, sir, is this,
and it's in fact me rather seeking a clarification from
Mr Sherborne. He mentioned a little while ago that the
diary of Mrs McCann had been obtained in some way or
other from the police. That obviously caused us
a little concern.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I read that as the Portuguese police.
MR SHERBORNE
I thought I had said it was the Portuguese
police but if I didn't make that clear, it was the
Portuguese police.
MR GARNHAM
I'm grateful for that. That will enable --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
As I recollect, and I don't know
whether I'm giving evidence of this of what I've read or
from the statements, or whether Mr Sherborne said it,
the diary was seized by the Portuguese police, and just
to make it clear, I have an understanding that the
Portuguese authorities required it to be returned with
no copies kept, but in some way it found its way to --
MR GARNHAM
I suspect that comes from the statement of
Mr McCann, but it doesn't matter, as long as the
position is dealt with.
The second matter I raise is this. By letter dated
10 November, those instructing me asked the solicitor to
the Inquiry whether the Inquiry would grant the MPS
permission to disclose the documents placed on the
Lextranet to the senior investigating officer for
Operation Weeting. We've not had a response to that.
I make no criticism of that, I know how busy the Inquiry
staff are, but I raised it with Mr Jay last night and he
suggested that I raised it with you orally today.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think you're right to raise it and
it raises some very interesting issues, which I will ask
for some help about.
Is this material that you've now seen material that
has been obtained by the Inquiry under compulsion or
voluntarily? Do you know?
MR GARNHAM
I don't know. I suspect -- the classic example
is a particular witness statement. I suspect that was
volunteered, but it might have been in response to
a rule 9 or Section 21 request. I don't know.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Are you trying to decide, as you read
these statements, whether in each case you want to
disclose it to the police or is this blanket?
MR GARNHAM
It's for two purposes, sir. First of all, it's
because, as we read it, we're seeing things that would
be material to the present investigation and we would
therefore like the police to have it.
The second purpose is that I would like to take
instructions from the officers involved in
Operation Weeting about that in order to ground
a request to you to make a Section 19 ruling in respect
of it.
I can't do either of those things because of the
terms of the confidentiality order as things stand at
the moment, which is why I'm asking you, sir, for
permission.
I'm quite happy to deal with it if the Inquiry
prefers it on a document-by-document basis, although we
would inevitably prefer to be able to show the senior
investigating officer all the material that goes onto
Lextranet.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One has to be a bit careful about
that because what's been obtained by me pursuant to
a requirement under the 2005 Act, in other words under
compulsion, might carry with it certain consequential
effects if it were put into the police system. I'm not
saying it would, but I'm saying, putting a criminal law
hat on, I'm a bit concerned about some aspects of that.
Is not the first thing to do, in relation to any
statement that you particularly want the police to have
because it advances their inquiry, to identify that
statement and then, through the Inquiry or through the
relevant core participant, seek permission?
For example, if one of Mr Sherborne's clients has
made a statement which you think would assist the police
inquiry, we can ask or I can ask -- it probably won't be
me -- Mr Sherborne whether his client would have an
objection to that statement being released under the
police. Then it's not being provided under compulsion
and you have it. That's the first thing.
For the rest of it, the need to take instructions
I do see as slightly different, and I'll just need to
hear what people think about that.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, I should say that with the agreement of
the Inquiry, News International are providing all their
documentation to us and to the Inquiry, so there's
a complete duplication in that regard and that's proving
helpful. We don't have the same arrangement with each
and every core participant.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I can understand that. I have
the point. Right, thank you.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, I would only say about that that some of
that is urgent simply because the witnesses will be here
next week.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Let's deal with the first
point first. Mr Jay, I know, because it was discussed
with me, that the information which came in your opening
essentially came from -- well, obviously came from the
police and there was an opportunity for some checking to
be done, but would it be fair to say, in the light of
what Mr Garnham has said, howsoever it's arisen, that
your opening should be read with that caveat that he's
identified in mind?
MR JAY
Yes. But we can revisit the question of
inferences, indeed we can explore it further, as and
when DAC Akers gives evidence because it's one of the
matters we will probably ask her about, further clarity
on the approximately 19 other corner names.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Thank you very much
indeed. Let me deal with this point first because the
other person who has an interest in saying something
about that is Mr Davies. Mr Davies, you flagged this
point up immediately.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Is it sufficient if we have obtained
the correction to the way in which Mr Jay put it, or the
elaboration on what Mr Jay said, that we have received
which of course is now available for all to see?
MR DAVIES
Yes. As I explained to the Tribunal, we haven't
seen the whole of the notebook, so we are in no position
to make any comment as to the accuracy of what the
police say, but I am content if Mr Jay's opening is
treated as amended, as Mr Garnham said, and as Mr Jay
says when DAC Akers gives evidence, if it's necessary,
some further clarification may be obtained then, but the
position for the moment will be as Mr Garnham has put it
just now.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine, thank you. Thank you
very much and I'm grateful to Mr Garnham for picking
that up so speedily. It is inevitable that seeking to
summarise, one might not do the very fullest of justice
to every detail and inferences which may be thought
appropriate may not be right, so we have to be careful.
Right, the second point. First of all, it's quite
clear that it does in fact, because of the urgency,
concern your clients. Your clients, I think, all gave
statements not pursuant to legislation, not because
I required it, but I think I invited them all, because
I felt that it was appropriate to draw that distinction.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Do you have any objection, and if you
want to take a couple of minutes to take instructions of
course you may, to them being shared with the
Metropolitan Police?
MR SHERBORNE
Can I say this without having had the
benefit, which I will take in a moment, of seeking
instructions? I suspect that there won't be an
objection. We haven't received any request from the
Metropolitan Police so we haven't had any time to think
about this, but I can see the sense of it and I am aware
that one or two of those whom I represent have already
been assisting the police in the investigation. Can
I take a few moments just to --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course you can, of course you can.
I won't require you to do it with me sitting here
looking on. I will rise for a couple of minutes because
it's always much easier to do that --
MR SHERBORNE
I think, with the benefit of that time,
Mr Crossley, who sits to my left, will speak to the
Metropolitan Police and perhaps we can come up with
a mechanism, because of course there are a number of
different individuals, at least 20 of whom are giving
evidence next week, who may well need to be consulted
about their individual circumstances, and that's not
something --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You won't be able to do that in two
minutes.
MR SHERBORNE
No, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
As regards the broader pictures, that
won't affect you, Mr Sherborne. It really affects
others who might have been required to make statements
who aren't necessarily represented.
Mr Jay, what's the position about this?
MR JAY
Sir, I am troubled by the possible Article 6
reasons. Most of the evidence the Inquiry has received,
but not all of it, was obtained pursuant to coercive
powers under Section 21 of the Inquiries Act, and the
purpose of obtaining that evidence is self-evidently to
assist this public Inquiry, not directly to aid the
police in its investigation.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I wouldn't release any
statement that had been made by somebody who is
presently suspected of crime.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Certainly not without them
specifically giving authority because they could say
anything they liked to the police.
MR JAY
Sir, I respectfully endorse that.
The two other sort of categories of evidence,
however, there are the possibility of witnesses who
provided material to the Inquiry under these coercive
powers, who are not currently the subject of a police
investigation but who might be if that material were
provided to the police. And then there is material
which, as it were, would not be self-incriminating but
which might incriminate other people.
Whether it's necessary in both those cases -- maybe
it is -- to ask for the individuals' consent before the
material is released to the police is something which
I believe is worthy of further consideration.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. Maybe I'll have to investigate
this a bit more with Mr Garnham, but I'll be very, very
disturbed, I think, if a statement that had been made to
the Inquiry pursuant to a legislative requirement was
then used as the basis for identifying the writer of the
statement as a suspect.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Because once that's happened, anybody
who has anything useful to say about a large number of
topics simply won't say it, and the benefit that I have
of the widest possible picture will be entirely lost.
I say nothing about Saunders and the European
Convention.
MR JAY
Yes. Of course, anybody who receives a Section 21
notice will understand the immunities under Section 22
of the Inquiries Act, and those immunities include
a privilege against self-incrimination.
It might be said that embedded within that is some
sort of assurance that the Inquiry will not be providing
that information on to the police, let alone the
difficulties you advert to in Saunders v The United
Kingdom where the European Court held that it was
a breach of Article 6 of the Convention for the
prosecution to rely on evidence which had been obtained
by the then DTI pursuant to statutory coercive powers.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I certainly won't give that direction
without rather more detailed argument.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The subquestion is slightly
different, and is to this effect: is it appropriate for
Mr Garnham to be able to take instructions from a police
officer simply for the purposes of this Inquiry and, if
so, should that police officer be required to sign
a similar confidentiality undertaking so as to provide,
if you like, a Chinese wall between what is within the
knowledge of the police for this Inquiry and their
investigation, or is that unrealistic?
MR JAY
Putting aside the possible artificiality of the
Chinese wall, but that may be capable of being
surmounted by the giving of an undertaking, on my
understanding what Mr Garnham wishes to do is in
relation to a particular piece of evidence seek
instructions from an officer who has given the
undertaking as to whether in those circumstances an
application should be made to you for some sort of
restriction order under Section 19 of the Act.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh, I see, and only for that purpose?
MR JAY
On my understanding, that's the basis of his
request.
Of course, lest there be any misunderstanding about
this, and as everybody knows, there are two separate
sections of the Lextranet system. There is a section
which is only available to the Inquiry team, which at
the moment contains just over 2,000 separate documents.
Many of those documents could not be released into the
public domain, given Section 19 of the Act and the
ongoing police investigation. Of course, we have seen
those documents, we have read virtually all of them, and
where they are, as it were, confidential documents, we
will maintain their confidentiality. That goes without
saying.
I don't believe that Mr Garnham is asking to look at
those documents. What his request relates to are the
documents which migrate from that very private section
of the Lextranet system to the core participants'
section of the system. At the moment, there are not, of
course, 2,000 documents on that side of the wall, there
are far fewer documents.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So all those documents are actually
due to enter the public domain because they're
statements or exhibits --
MR JAY
Well, some of them will, some of them won't. Can
I give you a concrete example? The exhibits to
Mr Mosley's witness statement have been provided to the
core participants on the basis that they are
confidential to the core participants.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
The reason being is that although many of the
exhibits are quite innocuous, they relate to the public
pronouncements of the European Court of Human Rights or
Mr Justice Eady, there are the two offending
News of the World articles --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There's no question of --
MR JAY
Those are not going to enter the public domain.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There's no question of them entering
the public domain for reasons that I've given several
times, and secondly, they're not the sort of document
that would remotely fall within the group that
Mr Garnham is concerned about.
MR JAY
What Mr Garnham is seeking, on my understanding,
although I haven't discussed this with him, but he can
clarify my understanding if it's incorrect, is that as
and when a document migrates from the private part of
the site, which only we see, to the core participant
part of the site, that document may be of interest in
Mr Garnham's view to the officers of Operation Weeting.
However, the Metropolitan Police have signed up to
an undertaking whereby at the moment they only use the
documents for the purposes of Inquiry --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, but we're actually at
cross-purposes here because are we saying it is of
interest to the Inquiry, the police investigation --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- or are we saying actually we want
it redacted for whatever reason, not necessarily because
we don't know about it, but because it might impact
adversely on the police investigation?
MR JAY
It may be that Mr Garnham's concern is that once he
sees -- once the relevant officer in Operation Weeting
sees an unredacted witness statement, which is now on
the core participants' part of the intranet system, he
may wish to have the opportunity to make representations
that further redactions be made under Section 19 to
protect the integrity of the police investigation. That
may be his concern.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
MR JAY
I'm just teasing out, really --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's why we have to do it -- I'm
happy to do it in this way, not only so that everybody
hears it but also so that everybody, whether or not
they're involved, can feel it appropriate to make
recommendations if they wish to.
Mr Garnham, you can say which it is. Is it because
there is a statement that you've seen that actually you
think will further the police investigation, or is it
because there is a statement you've seen some details of
which you think the police may want redacted under
Section 19?
MR GARNHAM
The immediate prompt for this application is
the second.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
I'm not keen to ventilate what it is in which
statement in open forum for obvious reasons, but it's
the second that prompts the application.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Once you've done that, as
Mr Sherborne would say, the cat is out of the bag and
it's gone, and I understand that.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, that's the immediate prompt. Mr Jay is
right to apprehend that in respect of the material on
the public side of the divide he describes, I was also
seeking permission for that to be shown to a police
officer in Operation Weeting for the benefit of the
police investigation, and we had offered in
correspondence, the correspondence to which I referred,
that that officer would be somebody who would sign the
confidentiality --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Subject to anything that anybody else
may say, I have no problem at all about an officer who's
fully cognisant with the police inquiry but who signs an
undertaking seeing the statements so as to advise you as
to what if anything ought to be redacted. I have no
problem about that at all, but I'll hear everybody else.
As regards the further step, in relation to those
for the next two weeks who are, of course,
Mr Sherborne's clients, I'll rise for Mr Sherborne to
consider the matter and possibly discuss with you what
the appropriate way forward is and you can identify the
statements you're concerned with, because that will make
the task of Collyer Bristow rather less intense if they
have to speak to three people as opposed to 53 people.
You can do that privately and then I'll come back to
hear what you have to say.
MR GARNHAM
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right, thank you. Does anybody have
anything to say about the first situation? That is,
obtaining of the confidentiality undertaking that you've
all signed from a police officer who is familiar with
Operation Weeting, and therefore what might particularly
cause prejudice, being able to give Mr Garnham
instructions as to redacting some part of the statement
for public purposes -- I mean, I'll have seen it and it
will be in, but it will be redacted from public purposes
if I make an order under Section 19(2).
Mr Davies?
MR DAVIES
I don't, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Caplan?
MR CAPLAN
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Does anybody else have any
observations to make about that?
Right. So that's a given. Nominate an officer --
MR GARNHAM
Thank you, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- and he can sign a confidentiality
undertaking and give you instructions accordingly.
MR GARNHAM
Thank you, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'll rise now for Mr Sherborne to
take some instructions and so you can be a little bit
less coded with him than you've necessarily had to be
with me, and let me know when you're ready.
(3.40 pm)
(A short break)
(3.46 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Garnham.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, thank you for the time. The result of my
conversation with Mr Sherborne is that we can arrange
this. Provided the Inquiry has no objection, and
I anticipate that it will not, we will do it between
ourselves by his voluntarily letting me see these
statements then we can make whatever submissions we want
to you in the light of them.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
That deals with those statements.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You'd better do that quite quickly.
MR GARNHAM
It will happen quickly.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
The second thing is the undertaking. The
original letter which began this process from my
instructing solicitor of 10 November proposed
a willingness to sign a confidentiality undertaking, so
that will follow suit and that provides no difficulty
either.
The third point I would raise simply in case it ever
arises again, although it won't do this afternoon,
Mr Jay suggested that there might be some difficulty
about documents obtained under compulsion being passed
to the police. I interpolate to say I'm not seeking
that this afternoon. And he said there might be
a difficulty because of the sort of Saunders line of
authority. I would only say this in relation to that:
Section 21 is qualified by Section 22. You cannot
require somebody to provide a statement to the Inquiry
that is incriminating of themselves.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Therefore that might be the answer.
MR GARNHAM
That may be the answer. I say that just in
case it needs to arise on other occasions. It need not
today.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If necessary and we're short of legal
things to do --
MR GARNHAM
We can spend an afternoon on that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- then we can think about that. All
right, thank you very much.
Mr Sherborne, that's all right, is it?
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, it is, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Good. I have a request of you, and
it's not of the highest urgency but it is moderately
significant. I don't think it will cause you too much
work. But you have pointed to a number of particularly
critical articles -- particularly important, I'm using
the word critical -- articles in relation to a number of
your clients and have made the point forcefully that
there could be no public interest in this particular
story and the consequences of harm were very real. And
you said, I think more than once, that similar bylines
were visible on the stories, in other words written by
the same people covering different stories.
MR SHERBORNE
Yes, in relation to the Jefferies case and
the McCann case.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. If you could pick out a number
of specific examples, and it may be that your clients
will have them very much in mind, and maybe they're
collected somewhere, if it's difficult, say so, it may
be that I will think about asking the specific
journalists to deal with the very points you've raised.
I'm not saying I will, but I think it's a potentially
fruitful line of inquiry.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I'm very grateful for that. In terms of
that specific point, namely the overlap between
journalists who covered the McCann case and the
Jefferies case, that is work which will take very little
time to do, I can reassure you. I can certainly provide
that within the next day or so to the Inquiry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I'm not asking you to give me
100 names, because the timeframe within which I'm
operating will bite throughout, but you've presented one
side of a picture very graphically, and I would just
like to make sure that I understand whether there is
another side and, if so, what it is, in the context of
ethical decision-making at journalist level and at other
levels.
I can always pick these up with editors, most of
whom I think are already likely to be giving evidence,
but I just wonder whether in relation to some of them it
may not be sensible to go a bit further. I'm not saying
I will, but I'm saying that I think it's worth thinking
about.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes. We say of course the articles
speak for themselves, but I can understand why the
Inquiry might want to hear from the individual
journalists as opposed to the editors as to why those
stories were written.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR SHERBORNE
As I say, I will provide those names --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And the considerations that went into
them.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Because that's the other side of the
coin. There may be no other side, and I take your point
that the articles speak for themselves.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But it's --
MR SHERBORNE
It is, and I'm sure that the particular core
participants that this refers to would be interested to
understand it, if there is another side to their story.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. All right. That's food for
thought.
MR JAY
Sir, may I raise one issue? I haven't seen the
text of the proposed undertaking the officer from
Operation Weeting would be giving, that is to say solely
for the purpose of indicating whether there are any
Section 19 redaction issues, but it should be made clear
that that is the sole purpose for which the officer can
consider the witness statements at this stage and would
override any other duty the officer might have to embark
on a line of inquiry which might otherwise assist
Operation Weeting in general.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, I think Mr Garnham understands
that.
MR JAY
Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And doubtless it can be drafted and
you'll agree something and it will be signed and all
that will be done very quickly too.
MR JAY
Yes, it will have to be done very quickly.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It can be subject to an undertaking
at this stage while it's sorted out.
Anything else? We've managed to conduct a full day.
I think it is the first of many.
Thank you very much. We'll resume at 10 o'clock on
Monday morning.
(3.55 pm)
(The hearing adjourned until 10 o'clock on Monday,
November 2011)