(2.00 pm)
MR JAY
Mr Starmer, we're now on paragraph 62 of your
statement. It's Mr Davies again.
A. Yes.
Q. Asking whether or not you'd called for the two
documents, this is the contract between the executive of
News of the World and Mr Mulcaire and the "for Neville"
email. You said:
"At about 10 o'clock that evening, I emailed Simon
Clements to ask him whether he had looked at the
documents."
That's tab 36, which speaks for itself.
A. Yes.
Q. It's quite crisply worded by you.
A. Yes.
Q. This might have something to do with the time of day.
A. Yes.
Q. At two minutes to midnight, Mr Clements is back to you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think you've given the CPS enough
support for their devotion to duty, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
"... neither he [this is Mr Husain] nor I have
looked at material extraneous to the case papers we had
at the time. We do not understand that to be the
purpose of your examination. I have spoken to
John Yates tonight and we will speak again in the
morning to clarify the issue."
A. Yes.
Q. And so the following day Mr Clements, as you say, began
to look into the matter. Then you say:
"Later that day, also on 17 July, Mr Clements was
sent a copy of the MPS response to the CMS committee."
This is the first suggestion to your mind that the
MPS investigation might have been curbed by a belief
that the narrow view of the law may be correct?
A. Yes.
Q. That's tab 39, the second page of it.
A. Yes.
Q. The reference is 18599. It's fair to say it's hinted at
in the third paragraph. That's where it appears, isn't
it, Mr Starmer?
A. Yes. The issue that was -- the only real concern I've
ever had about the history of the advice on RIPA is that
it's quite clear from the documentations that the police
were concerned that they might have to prove that the
message had been listened to before it had been
intercepted, and I don't dispute that.
The issue I had in relation to all this was whether
that was the reason why the investigation never looked
at other defendants, and I took a clear view that that
was not the reason that the investigation didn't look at
other defendants, for all the reasons that I've set out
in my letter to the Select Committee, I think in 2010.
Q. Yes. That clearly identifies the issue. I move on to
paragraph 67, Mr Starmer, and the investigation into the
"for Neville" email. As you rightly say, paragraph 68,
the contract for the £7,000 bonus for Mr Mulcaire was in
the exhibits bundle.
A. Yes.
Q. Indeed it was referred to in the course of Mr Perry's
opening to Mr Justice Gross on 26 January 2007.
A. Yes.
Q. But no trace of the "for Neville" email has been found
in the CPS papers.
A. Yes.
Q. And indeed, this is paragraph 70, following contact with
DCI Surtees, the email formed part of the unused
material.
A. Yes.
Q. Paragraph 71, you are more precise about it there,
Mr Clements' lawyers were informed by DCI Surtees that
the "for Neville" email formed part of the unused
material, it was listed on the sensitive schedule as
item WAB/107, described as "black bin bag containing
various notepads".
A. Yes.
Q. Presumably there were also bits of the Mulcaire
so-called notebook there as well.
A. I think that's right. Yes.
Q. In paragraph 72, you deal with the review of the unused
material, which was under the 1996 Act as amended, and
Mr Mably's recollection never having seen it.
A. I've ascertained that it wasn't on our premises, and
therefore we'd not physically had possession of it, but
I was aware that a disclosure exercise would have taken
place, and by then I think I was aware that Mr Mably had
conducted that exercise, and therefore he looked at some
of the documents as part of the unused material. But
I don't know what, and as I set out there, I don't think
he recollects precisely what either.
Q. The Met view of the email was that it didn't have the
significance that the Guardian attributed to it. That's
paragraph 73. But there came a time, I think on 17 or
18 July, when you yourself saw the email; is that right?
A. Yes. On that Friday, once I was told that we didn't
have it, the police did have it, I asked for it to be
sent over as quickly as possible and I think it was
faxed through to my office and then I obviously looked
at it.
Q. We're obviously going to have to be careful, given the
ongoing investigation, as to exactly what your reaction
was to it, but indeed, to be fair, you are careful in
the last sentence of paragraph 74 that it suggested that
there were other possible suspects, and that's really as
high as one need put it?
A. Exactly. As I said before lunch, I was concerned as to
whether there had been other suspects. I'd got the
reassurance I'd got from the police and David Perry, and
when I saw the email, I was a little concerned that that
didn't correspond with what I'd understood to be the
position only two or three days before.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There are two possible values to such
a document, and if I take an analogy which Mr Jay might
like, one is that it could be -- and I'm not talking
about this document, but in these circumstances --
a smoking gun which led directly to a target; another is
that it is a flag saying, "Look here", or, "Dig more".
A. I thought it was probably the second, but even if it was
the second, it didn't correspond with what I'd thought
I'd got a reasonably firm assurance about, namely that
there hadn't been thought to be other suspects.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And that's the point.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And that's probably the long and the
short of this email, isn't it? It's not whether it is
significant in itself as demonstrative material, but
whether it should have alerted somebody to carry on.
A. I would agree with that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm putting it quite carefully
because I don't want to go too far. I don't know what
use will be made of it, but I'm simply trying to provide
a context for this Inquiry as to the value that can be
taken from it. Is that a fair reflection of the
position?
A. That's how I viewed it at the time.
MR JAY
You had a meeting with Mr Perry on the afternoon of
17 July. At the meeting he, I infer, brought along his
notes of the conference. He annotated his agenda of
21 August 2006, which we have under tab 41 and we've
looked at earlier today with Mr Perry.
A. I can't actually remember whether he had that document.
I certainly had before me his document of 14 July 2009,
where he'd said -- where he'd indicated the answers that
he'd got to various questions. Whether he had his own
document, I don't remember, but we did obviously talk
about that conference and the answer he was given,
because I was simply at that stage, as it were, laying
the Neville email alongside his notes of 14 July 2009
recalling the 2006 conference, and asking him in the
first instance whether he had ever seen the Neville
email before and what he'd made of it.
Q. Yes. What was his answer to that, to the best of your
recollection?
A. He didn't recall the Neville email. He wasn't
100 per cent sure, and I wouldn't have expected him to
have been 100 per cent sure. He'd been asked by me to
come in at very short notice and to discuss this, but he
didn't recollect having seen it.
Q. Thank you. Later that afternoon, you issued a press
statement.
A. Well, no. Yes, I did, but my --
Q. Sorry, yes, you're right.
A. My first -- having discussed it with Mr Perry, I was
concerned that there really ought to be some further
investigation of the "for Neville" email, because
I didn't for myself see how it sat with what I had
understood to be the situation. And whilst I couldn't
direct the police to investigate anything, I obviously
did have the option of writing to Mr Yates to invite him
to at least consider whether he should have a further
look at the Neville email, and that was what I thought
was probably the best thing to do in the circumstances
as I saw them that afternoon.
A press statement was issued to that effect, but
then I had a series of phone calls, first with the
Commissioner and then with John Yates later that
evening, and as a result of that I agreed to meet
John Yates on the following Monday morning to discuss
the "for Neville" email.
Q. Yes, and you issued a press statement which was, if
I may say so, deliberately plus it was temporising. You
said that the DPP was now considering whether any
further action was necessary, pending your meeting with
Mr Yates that Monday following; is that correct?
A. Precisely. My instinct was that there ought to be
a further investigation of the "for Neville" email. I'd
had my discussion with John Yates and he had put various
points to me and I had agreed that we would therefore
have a meeting on the Monday morning to further discuss
the email, rather than me issuing anything of substance
that evening.
Q. When you had those discussions with Mr Yates in the
early evening of 17 July, did he give you the impression
that he was unwilling to investigate this further or
not?
A. There was a degree of pushback against my suggestion
that there should be a reinvestigation or further
examination of the "for Neville" email. To the best of
my recollection, Mr Yates said that it was not new, it
had been seen before, and thus I took from that that he
didn't consider at that stage there was any point for
investigating the "for Neville" email.
But, to be fair to him, it was the Friday evening.
He did not think -- there was a degree of pushback to my
initial suggested course of action, but he agreed to
a meeting on the Monday morning so we could discuss it
further. And that seemed to be sensible. We were by
then quite late into a long Friday, and so we agreed to
meet on the Monday morning.
Q. Yes, and you did meet at 11 o'clock. The notes are
under tab 47, but the version we have, the notes of the
document have come out very badly in the photocopy, but
we do, as it happens, have a much clearer version. Do
you have one?
A. I have one. Whether it's as clear as the version you
have, I don't know. I've done my best to decipher
what's in it.
Q. Thank you. (Handed).
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
MR JAY
I'll provide one to the technician. I don't think
there's anything here that's going to be problematic.
You summarise this in your statement.
A. Yes.
Q. Can I ask, first of all, whose notes these are, if you
know?
A. These are notes that I think came from the Metropolitan
Police of this meeting. I'm not sure who amongst the
Metropolitan Police team kept the notes but they're
notes that came from them. Or that one of their team
made.
Q. Can we just alight on a few points. You can see the
reference to the email being part of the sensitive
material, about six lines down, do you see that?
A. Yes.
Q. "David Perry on Friday, Louis Mably spoke --"
It's not altogether clear. I think it says:
"Carmen Dowd on unused material and old [something]
review of our documents."
A. I think from memory, and having tried to analyse these
minutes, I think I was outlining the history as I saw
it, and I was then explaining to those present there
that I had spoken to David Perry and that he didn't
recall seeing it, and so the first thing I wanted to
know was: did the police have a note of the "for
Neville" email having been considered in 2006/2007,
because it seemed to me that might short-circuit the
issue, so that was the first thing.
Q. Yes. And on the second page, but perhaps this page
shouldn't go up on the screen, because you do say
something specific about the email.
A. I do.
Q. You say you understood no other suspects. The email now
tends to suggest possibly something else.
A. Yes.
Q. I think that's as far as we need take it.
A. I mean, I was simply really expressing to that meeting
what I've just expressed to this Inquiry, that what I'd
understood to be the position didn't on the face of it
sit very well with this email.
Q. Mr Williams then made his contribution towards the
bottom of the second page. There's a reference to
Mulcaire, "June/July, bigger due to victims MPs,
et cetera", I think it says. "Case conference 21
August". And then it says, "Discussion other
defendants. Lots of material. Names, et cetera.
Scope, production order, discussion."
So it's possible that Mr Williams was saying that at
the conference on 21 August there was some discussion
about the possibility of bringing in other defendants,
because there was lots of material, but that would all
depend on the production order. Is that right?
A. I think I can't remember precisely, but I certainly
wouldn't quarrel that that's what he said. It makes
sense, not least because once I'd heard what he said,
I then said -- I then said, as it were, to the meeting,
"David Perry and Louis Mably asked if evidence of other
journalists, told not and saw no evidence to support."
So having heard from Mr Williams, I said, well, as
I understood it, something had been said by way of an
answer in that conference which suggested there wasn't,
and David Perry had said there wasn't further evidence,
so that was my response to him, so that makes perfect
sense.
Q. On the top of the fourth page, this is an important
point, what you say:
"David and Louis asked if evidence."
A. Yes.
Q. Can you read the next bit? It relates to other
journalists.
A. "[Something] of other journalists."
Q. Right. So you are?
A. "Told not. Saw no evidence to support".
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'll tell you. It's:
"Does the evidence", and the arrow means "lead to",
"editor and other journalists."
MR JAY
Thank you.
A. What was happening was Mr Williams was saying -- I had
said, look, I understood the position that there were no
other suspects. I've now seen this email. For me, just
laying the two things side by side, they don't appear to
correlate, and then was there any consideration of it?
Mr Williams explained to the meeting that there had been
this discussion about other defendants on 21 August, to
which I responded, well, I had understood at the
21 August conference that David Perry had asked
questions as to whether there was anything that led to
the editor or other journalists and was told not, and
nothing to support it. And nobody's ever contradicted
that to me.
Q. That was the key question I had.
A. I'm sorry.
Q. Once you said that, did Mr Williams or anybody else say,
"No, that's not what happened at the conference on
21 August"?
A. No, they didn't say it then and nobody's ever said it to
me.
Q. Okay. It doesn't appear from this note --
A. No.
Q. -- that you were contradicted.
A. No.
Q. And that is -- or is possibly a key point.
A. Yes.
Q. When it says "KS does not recall Neville", that's
David Perry?
A. I think I'm reciting what David had told me on the
Friday.
Q. But Mr Williams' response is more or less in the middle
of the page.
A. Yes.
Q. "Lots of --" is that "names seized"? "Email dated 2005.
Prosecution strategy."
Again I'm sorry --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
"Lots of names seized."
That's the first point. The second point is that
the email was dated 2005, which didn't fit with the
timing of the then current charges. And there was the
prosecution strategy which he described. Gordon Taylor
charge. Or change network.
MR JAY
Yes. This is the mobile network changing, I think.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
"Only keep 186 days' data. Can never go back and
get data."
And then something about disproving calls.
A. I do remember being told that there would be a problem
with an email dating back to 2005, in that I think I was
being told that the data would only be held for
a certain period of time, and therefore it would at
least be very difficult to investigate.
Q. Yes.
A. I think, to be fair, two lines down, I accepted at that
meeting that in and of itself, the email didn't prove
anything.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But again, it's the first few words
of that sentence that matter.
A. Yes.
MR JAY
Yes. And if you link it with other evidence, query
where that might go.
A. Well, precisely.
Q. Then it says:
"Context, bin liner [this is still Mr Williams
talking probably], lots of material with names,
et cetera, could be journalists."
A. Yes.
Q. Then Mr Yates chips in:
"No new material seen by counsel."
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, it's not -- what he's saying is:
"This is not [underline not] new material."
MR JAY
Yes, "seen by counsel". So presumably he's not
accepting that leading counsel had said he hadn't seen
the email; is that right?
A. His view was none of this was new material. I was
concerning myself with stuff which had been seen at the
time and, in his view, seen by counsel. I can't now
recall whether he meant leading counsel or junior
counsel, and he may not have been specific.
Q. Yes.
A. Then he said "seen by" something else, and I'm not sure
I can decipher the next -- "seen by team"?
Q. Yes.
A. Focus on -- we focus -- I recall we focused on the set
parameters, which was an operational matter for the
police, and then he expressed the view the email will go
nowhere.
Q. "PW can construct [is it?] rationale from ..."
Is that "time"?
A. "... the time".
Q. That's going back to the 2005 point. Then he's saying
on behalf of the police:
"Would we consider -- yes -- is it ..."
And then the reference to police resources.
"No."
A. I think Mr Yates was saying we can construct the
rationale at the time, but if you ask the question
whether it was good use of police resources, he at that
stage was not of the view that it was.
Q. I don't think we need read the rest of it, but one of
the upshots of the meeting was that you were going to go
back to Mr Perry for advice as to the evidential
significance of the email?
A. I have to say, I wasn't entirely comfortable with the
position we were reaching in the meeting, because
I wasn't -- Mr Perry told me he didn't think he'd seen
the email. Mr Yates was telling me that it wasn't new,
it had been, as it were, considered at the time, which
would then perhaps answer all the concerns I had. And
I wasn't inclined to leave it there. It seemed to me
that what I -- the sensible thing for me to do in those
circumstances was to formally ask David Perry the
questions: did you see it at the time? If so, what did
you make of it? If you didn't see it at the time and
now looking at it in 2009, what do you make of it now?
That would close down my concerns one way or the other.
So, rather than pursue, as I'd intended on Friday,
the invitation to Mr Yates to reopen the investigation
at least to that extent, to which he was pushing back to
some extent, I'd thought the next best option, as far as
I was concerned, was to go to David Perry for some
further advice.
Q. Yes. So two things were happening, really
contemporaneously. One, you were instructing
David Perry to answer your questions in the form of
a further advice --
A. Yes.
Q. -- and the police officer, Mr Williams, was preparing
a note which would assist in provide some of the
background for Mr Perry writing that advice? Do I have
it --
A. That's right. I said I was going to ask David Perry to
do the advice. There was no pushback against that, I
have to say straight away. On the contrary, it was
agreed that Mr Williams would assist in that process by
providing a background note so that Mr Perry could
advise as swiftly as possible, and that's what he did.
Q. The advice Mr Perry was being asked to give, in the
circumstances -- well, he was being asked to provide it
overnight. In the circumstances he was busy the
following day in the Court of Appeal, and you say in
paragraph 5 that you think that both he and you would
now agree that with the benefit of hindsight it would
have been better if he'd had a little more time, being
given the opportunity to check his papers before
committing himself?
A. Yes. I was under pressure to complete my exercise as
swiftly as possible. I was anxious for David to turn
this around as quickly as possible, but -- and he
willingly did what he could overnight, but given the
significance of this material I think, as I say, he and
I would now accept that they were not ideal
circumstances to be dealing with something which in the
event may be of some significance. But I don't -- I
mean it was me asking David Perry to do this as quickly
as possible.
Q. Sorry, please continue.
A. I'm sorry?
Q. Sorry, there was a problem with our machine, but I think
it's now come back to life.
A. I was simply indicating that it was certainly me. I was
asking for this to be done as swiftly as possible, and
David was doing his best to help me with the exercise
that I was engaged in.
Q. We know that Mr Perry, because he said so, based himself
heavily on a note which Mr Williams prepared, which is
our tab 49.
A. Yes.
Q. Which was emailed at about 6 o'clock that evening. You
can see the view of the law that was set out in that
note on the second page, under the heading "Challenges".
A. Yes.
Q. It's pretty prescriptive:
"To prove the criminal offence of interception, the
prosecution must prove that the actual message was
intercepted prior to it being accessed by the intended
recipient."
So that's the narrow view of the law.
A. Yes.
Q. Then there is an analysis on page 5 of the "for Neville"
email.
A. Yes.
Q. Which again we possibly don't want to dwell on too
closely because it may or may not be considered by
a criminal court.
A. Yes.
Q. But we can see what is said there.
A. Yes.
Q. We can move on through your statement that the advice
from Mr Perry arrived the following morning, 21 July.
A. Yes.
Q. We've seen that advice with Mr Perry this morning. Of
course, in the meantime, you'd received a letter from
a Member of Parliament asking you to direct the police
to reopen their inquiries.
A. Yes.
Q. Of course, that's something that wouldn't have been
within your constitutional remit to do.
A. No, I have no power to direct the police to investigate
anything.
Q. We've looked at Mr Perry's advice. It speaks for
itself, I'm not going to ask you further questions about
it. But I can ask you this general question: what was
your reaction to it?
A. Well, I accepted Mr Perry's advice. I'd asked him
specific questions about the "for Neville" email. In
a sense, at that stage, the answer I was most interested
in was: what do you make of the email now? And he had
given an answer to that. He had far greater knowledge
of the case than I did. I'd asked him four very
specific questions, to which he'd given the answers, and
I accepted his advice.
Q. Thank you. His view of the law was of course one he was
going to revise the following year, but it was perhaps
for you a subsidiary concern in the light of your
primary concern, being the significance of the email.
Have I correctly understood it?
A. That's right. I think although -- I don't think at that
stage anybody was suggesting that legal advice from the
CPS was the reason why the investigation didn't go
further in 2006/2007. That only became an issue later
on.
Q. Right. You wrote back to the Select Committee on
30 July.
A. Yes.
Q. It's tab 59. And you obviously based yourself heavily
on leading counsel's view and on Mr Williams' note, and
we can see on the second page of that document that in
relation to the law, you pithily summarised what
Mr Perry had said:
"To prove the criminal offence of interception the
prosecution must prove that the actual message was
intercepted prior to it being accessed by the intended
recipient."
A. That was prepared from Mr Perry's advice, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Starmer, could I just take you
back to the advice and ask you one question? In
retrospect, and I appreciate that it's very, very easy
to sit here years on and try and analyse everything
without cognisance of what happened subsequently,
I understand that, but do you think that the way that
you asked Mr Perry the question and perhaps the way that
he answered it was more directed to the "is this
a smoking gun" question rather than "is this a flag that
says dig here"? Do you see the question I'm asking?
A. No, I do. I mean, I think I can only answer that by
reference to the history. My first instinct was flag,
as I've indicated, rather than smoking gun. It was for
that reason that I thought the sensible course was to
ask Mr Yates to consider investigating the email
further.
It was clear to me from my discussions with Mr Yates
that that wasn't an invitation that at that stage he was
necessarily going to accept, so that option didn't seem
viable. I then decided to ask Mr Perry.
In retrospect, it was -- to pose a set of questions
for Mr Perry was very difficult for him to answer when
only looking and bearing down on the "for Neville"
email. What I really wanted was some help on whether
this was a sensible basis for looking again at any of --
for further investigation.
But I certainly take the point. I was asking him to
bear down on one single email out of context, but that
was my secondary option at that stage. My first option
was the one that I'd wanted to pursue on the Friday
evening.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand entirely. The only
reason that it's important to try and unpick all this is
because of the concern about the time it took to get the
whole thing going again.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And the allegations that have been
made about why it wasn't got going.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm sure you understand.
A. I do.
MR JAY
The view of the law you express there, you tell us
in paragraph 106, was one that you were later to reflect
upon. Indeed, in 2010. Although it did form the basis
of your evidence to the Select Committee on 3 November
2009.
A. Yes. Essentially, once David Perry had given me his
advice at the end of 2009, I felt that I'd completed the
exercise I'd set for myself. There were then some
exchanges with Select Committees on discrete issues, but
when I later came to look again at the law in 2010,
I was concerned that that way, that interpretation
certainly wasn't the only interpretation of those
provisions.
Q. What happens through the rest of 2009 we can cover
reasonably briefly, Mr Starmer. You say in
paragraph 108 that Mr Yates gave evidence to the Select
Committee on 2 September 2009. It was on that occasion
that he said that he completed his assessment of the
case, his establishment of the fact exercise, in one
day. That wasn't a point, though, which resonated with
you until much later, was that right?
A. No. To be honest, I hadn't particularly focused on how
long Mr Yates had taken. It's only recently I thought
about whether it would -- in relation to my exercise,
I asked the team to look at it. They came and presented
something to me and I took time to study it. I didn't
even know at that stage whether he meant that he spent
a day on his part of the job, which his team had already
prepared, or whether it was the start and the end of the
exercise. I acknowledge that he said it in September
2009. I didn't hear it. If I read it, I didn't read
anything particularly into it. I had understood he'd
looked at whatever he needed to look to, to come to the
conclusions he had, and it was as simple as that.
Q. Implicit in that, I think, by the time you did realise
the significance of the brevity with which Mr Yates had
considered this on 9 July 2009, you became somewhat
concerned, is that --
A. My concern then was that I had been told in July 2009,
in confident terms by Mr Yates, that all of this had
been looked at, it's nothing new. "Mr Starmer, you
needn't concern yourself". When I really focused on the
fact that this had all happened in a day, I became
increasingly concerned about the confidence with which
those answers had been given to me.
Q. The only other relevant event, as it were, in 2009 is to
be found under tab 66 which is our page 18657, which was
your letter to the chair of the Select Committee.
A. Yes.
Q. Which gave the narrow view of the law. We know, because
we saw it this morning, this was based almost word for
word on Mr Mably's email which set out that narrow view,
which we looked at with Mr Perry at tab 64.
A. Yes. I think it's fair to say that the team that were
preparing my evidence for the Select Committees were
drawing on the views that counsel had given them and
double-checking them with counsel, and to that extent,
whatever counsel recollected to be the position was then
being put into my evidence to the Select Committees.
I mean, I don't criticise them for that. In a sense,
they didn't have very much else to go on.
Q. Thank you. We're now into 2010, Mr Starmer. I've been
asked to put to you a point on paragraph 114 of your
statement, which is the reference to 24 February 2010
and the CMS committee publishing its report, which
stated that the police had been wrong not to investigate
further the contract or the "for Neville" email.
The question is this: given that the CMS committee's
conclusion differed from yours, didn't that cause you to
reconsider, and in particular cause the police to carry
out further investigation?
A. Well, I can't answer the second part of that. For my
part, I think I felt that having gone through the
exercise with Mr Perry, I'd exhausted any further work
I could do on the "for Neville" email. I mean, I had
suggested at the time it be further investigated, and
was pushed back against that. I'd asked David Perry.
He'd given me a series of answers. For me, that --
I wasn't sure what else, as DPP, I could do. I couldn't
direct anything to happen at that stage.
But I do accept that I could then have gone in for
another round of meetings with Mr Yates in the way that
I had in 2009, but at that stage certainly so far as
I was concerned as DPP, after the end of July 2009,
I hadn't looked at it in great detail and no new live
case had come on to the CPS radar.
Q. Thank you. We can fast-forward to 1 September 2010.
It's page 18142, page 34 of 63, which is the piece in
the New York Times.
A. Yes.
Q. Further matters came out over the succeeding days which
I'm going to gloss over because they may be relevant to
later trials.
What happened at paragraph 120 is Mr Yates, on
6 September, made contact with the Crown Prosecution
Service.
A. Yes.
Q. Telephoned the Chief Crown Prosecutor for London, who
you say had had no dealings with the matter -- it's
unclear why he did that.
A. I don't know why he did that.
Q. And she sent you an email the following morning to say
that Mr Yates wanted to bring you up to date with what
they were doing. Apparently he had told her that he did
not intend to reopen the investigation, but merely
intended to clarify what had been said.
Now, the email is tab 75.
A. Yes.
Q. Given what it says, I think we probably should gloss
over it, but it's clear that Mr Yates wasn't going to
take the matter any further at that stage, was he?
A. No. I was being told that he was not talking about
a reinvestigation. This was coming, obviously,
second-hand to me.
Q. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It may be that it went to your
colleague rather than to your office on the basis that
she answered the telephone, because it says he was
calling to speak to the director.
A. No. Alison Saunders by then was Chief Crown Prosecutor
for London.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I see, so in a different building?
A. So she was heading up a different team in London, not
the specialist division that had been dealing with it,
and would not, I would have thought, been answering the
phones, just in the ordinary way.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
A. To be fair, she may have been talking to him about
something else.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
MR JAY
I think I'd like to take you forward to
paragraph 125, when you explain that you were beginning
to have doubts, and you had been having doubts for some
time, as to what you describe as the "emphatic view of
the constructions of sections 1 and 2 of RIPA".
A. The more I looked at the advice that Mr Perry had given
me in 2009, the more I was concerned that whilst it was
undoubtedly one view, it wasn't the only view, and the
more I looked at it, the more I was concerned that there
was a wider view which was at least a tenable
alternative.
Q. So perhaps unusually you sought now two pieces of
written advice, first from the original counsel, Perry
and Mably, but secondly from someone new altogether,
Mark Heywood QC?
A. Yes.
Q. Is that something you've often done, get two pieces of
advice on the same point, or was this an exceptional
course?
A. This was an exceptional course. I, looking backwards,
was concerned at the way it had been put in emphatic
terms in 2009. I was, looking forward, concerned that
we once and for all really needed to have a clear view
on this, because this was now September 2010 and
I thought it likely that for the first time under my
watch we would have to give a view on these provisions
that others would rely on, and I wanted to make sure
that I'd thought that through as carefully as I could
before we gave advice.
It was now becoming live to me. I was about to have
to oversee advice on these provisions and I wanted to
make sure I got it right, so I wanted the backward view
and a forward view.
I have to say, and this leads into further
discussions, you would have noticed that Mr Heywood was
jointly instructed by others, and in the background here
was also a concern about the legislation. My view was:
if it was unclear, that was extremely unhelpful, and at
one stage I was of the view that that lack of clarity
needed to be resolved and brought to the attention of
others, and so Mark Heywood was really advising in
a much broader sense on the legislation as a whole.
Q. Yes.
A. My concern was straightforward. If I said to any
incoming investigative team, "Adopt the broad approach",
they did that, built a case, and the court ruled that it
was the narrow approach that applied, the case they'd
built might not go very far. I didn't want to do that
unless I'd got some pretty solid advice. I didn't want
to take that risk, rather.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Jay, have you moved on from the
New York Times article?
MR JAY
I have.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Could I ask one question about that,
if you don't mind, Mr Starmer. It's not the article
itself, it's what happened thereafter. Because at
paragraph 123 you make the point that one of the people
who'd spoken to the New York Times was Mr Hoare.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Who'd made some admissions but also
some serious allegations, and the question then arose as
to whether he should be treated as a whistle-blower,
a significant witness or a suspect.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And you make the point in your
statement that Mr Husain didn't express a view and that
it was an operational decision for the police.
Would you ever be asked to advise about that sort of
question? I ask for this reason, that here's somebody
who's come out of the woodwork, as it were, and said
this. If you're going to interview him as a suspect,
there's a very real risk as to what will happen.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If you're not, then you're going to
go rather further into what he might say, and so you
might learn something.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm just interested to know --
I appreciate it's an operational decision for the
police, but where the CPS comes in all this and whether
you'd expect to be asked, whether that's the sort of
question you are asked, and I'm not asking you to give
a view about this case, but just so that we understand.
A. It varies from case to case, and in more sensitive and
complicated cases we are asked, usually at an earlier
stage, our views on usually the evidence. It may be in
certain cases we would be asked whether it would be
better to treat this witness in way A rather than way B,
or at least what would the evidential ramifications be
of treating the witness in way A rather than way B. So
I wouldn't -- it wouldn't surprise me. It would be
rare, but I wouldn't have any difficulty and it wouldn't
surprise me if I saw that we'd been asked to give advice
about whether it would be more sensible, if one was
looking through a prosecutor's mind, to interview under
caution or to treat the witness in some other way.
I wouldn't -- I'd think it was rare but I wouldn't think
it was strange and in an appropriate case I think it
would be a good thing to do.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But you weren't asked in this case?
A. In this case, I think the police officer indicated,
I believe in an email, that he might be interested in
Mr Husain's view, but in the end, no view was ever
expressed and the decision was taken to go ahead and
interview under caution without any reference to us.
MR JAY
You got advice from Mr Perry, which we've seen this
morning, which, as it were, rowed back from the sort of
adamantine view he'd expressed the previous year and
probably to the position where he was on 21 August 2006.
A. Yes.
Q. Now that he'd seen all the papers. He also made it
clear that it wasn't necessary to resolve and be in the
proceedings in the events which happened, whether the
narrow view or the broad view was correct, for the
I suppose simple reason that the point was never taken
by Mr Mulcaire in relation to counts 16 to 20, he'd
simply pleaded guilty?
A. Yes.
Q. Can I deal with this out of sequence in terms of your
statement. Three days later, you got advice from
Mr Heywood, who was, as it were, the fresh mind
approaching this case.
A. Yes.
Q. His view, in a very detailed and thorough advice, which
brought into play both underlying European directive and
instructions to parliamentary counsel, was that on
balance the broader view was correct. Have I correctly
summarised it?
A. That's correct, yes.
Q. But I don't think we need look at his advice.
A. No, no, no. There was another significance of
Mr Perry's -- Mr Perry advised in exactly the way you'd
set out and by then he'd had the opportunity to look
more carefully with more material and set out in much
fuller terms the approach that had been taken, and I was
perfectly satisfied to accept that, the way in which he
said it had been approached.
But as I set out in paragraph 129, it occurred to
me, because I had been concerned about the "for Neville"
email back in July 2009, I was concerned to know
whether, given that Mr Perry was now expressing
a slightly different version of the interpretation to
the one he expressed in July 2009, whether that affected
his view of the "for Neville" email, because I was
slightly concerned that it may have been the narrow
approach that it articulated at the time that made him
think that there was nothing, as it were, further to --
the email would take us no further.
So, really out of an abundance of caution, I asked
Mr Perry to look again at his advice on the "for
Neville" email and put it through his new -- the
interpretation that he had set out in September 2010 to
assure me that his view was still the same or, if not,
to let me know.
Q. Your concern was that it was at least possible that
a particular view of the law might colour counsel's
approach to the evaluation of the evidence in the case,
was that it?
A. Yes. He'd set out an emphatic view of the law in 2009
in the middle of an advice on the "for Neville" email.
He'd then, a year and several months later, provided
a fuller advice, which didn't take the emphatic view in
the same way, and I was concerned to know whether that
affected the conclusion he had reached in July 2009, or
whether his conclusion remained the same,
notwithstanding, as it were, the slightly changed
position on the interpretation.
Q. Yes. But the police might want me to put the point to
you in this way, that it was Carmen Dowd's view of the
law expressed on 25 April 2006 which coloured the
police's assessment of the evidence, and their approach
to the investigation, because the narrow view of the law
required them to do far more in terms of the
investigative choices they had to undertake. Do you see
that point?
A. I do see that, and let me deal with it. I don't doubt
that the police thought that they might have to prove
that a message had been intercepted before it was
listened to and that's why they bothered to get the
evidence they did, technical evidence, to try and prove
that. The issue I've always had here is whether any of
that affected the scope of the investigation, in other
words whether advice from the CPS was the reason why the
investigation didn't go further in 2006/2007.
I do not think it did, not least because on my
analysis of the advice at no point did Carmen Dowd ever
suggest that RIPA alone was the offence that could be
relied on. She initially said RIPA and the Computer
Misuse Act. It's true to say the Computer Misuse Act
option was considered and discarded later on, but by
then the conspiracy option had been opened up, so at no
stage could anybody have thought that the only basis for
prosecuting is RIP
A. That was my first point.
My second point was that Carmen Dowd had always
expressed herself in a pretty provisional way. She
said, "This is my view, we're going to have to come back
to it." It was obvious to me, from looking at the
indictment, that the team as a whole could not have been
taking the narrow approach, for all the reasons that
were rehearsed with Mr Perry this morning, and beyond
all that, I couldn't see then and I can't see now how
the narrow interpretation of RIPA would stop you even
investigating other defendants. Because until you
investigate, you don't even know whether you're going to
get evidence which fits the narrow interpretation.
So there was all the analysis of the facts and the
history that led me to reject the suggestion that at one
stage was being put forward, that this investigation was
curtailed because of CPS advice, and there was the
common sense that you don't not investigate because of
a narrow legal -- even if you genuinely think there's
a narrow legal interpretation, because you just don't
know what you're going to turn up, and an investigation
could have turned up evidence which fitted the narrow
view.
So I don't think it accorded with the history and it
didn't accord with my commonsense approach.
Q. Yes. It might be said in addition that anybody who was
at the conference on 21 August 2006 would clearly have
understood that if other defendants were going to be
brought into the frame because the evidence demonstrated
that they might be guilty of offences, the perfect
vehicle for bringing them in was the offence of
conspiracy, which would not require the narrow view of
the law?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. Mr Perry, to go back to September 2010, was asked
by you to review the "for Neville" email through the
prism of the broad view of the law and his answer was
the same, but he expressed himself -- tab 86 -- really
in terms of the further investigations approach rather
than the smoking gun approach?
A. Yes.
Q. He said in paragraph 8:
"I should also make clear that the conclusion
reached in my draft advice, namely it's unlikely I would
have advised the CPS/MPS that further investigations
should be undertaken in relation to the email of 29 June
2005, remains unchanged."
A. Yes. That was really my only concern at that stage in
relation to, as it were, double-checking Mr Perry's
advice. Or asking him to do so.
Q. It would have been extremely odd had he said it had
changed as a result of his reformulation of the law --
A. No, I --
Q. -- but you were certainly right to ask him.
A. I appreciate that. I had been concerned in 2009 about
the Neville email and I had remained concerned about it
and I was perhaps out of an abundance of caution asking
Mr Perry again just to look at it to assure me that
there was no change of position.
Q. To be fair, to add to the picture, Mr Heywood made the
point, as I've also made perhaps more laboriously than
he did, that the inchoate offences of conspiracy or
attempt would not depend on a narrow view of RIPA, and
he said that in terms in his advice, didn't he?
A. That's right. And from Mr Heywood, I was very concerned
if I was going to be asked at this stage to advise the
police, either in relation to the matters arising from
the New York Times or at any future stage, what was
going to be said, as it were, on my watch in my name.
Q. Thank you. On 1 October 2010, there was another meeting
between police officers and your officials, and we've
seen tab 89 already, which is the notes of the meeting.
A. Yes.
Q. I took Mr Perry to paragraphs 3.10 and 3.11 of that.
A. Yes.
Q. There are other parts of the notes which we can't look
at for present purposes because they might bear on an
investigation.
A. Yes. I wasn't at the meeting. I had always assumed
that that was Mr Husain and Mr Clements summarising what
they understood to be Mr Perry's position to those
present at that meeting; whether what's recorded is an
accurate summary or not, I simply don't know.
Q. There was another meeting later that month on
19 October. You refer to that in paragraph 136.
A. Yes.
Q. There appear to be some notes, what may be notes, of
that meeting at the back of the document in tab 92.
A. Tab 91 are the notes of the meeting. Tab 92 is
a document that Simon Clements had with him at the
meeting and some notes he made for himself, but the
minutes are at tab 91.
Q. Thank you. Tab 2 is a sort of aide-memoire, 18756.
There is an issue, I don't think you can really take it
further, but I should refer to it. You see the arrow
slap in the middle of the page?
A. Yes.
Q. "Alerting them to LE6 understanding."
And then:
"DPP [underline that] no one wants to reopen the
investigation."
A. Yes.
Q. I think the suggestion might be that you were expressing
a degree of frustration that no one in the police wanted
to reopen the investigation, but --
A. I don't recall what I said. I've seen this and looked
at it carefully and asked Mr Clements what he was
recording and he recollects that I was expressing
a frustration that nobody appeared willing to reopen
this investigation.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In the light of your earlier evidence
from the previous year, that frustration might be an
accurate reflection of what you were saying a few
minutes ago.
A. Precisely. It wouldn't -- I honestly can't remember
what I said at that meeting but I obviously said
something. Mr Clements does remember it and wrote it
down at the time and thought I was frustrated because it
appeared to me that others wouldn't reopen the
investigation.
I'd had the meeting back in 2009 where a course of
action I thought was reasonably sensible didn't look as
if it was going to find favour, and I'd been told in
September 2010 that whatever else was going to happen,
this was not going to be reinvestigated. I think if
I was expressing any frustration, it was probably borne
of those two things.
Q. Thank you. The more nuanced view of the law found its
way into the letter to the chairman of the Home Affairs
Committee this time.
A. Yes.
Q. It's at tab 93, but you set out the relevant part at
paragraph 137 of your witness statement.
A. Yes.
Q. I don't think we need look at that, but it reflected the
view of two distinguished silks now that certainly one
of them was saying that the broad view on balance was
right, and the other was saying it's highly arguable
both ways?
A. Yes. The reason -- it was set out in that letter, and
the version that's in paragraph 137, quoted, was the
version that I asked my prosecutors to use in any advice
they gave from then on, because I didn't want there to
be any lack of clarity at that stage as to the approach
that could be taken.
Q. Now we move on to Operation Varec, paragraph 139.
We are, I'm afraid, going to have to skate over some
documents because in my view they can't be looked at now
because they could bear on the ongoing police
investigation. But can you without referring to those
documents summarise what Operation Varec was about?
A. Yes. As I understand it, there was -- as a result of
what was published in the New York Times, various
individuals were approached and some were interviewed
under caution. At the end of that exercise, the
Metropolitan Police, although they considered that they
didn't have sufficient evidence to reopen the
investigation at that stage, required or wanted advice
from the Crown Prosecution Service and advice was given.
Q. You gave a press statement on 10 December 2010, which we
can look at under tab 97.
A. Yes.
Q. Which really sums up the then contemporary thinking.
It's page 18806.
A. Yes.
Q. You referred to the history, you referred to the
New York Times piece, the fact that Sean Hoare had been
interviewed but had not co-operated, and you said:
"The CPS and the MPS intend to convene a panel of
police officers and prosecutors to assess those
allegations with a view to determining whether or not
investigations should take place."
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's only in the event of further
allegations being made, isn't it?
MR JAY
My apologies.
A. That's precisely right. Allegations had been made in
September. A number of individuals had been interviewed
under caution. Pretty well all of them had said nothing
under caution, and therefore that didn't yield a great
deal. But it occurred to me and to others that there
might be other allegations and that we needed, going
forward, to think of a sensible way of making sure that,
if possible, there was a joint approach from the outset
as to how they'd be handled and hence a panel.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So in short, the police had gone
through the New York Times article and picked up all the
witnesses named in that article and sought to get some
information from them --
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- without success.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
What they hadn't done, and it's quite
clear they hadn't done, was open the room that was
marked "Caryatid", with all the evidence that was in the
room?
A. Yes.
MR JAY
We're going to move to tab 98 and therefore into
the events of 2011.
A. Yes.
Q. The year started with more questions from the Guardian
on 6 January and this was in consequence of documents
disclosed in the Sienna Miller litigation. You explain
in paragraph 148 that these weren't easy questions to
answer.
A. Yes.
Q. So there you had two openings. One was not to answer
them, or two, to ask for more wide-ranging examination
of all the materials available.
A. Yes.
Q. And you preferred the second option, notwithstanding the
resource consequences?
A. Yes.
Q. What was your thinking behind that?
A. I was -- it was a combination, I suppose, of frustration
and concern, and what appeared to me to be emerging from
the Sienna Miller civil action cast some doubt on what
I'd understood to be the position, and I felt I'd been
in that place too many times and that at that stage,
even though it was -- would be more resource-intensive,
a more wide-ranging examination was necessary, at least
to reassure me about the position.
What then happened, and I think this is
paragraph 149, was that as I understood it, some of the
information that was emerging from the Sienna Miller
civil action I was told had in fact been amongst the
unused material.
Now, this was the second time this had occurred.
The first time was in relation to the Neville email, and
now it was happening again in relation to the
Sienna Miller material. And I'm afraid at that stage
I thought nothing less than a root and branch review of
all the material that we have and the police have is now
going to satisfy me about this case. And that's why
I indicated in fact to Tim Godwin, who I think was then
Acting Commissioner, that I had for my part reached the
view that we could no longer approach this on
a piecemeal basis looking at bits of material and we
really had to roll our sleeves up and look at
everything.
Q. Yes. So there was a meeting then on Friday, 14 January.
You say in your statement Mr Yates was there, not
Mr Godwin.
A. No, I don't think Mr Godwin came. I have a vague
recollection that he may have arrived at the very end of
the meeting, but that's -- it's not recorded and that
may not be right. It actually I don't think makes any
material difference, but he certainly wasn't at the main
part of the meeting.
Q. Yes. Again the note of the meeting in the bundle could
be clearer, and to that end I've caused clearer copies
to be taken. Do you have a satisfactory copy?
A. This is tab 101, I think.
Q. It is indeed.
A. I have a copy that is reasonable, I think, from my point
of view.
Q. You kick off by setting out your thinking:
"We're labelling the problem that Carmen Dowd is not
here, KM ..."
That is?
A. Ken MacDonald. I think I had spoken to Ken to see
whether he had any recollection and he had very little
recollection.
Q. You say:
"... now attempting to say case closed with pleas in
2007."
Does that then say:
"Won't go away (eg New York Times). Civil
litigation leading to disclosure of 2006 material."
A. Yes.
Q. I can't read the next bit very well.
A. Mm.
Q. Is it "altering"?
A. I'm not sure. "Allowing"? I don't know.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's "allowing" something.
A. Yes.
MR JAY
Then it says:
"Hard to avoid questions and various committee
[something] one asking questions, therefore [you] and
John Yates may end up giving evidence."
A. "And John Yates may end up giving evidence."
Q. "Problem we have difficult to say what evidence we
looked at despite the fact that Louis examined it. Need
to know what ..."
A. "... assessment was made of the evidence of others and
impact of it."
I think.
Q. Then you posed this as a question, really:
"Time has come to reconsider everything that is/was
available therefore enabling us to give comprehensive
answer to current/future questions."
A. I think I was not only concerned that the Guardian were
asking probing questions, but given the degree of
interest, I was mindful that I was likely to be called
before a Select Committee to give evidence, and for all
the reasons I've already stated, I took the view that
I needed a bit more assurance about all of this.
Q. What Mr Yates said may be of interest to us. Can you
decipher what the next page starts off with?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
"I have no problem but it's the
handling, that is why are we doing it now. John Yates
and I have always said that if there's new evidence
we'll examine it and I stand by the interview I gave in
2006."
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
"Is there anything to add on ..."
presumably Goodman and Mulcaire?
A. Goodman and Mulcaire.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
"Likely no".
MR JAY
I'm not sure what interview was given by him in
2006.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Didn't he give a press interview at
the same time that he made the statement?
A. He was referring to 9 July.
MR JAY
That's 9 July 2009.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh. Oh, "stands by the
investigation".
MR JAY
Sorry, it's "investigation".
A. Yes.
Q. I'd like to gloss over the next bit. Can we move on
to --
A. I think there's then -- I think I was --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Can we just take that off, please.
A. One of the concerns I had was that some store was
being -- some weight was being placed on the fact that
Mr Mably had looked at the unused material, but knowing
what the disclosure exercise is, and how it's
approached, and knowing that Mr Mably had in fact no
recollection of some of the documents I discussed with
him, I don't think he'd looked at all that material, nor
in fact would he necessarily have needed to do so for
disclosure, and he was looking out for a disclosure
purpose, and therefore I was concerned that that hadn't
been looked at by a prosecutor with a view to
considering issues such as were there other defendants,
et cetera.
MR JAY
Certainly. Then the next page, the third page of
this starts off:
"The questions of civil case is difficult because
Louis Mably is the only one who can answer."
That might not say "civil".
Mr Yates then says:
"Queen v Blackburn may help in judicial review."
I think that's a very old decision of Lord Denning.
I'm not sure what that has to do with it, but never
mind.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's all about whether you can tell
the police to prosecute.
MR JAY
You can't judicially review prosecutorial
decisions. Okay.
A. I think he was contemplating whether, if anyone
judicially reviewed, what the prospects might be.
Q. You said we don't want to lose.
A. I was less concerned than Mr Yates on what might happen
on the prospect of judicial review. I just wanted an
answer to some of the questions at this stage.
Q. I think we can probably move on to the next page,
because parts of the next page have been highlighted in
my copy, possibly intentionally. Can you decipher what
is attributed to you, Mr Starmer, at the top of the next
page?
"It is only [something] for new material. The
answer is --" is that "not now"?
A. I think there was -- we were considering, one, do we
simply ask the panel to look at this, but the panel had
been set up to look at new allegations, and I was
concerned that I didn't so much want answers to the
question what does any new material show, I actually
wanted an answer to the question in relation to all of
the material. And so the debate was really at that
stage, I think, do we ask the panel to look at this or
should we do it some other way, and I think my view was
probably not the panel, because that had been set up for
new material and I didn't just want -- I was concerned
that we were looking at just bits of new materials that
came up or were missing the opportunity to look at the
whole lot.
Q. Yes. Then a police officer who is DH says:
"Operation Varec is the only new material. In terms
of Goodman/Mulcaire there's nothing new. All the stuff
is on the system."
A. Yes.
Q. Then Mr Yates says:
"Puts both organisations in difficult position.
What did we do in 2009?"
A. Yes.
Q. So he's concerned about reputational issues now and
suggesting you're in the same boat as he is. Then you
say -- I'm not quite sure what you then do say. Not
very clear.
A. I looked at the decisions made and whether they were
correct. So I was indicating to him what the scope of
my exercise was, because I, for my part, thought I was
in a different position to Mr Yates when it came to what
had happened in 2009. I for my part didn't have any
concern about looking at this material again.
Q. Then you made it clear that "this is a broader
examination to go before panel"?
A. Yes.
Q. That's 2006 and subsequent. So you're saying we're
going to look at everything?
A. Look at everything we had then, look at everything we
have now, put all of it together.
Q. Can I ask you this, without necessarily ploughing
through the text of all of this document now. What was
the mood like at this meeting? Was it all sweetness and
light between you and Mr Yates or was it something
different?
A. I was absolutely clear in my mind at the beginning of
that meeting I was going to settle for nothing less than
a full review of all this material unless somebody
blocked me access to it, and I approached it in that
way. To be fair to Mr Yates, he did not seek to block
that approach, and in the end agreed to it, but I have
to say by then I had reached the stage where I really
was not in the mood for being dissuaded from my then
course of action, I'm afraid.
Q. Yes, we understand. Matters then moved quite swiftly
to --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think we'd better give the
shorthand writer a break.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So we'll move a little bit slower
than swiftly.
MR JAY
Right.
(3.23 pm)
(A short break)
(3.32 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
During the course of the last session
a document was put on the screen for those in this room
and in the marquee to see. Mr Jay made it very clear
that some care would have to be exercised in relation to
references to the document, and I noticed that part of
the document which should not have been displayed was in
fact displayed. I do not criticise anybody for that,
but there it is.
To such extent as it is possible, no reference
should be made to that document at all. I say to such
extent as it is possible. I obviously cannot call back
that which is already in the public domain, but I would
be grateful if in the spirit that I have undertaken this
entire Inquiry, those who are reporting what has been
going on should have regard to the concern that I have
just expressed.
Is there anything else I can do, Mr Jay?
MR JAY
Sir, no.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
MR JAY
Mr Starmer, to complete the chronology, because we
are nearly there, you decided after this meeting that
your principal legal adviser, Alison Levitt QC, should
carry out the review you referred to.
A. Yes.
Q. Following discussions with the attorney, a press
statement was released, but to some large measure it was
superseded by the commencement of Operation Weeting, but
may I ask you what's happened to the review in the light
of Operation Weeting?
A. The review was begun, but 12 days later the
investigation was reopened. My principal legal adviser,
Alison Levitt, is in charge of the CPS team now advising
the police in relation to the reopened and much wider
investigation, and the view I formed is that the review
can't be completed until we've reached decisions one way
or the other whether anybody should be charged, and
I certainly wouldn't want to be publishing any review
before that stage has been reached. So to some extent,
Alison Levitt QC is now conducting the review alongside
all the other material that is now coming in on the new
investigations.
But I should make it clear I had intended the review
to be completed and to have reported on it, but once the
investigation reopened, it was obvious to me that it
wasn't a good idea to publish the results of the review
until we had completed whatever work we need to do in
relation to whether or not there should be charges.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Although to some extent the very
detailed chronology that you've provided to this Inquiry
does put in the public domain the various steps the CPS
have taken over the years.
A. No, that's absolutely true, and to some extent, once
this Inquiry was set up, it was obvious that most of the
questions that I had any concerns about were going to be
addressed through this process in any event.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm pleased somebody thinks that
something's going to be addressed by this Inquiry. I'm
not sure after yesterday that everybody does. All
right, yes.
MR JAY
Mr Starmer, we heard evidence from your
predecessor, Lord MacDonald, this morning as to the
DPP's approach to the press and media relations
generally. Is there anything that you wish to add to or
subtract from that, at least as regards your tenure of
the position of Director of Public Prosecutions?
A. No. I take the same approach as my predecessor. I've
really built on the platform that he built, and I have
approached it in much the same way for the same reason.
Q. Yes. The only other matter -- I'm going to take the
rest of your evidence as read, but one core participant
had a couple of outstanding questions on your first
statement. Unfortunately, I've mislaid them. You have
been given advance notice of them. Are you able to deal
with those questions?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In other words, do you have the
questions?
MR JAY
I have them now.
A. From memory, I think one of them, at least, was: is it
right that the CPS doesn't very often prosecute
journalists?
Q. That certainly was the question.
A. And the other was in relation to the Damian Green case,
as to whether or not we considered any journalists in
the course of deciding that case.
If I could take them in reverse order, as far as the
Damian Green case is concerned, the answer is no. It's
true some of the material which it was alleged had been
leaked found its way into at least two national
newspapers, but so far as I'm aware, there wasn't
a police investigation into the journalists, and I was
certainly never called upon to make any decision in
relation to the journalists.
In relation to the rarity of prosecutions of
journalists, it is true, they're rare. Certainly from
memory I don't think I have had to look at a case since
I've been in post where we've prosecuted a journalist.
It is rare. It does happen on occasions, but it's rare.
Q. I think the follow-up question was: is there a reason
for that, apart from maybe the obvious ones?
A. It's very difficult to give a reason for that. Rarely
do cases involving journalists come to us for
consideration, and therefore I think the issue is to do
with the approach that's taken in the investigation.
The broad view is that there's a public interest in
freedom of expression and the free flow of information
and for that reason, the conduct of most journalists is
not considered by those conducting criminal
investigations and rarely, if ever, are there clear
examples of them breaking the law that have been brought
to the attention of the CPS.
I think that's the best I can do. I mean, we have
not been called upon to consider many cases at all.
MR JAY
Yes. Those are all the questions I have for you,
Mr Starmer. Thank you very much.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Starmer, I understand that you're
still working on the matter that we discussed on the
last occasion and I'm very grateful for the continued
efforts that you're making in that regard.
A. Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It only remains for me to thank you
and your team for the obvious amount of work that's been
put into the chronology and other assistance that you've
provided the Inquiry with. Thank you.
A. Not at all.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Is that it, Mr Jay?
MR JAY
It is. I've been asked to read into the Inquiry
one statement. That's the evidence of Mr Wissgott,
which I think relates to the Police National Computer.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much indeed.
Right. The probability is that the Inquiry will
resume with evidence on the week commencing 23 April.
If in the meantime there is any aspect that needs to be
addressed, I'm sure that we'll be informed. I'm content
to allow core participants to deal with the additional
questions of law that were discussed yesterday by the
end of next week, but I do intend to provide a series of
decisions comparatively shortly thereafter.
Thank you very much. I trust everybody has
a reasonable break.
(3.45 pm)
(The hearing adjourned until
the week commencing 23 April 2012)