#PhoneHackingScandal
The Fall of a British Tabloid
#PhoneHackingScandal
The Fall of a British Tabloid
The News of the World phone hacking scandal was a major media and political controversy in the United Kingdom that came to light in the early 2000s and peaked in 2011. Journalists and private investigators working for the British tabloid were found to have illegally accessed the voicemails of celebrities, politicians, members of the royal family, and even victims of crime, most notably murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler. The revelation that the tabloid had deleted voicemails from Dowler’s phone sparked public outrage and led to the closure of the 168-year-old newspaper in July 2011. The scandal prompted multiple police investigations, high-profile arrests, and the Leveson Inquiry—a public investigation into press ethics and regulation. It exposed deep ethical failures within parts of the British press and raised serious concerns about media power and accountability.
HCL Firm Asked Nine Times by News International to Delete Emails
- Monday, 01 August 2011
HCL, an India-based IT firm with a contract with News International, told Parliament that it received nine requests for advice on deleting large numbers of emails between April 2010 and July 2011. The requests included deleting old mailboxes belonging to former employees, over 200,000 delivery failure messages, and working with another company to delete archive emails to make them more manageable. HCL's lawyer stated that the firm was aware of nothing abnormal or inconsistent with its contractual role and did not store any data for News International, making it "utterly without foundation" to suggest that HCL deleted material on behalf of the publisher.