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Renewed Investigations by Scotland Yard in 2011 led to dozens of arrests for activities related to the phone hacking scandal. This list of persons arrested in phone-hacking scandal is a chronological listing of individuals arrested in conjunction with the illegal acquisition of confidential information by employees and other agents of news media companies referred to as the "phone hacking ...
Arrested in Milton Keynes on suspicion of offences under the Computer Misuse Act: 24 November: Bailed to 'early December' [20] Bethany Usher: Teesside University Journalism Lecturer, NotW Reporter (2006–2007) 30 November [21] Originally bailed to March 2012 but cancelled on 8 December when case dropped. Lucy Panton: Ex-NotW Crime Editor: 15 ...
The man is the sixth person to be arrested in the UK under the News International-related legal probe, Operation Elveden. [185] The 48-year-old The Sun journalist Jamie Pyatt had been arrested by detectives on 4 November 2011 investigating illegal payments to police officers by journalists and has been released on bail.
Police mounted a covert surveillance operation following the arrest of two journalists in a bid to unmask one of their sources, a tribunal has heard. ... “Three different police forces in the UK ...
Officers from Hertfordshire police arrested an LBC reporter as well as a photographer and filmmaker covering action by Just Stop Oil on the M25.
A new round of arrests was made in early 2013, with the arrest of six former News of the World journalists on 13 February, bringing the total number of people arrested as part of Operation Weeting to 32. [65] [66] On 14 March 2013, officers from Operation Weeting made a series of arrests.
The News Corporation scandal involves phone, voicemail, and computer hacking that were allegedly committed over a number of years. The scandal began in the United Kingdom, where the News International phone hacking scandal has to date resulted in the closure of the News of the World newspaper and the resignation of a number of senior members of the Metropolitan Police force.
Two financial journalists working on the City Slickers section of the Daily Mirror were convicted in 2005 for buying, tipping and then selling shares between 1999 and 2000, breaching the Financial Services Act. Investigations revealed James Hipwell and Anil Bhoyrul made at least £41,000 from those wrongdoings.