Glenn Mulcaire has identified the News of the World staff who had him hack phones, the BBC reported.
As iMediaEthics has written, Mulcaire was the private investigator hired by News of the World to hack phones. He was jailed in 2007 after being convicted of phone hacking charges, but at the time, News of the World claimed that hacking was only conducted by Mulcaire and former News of the World reporter Clive Goodman.
Mulcaire has been fighting legal orders to reveal who at News of the World knew of his hacking, and News International’s James Murdoch admitted in July 19 Parliament interview that News Corp. was paying his legal bills. Murdoch said the company would cease payment, but Mulcaire is fighting that stop payment.
According to the BBC, Mulcaire provided the names in Jul. 26 “letter to comedian Steve Coogan’s lawyers in accordance with a court order.” Coogan is suing News of the World and alleging his phone was hacked.
However, the names in the letter haven’t been revealed yet because “confidentiality issues” restrict Mulcaire’s attorney Sarah Webb, the BBC reported.
The AFP explained that Mulcaire’s attorneys are attempting to file a “court order blocking their release” of the names.
News International has declined to comment on the Mulcaire letter, both the AFP and BBC reported.
9/11 Hacking
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder met with family members of the Sept. 11 attacks to discuss the claims that News Corp. tried to hack Sept.11 victims phones, Fox News reported.
Holder reportedly explained that the investigation into News Corp. is only “preliminary” now.
The New York Daily News noted that Norman Siegel, an attorney for some Sept. 11 families, called on the FBI to review “post-attack press reports for suspicious private information, and also investigate whether computer hacking occurred.”