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Phone-hacking British tabloid newspaper becomes too sensational to survive spreading scandal
Although it's hardly a shock that brash British papers use a whatever-it-takes approach to create sensational headlines, illegal and grossly offensive phone message snooping by the largest tabloid ignited such a firestorm that Sunday's edition was its last. The News of the World, a spicy paper published since 1843, was abruptly shut by its embarrassed owner -- a global media company headed by Rupert Murdoch. He and the tabloid culture he represents are now under unprecedented British government scrutiny. The furor arose after revelations that the paper's journalists invaded the voice mail accounts of a 13-year-old murder victim, London terror bombing victims and relatives of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. A past editor, one of three people arrested Friday, is under "suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications," police say, and also is a target of investigators looking into bribes to police officers. As a result, Murdoch is "the object of an entire nation's disgust and anger," New York Times columnist Joe Nocera wrote Saturday.
The News of the World had an audited circulation exceeding 2.6 million, the largest of any English-language paper globally. News Corp., Murdoch's $33-billion media empire, bought it in 1969. The firm also owns the Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Fox News, other cable networks and film studios. Now, amid the expanding scandal, the company has paid out settlements to some of those whose phones were hacked and may need to compensate many others.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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