Murdoch pays Dowlers £3m for phone hacking
The family of the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler have been offered nearly £3m by Rupert Murdoch's News International as the company tries to draw a line under the single most damaging incident in the phone-hacking scandal.
The huge payout, which The Independent understands is to be divided between Milly's family and charities designated by them, comes after Mr Murdoch held his head in his hands in a meeting with the teenager's parents this summer and repeatedly apologised for the interception of her voicemails by his News of the World.
The revelation in July that the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire accessed Milly's mobile phone on behalf of NOTW after her disappearance in March 2002 – and that messages were deleted from her phone, giving her family false hope that she was still alive – was a tipping point in the hacking saga, unleashing a wave of public anger and revulsion which ultimately forced the closure of the 168-year-old tabloid. The revelation sparked an unprecedented crisis in the Murdoch empire, which was intensified by allegations that other victims of crime, including relatives of those killed in the 7/7 bombings and the 9/11 attacks, were also targeted.
The main principles of the settlement between NI and the Dowler family have been agreed and the package is expected to be finalised in the coming days.
It is likely that Mr Murdoch personally approved the payment to the Dowlers.
The cash sum will be divided between damages paid for the distress caused to her parents and sister, and a separate seven-figure sum which will be paid to charities chosen by the Dowler family. Following a memorial service for their daughter in 2002, Sally and Bob Dowler set up Milly's Fund, a charity that aimed to promote public safety and was later wound into the Suzy Lamplugh Trust.
Mark Lewis, the lawyer representing the Dowlers, was unavailable for comment last night.
The settlement dwarfs other payments made so far in the phone-hacking scandal, including the £100,000 paid to the actress Sienna Miller. NI also paid £700,000 to the footballers' union boss Gordon Taylor in 2008 and £1m to the publicist Max Clifford last year.
The size of the settlement with the Dowlers, who this summer saw former bouncer Levi Bellfield convicted of Milly's murder, means that the total cost to NI of paying damages to victims is almost certain to significantly exceed the £20m set aside by the company to meet the burgeoning number of High Court lawsuits against it.
News International has said it will offer settlements in all cases where it is accepted that there is evidence of phone hacking and is claimed to be tabling higher payments in return for the signing of a confidentiality clause by some victims.
Tom Watson, the Labour MP who has been a vociferous campaigner on the issue, said: "There were other families of crime victims targeted by News International. News Corp shareholders were told that cleaning up the hacking cases would cost £20m in the civil courts.
"This settlement shows the final cost to shareholders will be considerably more than that. There will be questions to answer at the News Corp AGM next month."
The transformation of the voicemail interception scandal from a story largely about gathering gossip on celebrities to a political firestorm about how Britain's biggest newspaper group interfered with a police investigation into the murder of a child was a personal nadir for Mr Murdoch.
He requested a private meeting with Milly's parents and her sister Gemma at which he repeatedly told them he was "very, very sorry". Mr Lewis, speaking at the time, said: "He was very humbled and very shaken and very sincere. I don't think somebody could have held their head in their hands so many times and say that they were sorry."
The Independent Police Complaints Commission last month launched an investigation into claims that a detective with Surrey Police passed information from the Dowler murder hunt to the NOTW.
The disappearance of Milly is also at the centre of an attempt by the Metropolitan Police to use the Official Secrets Act to force The Guardian newspaper to disclose the source of reports including the revelation that the schoolgirl's phone had been targeted.
How the case unfolded
21 March 2002
Milly Dowler, 13, disappears after school in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.
14 April 2002
The News of the World publishes a first edition story quoting from voicemails left on her mobile phone. The story is changed for later editions.
20 September 2002
Milly's remains are found in woods.
September 2009
News International executives tell MPs phone hacking was an isolated incident, confined to royal editor Clive Goodman.
4 July 2011
A lawyer for the Dowler family reveals their intention to sue NI after The Guardian discloses Milly's phone was targeted and voicemails deleted.
10 July 2011
NI announces the closure of the NOTW, saying "mistakes" have been made.
15 July 2011
Rupert Murdoch meets the Dowlers and repeatedly apologises.
19 September 2011
NI agrees £3m financial settlement with the Dowler family.
No comments:
Post a Comment