Read
- Romney clawing his way back in Republican race
|
- Putin praises Cold War moles for stealing U.S. nuclear secrets
- Afghan soldier kills two NATO troops at protests
- Whitney Houston Open Casket Photo Graces National Enquirer Cover
- 'Seinfeld' Actor in Critical Condition After Apparent Suicide Attempt (Report)
Justice Department Plans Subpoenas in News Corp. 9/11 Phone Hacking Claim (Report)
The U.S. Justice Department is preparing subpoenas for the first U.S. investigation into the phone hacking scandal engulfing News Corp., the Wall Street Journal reported.
The News Corp.-owned Journal reported that the investigations will focus on whether News Corp. employeees bribed foreign officials and hacked into the phones of 9/11 victims. Senior Justice Department officials would have to approve issuing the subpoenas, which hasn't yet happened, the paper reported.
London's Daily Mirror tabloid has reported that a source said a private investigator was approached about hacking into the phones, but turned down the job. The FBI has begun an investigation into the 9/11 allegations.
The Justice Department, meanwhile, has said it is looking into allegations that News Corp.'s News of the World tabloid bribed British police.
The Journal quoted a person "close to News Corp." saying the U.S. subpoenas are part of "a fishing expedition with no evidence to support it."
A spokeswoman for the company added: "We have not seen any evidence to suggest there was any hacking of 9/11 victim's phones, nor has anybody corroborated what are clearly very serious allegations. The story arose when an unidentified person speculated to the Daily Mirror about whether it happened. That paper printed the anonymous speculation, which has since mushroomed in the broader media with no substantiation."
Adding to News Corp.'s domestic woes: The FBI plans to contact actor Jude Law about his claims that his phone was hacked by the company's employees while he was in the U.S., the BBC reports. News Corp. has said there is no foundation for the actor's claim and called it "deliberately mischievous."
News Corp. has braced for the many intersecting U.K. investigations into the hacking to expand to the U.S., where its holdings include Twentieth Century Fox, Fox News Channel, the Fox broadcast network, as well as the Journal.
News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch, his son James, and former News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks all testified before a Parliamentary committee this week.
Related Articles: A Murdoch Family Rift? What Elisabeth & Lachlan's No-Show Might Have Revealed James Murdoch 'Mistaken' in Testimony, Say Former NOTW Editor and Lawyer- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints
Entertainment News From the Wrap
Reveille's Chad Bennett Debuts Brand-Building Agency, Populus
Company will build brands around shows and other content
AFTRA Approves Network Television Code by Huge Margin
96% of union approve terms for a successor agreement to the AFTRA National Code of Fair Practice for Network Television Broadcasting
'The Voice' Is Top-Rated Show of the Season -- Can 'American Idol' Regain Lead?
NBC scores with "The Voice" thanks to smart scheduling, while "American Idol" battles tough competition
Conrad Murray Wants His Freedom -- and Still Blames Michael Jackson for Death
Financial stress in Michael Jackson's life made his mindset "inconsistent with good judgment," argues the legal team of Dr. Conrad Murray


Follow Reuters