The Washington Times

U.K. police to quiz prime minister’s aide over hacking

LONDON (AP) — A key aide to Prime Minister David Cameron will be questioned by police over allegations a major British tabloid illegally eavesdropped on politicians and celebrities, including the British princes, a senior Scotland Yard officer said Tuesday.

Assistant Commissioner John Yates told a parliamentary committee that Mr. Cameron’s communications director, Andy Coulson, the newspaper’s former editor, is expected to meet with investigators after they look into new allegations made by an ex-reporter.

Mr. Coulson quit as editor of the 3 million-circulation weekly News of the World in 2007 after the newspaper’s royal reporter was convicted of hacking phone voice-mail messages and jailed, along with a private investigator.

The pair were found to have accessed voice messages left for royal officials, including some from Princes William and Harry.

Mr. Coulson repeatedly has denied wrongdoing or knowing that hacking cell phones was widespread among his former staff.

In an article published Sunday, the New York Times quoted a former reporter, Sean Hoare, and other unnamed ex-staff as claiming that Mr. Coulson, in fact, had been aware of the practice.

Commissioner Yates said that police would soon speak with Mr. Hoare, who was fired from the tabloid, and discuss with prosecutors whether their inquiry should be reopened.

He said officers also would speak with Mr. Coulson, who has said he is willing to meet with investigators. “At some stage, I imagine we would be seeing him in some capacity,” Commissioner Yates told the committee.

Commissioner Yates said he had written Tuesday to the New York Times asking editors to review a decision not to assist the police by supplying materials from the newspaper’s interviews.

Executive Editor Bill Keller said that to do so would contravene newspaper policy. Mr. Keller was quoted by the Times on Monday as saying, “Police already have evidence that they have chosen not to pursue.”

Critics of the original police inquiry claim officers failed to examine practices at the newspaper adequately. Commissioner Yates acknowledged that officers should have interviewed the newspaper’s chief reporter, whose name appeared in some documents related to transcripts of the hacked messages.

At the time of the initial inquiry, police said there was no evidence of widespread illegal behavior at the newspaper. However, the Times claimed Mr. Coulson had participated in dozens or even hundreds of meetings where hacking was discussed.

Scotland Yard found nearly 3,000 cell-phone numbers over the course of its initial investigation and said hundreds of people were thought to have been targeted. But it is likely far fewer had their phones actually broken into.

Commissioner Yates told lawmakers the targets may have included athletes and models in addition to legislators and members of the royal family.

Committee chairman Keith Vaz later announced that the committee will hold a full inquiry into the issue of phone hacking. He said Commissioner Yates had “raised a number of questions of importance about the law on phone hacking, the way the police deal with such breaches of the law and the manner in which victims are informed of those breaches.”

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