Post view

ugg italia
LONDON, July 10 (UPI) -- As the News of the World printed its last edition Sunday, Rupert Murdoch arrived in London to address the crisis threatening his media empire. The paper bowed out with a twice-normal print run of 5 million copies,timberland on line, amid mushrooming revelations that its reporters and investigators have hacked into the phones of royalty, politicians,saldi ugg, murder victims and the families of fallen soldiers. In a day of fast-breaking news on many fronts,www.scarpespaccio.net, Murdoch's Sky News reported that embattled News International chief Rebekah Brooks, a former editor of the racy tabloid,scarponcini timberland, met with her boss at his apartment Sunday afternoon. Brooks has been close to both Prime Minister David Cameron and his predecessor, Tony Blair. Opposition leader Ed Miliband told the BBC he will force a Commons vote to delay News Corp.'s proposed takeover of the BSkyB broadcaster until the News of the World probe is done. Cameron,www.stivali-it.com, the Labor Party chief said, "has got to understand that when the public have seen the disgusting revelations that we have seen this week,the north face arctic parka, the idea that this organization, which engaged in these terrible practices, should be allowed to take over BSkyB, to get that 100 percent stake, without the criminal investigation having been completed and on the basis of assurances from that self-same organization -- frankly that just won't wash with the public." The Sunday Telegraph reported that Murdoch's son and likely heir,www.northface.org.uk, James, could face criminal charges after admitting that he cleared out-of-court settlements to hacking victims and misled Parliament -- inadvertently,The North Face Jackets, he says. Charges that News of the World journalists paid police for information also could expose James Murdoch to prosecution in the United States,ugg italia, where he is deputy chief operating officer of News Corp., the report said The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act makes it a crime for U.S. corporations to pay off foreign officials. News International has declined comment on reports that police have e-mails from 2007 that seem to admit paying police for information and that phone-hacking was more widespread than previously assumed, The Sunday Telegraph reported.Topics related articles:
Nevin6su 19.12.2011 0 210
ADS

HTML Block
Comments
Order by: 
Per page:
 
  • There are no comments yet
Post info
19.12.2011 (4724 days ago)
ADS

 

 

 

Rate
_n_votes
Recommend
Actions
Categories
Baby Blogs (6 posts)
Blogging for Money (5 posts)
Books (55 posts)
City Blogs (4 posts)
Entertainment Blogs (5 posts)
Food Blogs (3 posts)
Games (2 posts)
Health (6 posts)
Holidays (4 posts)
Lifestyle (8 posts)
Movies (4 posts)
Music (3 posts)
Politics (5 posts)
Tech News (3 posts)
Videos (5 posts)