Police will not reopen paper phone tap case

Thu Jul 9, 2009 11:57pm BST
 
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By Peter Griffiths

LONDON (Reuters) - Police said on Thursday they would not reopen investigations into the interception of celebrities' mobile phone voicemails by journalists, despite new allegations against a Rupert Murdoch newspaper.

According to a report in The Guardian, reporters at Murdoch's best selling News of the World worked with private investigators to access "two or three thousand" private mobile phones belonging to celebrities, MPs and public figures.

Actors Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow, Australian model Elle Macpherson and former deputy prime minister John Prescott were among those targeted by journalists seeking stories for the Sunday newspaper, according to the report.

The story generated a political storm and Prime Minister Gordon Brown said there were "serious questions to be answered." But police said they would not reopen a 2005 investigation that led to the jailing of two men, News of the World reporter Clive Goodman and a private investigator, for hacking into the phones of staff working for the royal family.

Assistant Commissioner John Yates of the Metropolitan Police said the original probe concluded that phone tapping had occurred in only a minority of cases. All those victims had been informed, he said.

"Their potential targets may have run into hundreds of people, but our inquiries showed that they only used the tactic against a far smaller number of individuals," Yates said.

"No additional evidence has come to light since this case has concluded. I therefore consider that no further investigation is required."

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