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News International agreed to pay damages to 37 victims of phone hacking today in the high court, including actor
Jude Law, MP Chris Bryant, and former deputy prime minister John
Prescott.
Of those 37 claimants, the details of 15 settlements were read out
in court, along with three undisclosed payments. News Group
Newspapers, a subsidiary of News International which published the
News of the World, will pay £645,000 in damages to those 15
claimants, plus costs.
Among those whose settlements were made public, Prescott received
£40,000, Bryant, £30,000, and actor Sadie Frost £50,000. All
claimants will also be paid costs, taking the total price of the
litigation for NGN to far in excess of the amount in damages.
The majority of damages payments were between £30,000 and £50,000.
Exceptions included actor Jude Law, who was awarded £130,000 – the
highest disclosed payout, a News International spokesperson
confirmed – and anonymous claimant HJK, who received £60,000 after
being targeted while having a relationship with a celebrity. Law
said in a statement read in court that he had been "truly appalled"
by evidence that his life had been under "constant surveillance" by
the News of the World.
NGN, which also publishes the Sun, was the first named defendant in
each of the cases, with private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, who
was jailed alongside former News of the World royal correspondent
Clive Goodman in 2007 for his part in the hacking scandal, the
second defendant.
Tamsin Allen, a lawyer at Bindmans LLP, which is representing many
of the claimants, said in a statement that they "now have some
clarity about what happened to them in the years between 2000 and
2005 and satisfaction that justice has finally been done".
"Many of them have wondered for years how tabloid newspapers were
able to obtain secret personal information about them, even
suspecting their closest friends and relatives. Lives have been
severely affected by this cavalier approach to private information
and the law.
"News Group’s misguided decision to defend claims aggressively made
matters worse. News Group have finally started to see sense
and agreed to apologise and to pay compensation and costs in the
majority of the remaining claims.
"The Leveson Inquiry will, in time, reveal to the public the full
extent of the perversion of good journalistic standards at the News
of the World during the phone-hacking years.”
Mark Thomson of Atkins Thomson, which is also representing
claimants, said that, "After years of denials and cover-up, NGN has
finally admitted the depth and scale of the unlawful activities of
many of their journalists at the News of World and the culture of
illegal conduct at their paper".
"After more than a year of litigation, they have now not only made
admissions and apologies to many individual victims of the phone
hacking conspiracy but also made general admissions about what went
on."
Atkins also pointed out that a number of claimants are pursuing
legal cases against the publisher and "as a result, NGN will
continue to disclose further information and evidence".
Statements submitted to court by many of the defendants contained
acknowledgements from NGN lawyer Michael Silverleaf QC that
information about the claimants had been obtained illegally and
apologies.
Today's cases follow previous substantial payouts by NGN, which opened a compensation fund in November last year to cater for
damages to hacking victims. In December the publisher confirmed it
had settled seven claims, paying damages to Abi Titmuss, Ulrika
Jonsson, Michelle Milburn, Paul Dadge, Calum Best, Mark Oaten, and
James Hewitt.
Prior to that, publicist Max Clifford received a payout of around
£1m, and former Professional Footballer's Association chief Gordon
Taylor – subject of the transcript contained in the so-called "for
Neville" email – around £700,000.
The highest payout made by News International to date, and the
highest damages ever paid by a media organisation, was to the
parents of Milly Dowler, who received £2m after the News of the World was shown to have
accessed the voicemails of their daughter while she was
missing.
Other public figures who received settlements include former Sky Sports pundit Andy Gray , interior designer and
stepmother of Sienna Miller Kelly Hoppen, and former Labour cabinet
members David Blunkett and Tessa Jowell.