Sienna Miller, British actress, whose phone-hacking lawsuit against News Corp. helped trigger the death of the tabloid News of the World, said she was wrongly accused of friends and family of information leaks to the press .
Miller suspected someone close to her was to talk to reporters because the newspaper had been informed that they only knew, she said an investigation by the judge in the British press in London today. Only later did Miller discovered phreaking was the source of stories, she said.
"I feel bad that would ever accuse people will betray me like this," said Miller, whose relationship with actor Jude Law, has attracted media interest. "My natural paranoia and distrust extends to those around me."
Miller, who has accepted 100,000 pounds (155,050 U.S. dollars) to News Corp. in June to the end of the trial, saying she could have also had her email hacked. Metropolitan Police, who were ordered to hand over the phone-hacking evidence in Miller, arrested a 52-year limited, today's man in Milton Keynes, as part of their probe by hacking British press.
News Corp. closed the New World in July to help contain the scandal five years after it was revealed to the tabloid press had cut the phone to a school girl who was murdered in 2002 while she was still missing. British Prime Minister David Cameron called for an investigation, headed by Justice Brian Leveson, to examine the relationship between the press and the general public and determine if new regulations are necessary.
Dark streets
Miller also said he feared for his safety following photographers continue the cars when he was chasing him on horseback or on foot along the dark streets. The photographers often occurred in places, after discussing meeting someone on the phone when the suspect of his hacking, he said.
"I lived in a sort of game" in which "people are sort of pre-empting the outcome of every move I made a visit to your personal information," Miller said.
Leveson also heard of Max Mosley, Formula One, the former president, won 60,000 pounds for violation of privacy presented by Rupert Murdoch's News Site in 2008 for publishing an article about a Nazi 'orgy "with a video, without any contact with him. A judge ruled that there was no Nazi theme and the story was of public interest.
Sexual behavior
"The problem is that if you violate the privacy, simply because you disagree with what you have done, or it was not to your taste, well, we would all be over, because sexual behavior covers a wide range of things, "said Mosley." Where would it stop? "
Mosley said Rupert Murdoch, has left a letter in 2008 complaining about the head of the tabloid reporter, Neville Thurlbeck on.
"I have not received any response," said Mosley. I do not expect the answer, "From the company serious media", whose director was accused of a crime.
JK Rowling, author of Harry Potter, told the newspaper photographers Leveson had haunted him for two of her pregnancies, and each time she released new books, while the reporters made up details of stories. Newspaper companies would sometimes increase their coverage of her after she complained, she said.
"If you lock horns with them in this way, if you protest or complaint, you can expect some form of punishment rather quickly," said Rowling. The behavior is "malicious," she said. The author says a new word must be invented for journalists to distinguish them from tabloid journalists who risk their lives to cover wars and famine.
Piers Morgan, the host of CNN's "Tonight" show and a former editor of the Daily Mirror, will give testimony to the investigation said today Leveson
Miller suspected someone close to her was to talk to reporters because the newspaper had been informed that they only knew, she said an investigation by the judge in the British press in London today. Only later did Miller discovered phreaking was the source of stories, she said.
"I feel bad that would ever accuse people will betray me like this," said Miller, whose relationship with actor Jude Law, has attracted media interest. "My natural paranoia and distrust extends to those around me."
Miller, who has accepted 100,000 pounds (155,050 U.S. dollars) to News Corp. in June to the end of the trial, saying she could have also had her email hacked. Metropolitan Police, who were ordered to hand over the phone-hacking evidence in Miller, arrested a 52-year limited, today's man in Milton Keynes, as part of their probe by hacking British press.
News Corp. closed the New World in July to help contain the scandal five years after it was revealed to the tabloid press had cut the phone to a school girl who was murdered in 2002 while she was still missing. British Prime Minister David Cameron called for an investigation, headed by Justice Brian Leveson, to examine the relationship between the press and the general public and determine if new regulations are necessary.
Dark streets
Miller also said he feared for his safety following photographers continue the cars when he was chasing him on horseback or on foot along the dark streets. The photographers often occurred in places, after discussing meeting someone on the phone when the suspect of his hacking, he said.
"I lived in a sort of game" in which "people are sort of pre-empting the outcome of every move I made a visit to your personal information," Miller said.
Leveson also heard of Max Mosley, Formula One, the former president, won 60,000 pounds for violation of privacy presented by Rupert Murdoch's News Site in 2008 for publishing an article about a Nazi 'orgy "with a video, without any contact with him. A judge ruled that there was no Nazi theme and the story was of public interest.
Sexual behavior
"The problem is that if you violate the privacy, simply because you disagree with what you have done, or it was not to your taste, well, we would all be over, because sexual behavior covers a wide range of things, "said Mosley." Where would it stop? "
Mosley said Rupert Murdoch, has left a letter in 2008 complaining about the head of the tabloid reporter, Neville Thurlbeck on.
"I have not received any response," said Mosley. I do not expect the answer, "From the company serious media", whose director was accused of a crime.
JK Rowling, author of Harry Potter, told the newspaper photographers Leveson had haunted him for two of her pregnancies, and each time she released new books, while the reporters made up details of stories. Newspaper companies would sometimes increase their coverage of her after she complained, she said.
"If you lock horns with them in this way, if you protest or complaint, you can expect some form of punishment rather quickly," said Rowling. The behavior is "malicious," she said. The author says a new word must be invented for journalists to distinguish them from tabloid journalists who risk their lives to cover wars and famine.
Piers Morgan, the host of CNN's "Tonight" show and a former editor of the Daily Mirror, will give testimony to the investigation said today Leveson