Rupert Murdoch apologized to victims of criminal phone hacking by one of his tabloids and accepted the resignations of News Corp’s top two newspaper executives, Rebekah Brooks and Les Hinton.
Rarely one to back down in a fight, Murdoch took a new, more conciliatory stance on Friday in attempting to gain control of a scandal rocking his company and inching its way ever-closer to his son James.
The damage control included a personal apology to the parents of a murdered schoolgirl in what appeared to be an admission that the News of the World, then edited by Brooks and overseen by Hinton, had in 2002 hacked into the voicemails of their missing daughter.
It was that damning allegation, in a rival newspaper 10 days ago, which reignited a five-year-old scandal that has forced Murdoch to close the News of the World and drop a US$12 billion plan to buy full control of highly profitable pay-TV operator BSkyB.
The crisis has forced Murdoch to make concessions to public calls that the executives who were in charge at the time of the scandal be held accountable.
Known for his loyalty to those close to him, Murdoch backed down on Friday and accepted the resignations of confidants Brooks and Hinton, a 52-year veteran of the company and the top executive of Dow Jones, publisher of the Wall Street Journal.
With these departures, attention will now turn to Murdoch’s son and presumed successor, James, who took over the European operations of News Corp just as the crisis was beginning. He has admitted to approving the payment of out-of-court settlements when he did not have a complete picture of what had happened.
“First Brooks, then Hinton were the firewalls for James. There’s no question he’s on the hotseat next,” said Jeff Jarvis, a journalism professor at City University of New York.
A direct apology from Rupert Murdoch, who has been summoned to answer questions before a parliamentary committee on Tuesday, will be carried in all British national newspapers this weekend under the headline “We are sorry.” The text was released by News International.
He met parents of Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old abducted in 2002 and found murdered six months later. Police are investigating whether someone engaged by the News of the World not only listened in to the missing teenager’s cellphone mailbox, but deleted some messages to make room for more.
That misled police hunting for her and gave her parents false hope that their daughter might still be alive. Brooks, now 43, was then editor of the News of the World and has denied knowing of any such practices at the time.
“He apologized many times,” said Mark Lewis, the Dowler family lawyer. “I don’t think somebody could have held their head in their hands so many times to say that they were sorry.”
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