Jump to content

Communications Chief Andy Coulson quits


Recommended Posts

He resigned from his job at News of the World at the time. Why do we insist that that some people do not deserve a second chance and must pay a penalty twice over?

Even murderers and rapists get second chances and can go on to work after doing their time.

 

What do you think of David Cameron hiring him?

 

I'd personally hoped we'd seen the end of spin doctors when Labour got booted out.

 

x

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He resigned from his job at News of the World at the time. Why do we insist that that some people do not deserve a second chance and must pay a penalty twice over?

Even murderers and rapists get second chances and can go on to work after doing their time.

 

It shows poor judgement for Cameron to employ him. Even if he does deserve a second chance, surely that chance shouldn't be working for the Government? A job where, really, you shouldn't be having skeletons like that hanging in your closet. Coulson must be tremendously arrogant if he didn't realise this would catch up with him one day...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"It looks like finally the police will be taking some action."

Scotland yard said " We will leave no stone unturned"

 

 

...

 

Perhaps they're going to the beach to look for crabs?

 

Maybe we'll hear: "There is a hole under that rock and my officers are looking into it!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In 2005, Andy Coulson was editor of News of the World, and Andy Hayman was head of Specialist Operations, leading the investigation into the London bombings of July 2005.

 

An innocent man by the name of Jean Charles de Menezes was shot on Hayman’s watch. Here’s how Andy Coulson shaped the response:

 

 

 

As you can see, the headline doesn’t read ‘police kill innocent man’; instead, it offers readers a decidedly (ahem) loaded question. The article also seeks to lead the public with a series of mitigating circumstances that would go some way to excusing what police had done… if any of it were true:

 

– The article states as fact that Jean Charles de Menezes was wearing “a bulky winter coat despite the warm weather” (i.e. something conspicuous that might have hidden a bomb belt). He wasn’t.

 

– The article states as fact that the police shouted a challenge to Jean Charles de Menezes “screaming for him to stop”. They hadn’t.

 

– The article states as fact that Jean Charles de Menezes then “made the decision that cost him his life” and “vaulted over the ticket barrier and ran down the escalator”. He didn’t.

 

As you can see, when police shot an innocent man and Andy Hayman’s arse was on the line, Andy Coulson acted like a true friend; rather than rely on any of the investigative journalism that News of the World is supposed to be famous for, Coulson chose instead to take a friend at his word and not bother looking at or into any of the pesky detail.

 

Later, in 2006, Andy Coulson was editor of News of the World, and Andy Hayman was the officer in charge of the inquiry into the News of the World phone hacking affair

 

When it was suspected that News of the World had targeted hundreds if not thousands of innocent people and Andy Coulson’s arse was on the line, Andy Hayman acted like a true friend; rather than rely on any of the investigative skills the police are supposed to be famous for, Hayman chose instead to take a friend at his word and not bother looking at or into any of the pesky detail:

 

Guardian – Police ‘ignored News of the World phone hacking evidence’

 

Police who investigated the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World obtained previously undisclosed telephone records which showed a vast number of public figures had had their voicemail accessed – and then decided not to pursue the evidence…

 

Guardian – Phone-hacking inquiry left a mountain of evidence unexplored

 

Here’s the riddle. If the Guardian, the New York Times and Channel 4′s Dispatches can all find numerous journalists who worked at the News of the World who without exception insist that the newspaper routinely used private investigators to gather information by illegal means, why can’t Scotland Yard find a single one who will tell them the story?

 

In their original inquiry into the phone-hacking affair, in 2006, detectives arrested the paper’s royal correspondent, Clive Goodman, and charged him with listening to messages on the royal household’s mobile phones. Goodman refused to answer questions.

 

Scotland Yard then interviewed not one single other journalist, editor or manager from the paper. Detectives took this decision despite holding evidence that – we now know – clearly identified other News of the World journalists who were involved in handling illegally intercepted voicemail.

 

In their recent inquiry, which ended fruitlessly last week, they attempted to interview only three journalists, all of whom were identified for them by news organisations.

 

They approached those three not as witnesses but as suspects, warning them that anything they said could be used to prosecute them: two gave interviews in which they declined to answer questions; the third challenged them to arrest him in handcuffs, and so they never even spoke to him.

 

There are some who might describe this as something dangerously close to corruption, but obviously such people are reactionary leftist scum with an anti-Murdoch agenda…. the same type of people who would dare to raise an eyebrow at Hayman later leaving the police to work for News International as a columnist.

 

Clearly, what we are looking at here is nothing more than innocent goodwill shared between two men who know and trust that their good friend is on the level. Surely this is a quality to be applauded in these deeply cynical times.

 

http://www.bloggerheads.com/archives/2010/12/andy-coulson-andy-hayman/

 

Cameron is in deep trouble.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.