US Senators Query Dow Jones Editorial Integrity Panel
July 20 2011 - 4:45PM
Dow Jones News
Two Democratic U.S. Senators are pressing for more answers in
connection with a News Corp. (NWS, NWSA, NWS.AU) phone-hacking
scandal, asking whether an editorial oversight board created
following the company's purchase of Dow Jones & Co. raised
questions about the executive who was appointed to lead the U.S.
company.
The letter, from Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jay
Rockefeller (D., W.Va.) and Sen. Barbara Boxer (D., Calif.),
represents a new push by the lawmakers, who have already asked the
U.S. Justice Department and regulatory agencies to begin probes. It
comes one day after News Corp. Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch and
his son testified before Parliament, where Murdoch apologized to
victims but said he was not to blame.
In the letter, the lawmakers asked whether the special committee
would "conduct a broader investigation that includes an examination
of whether current or former senior Wall Street Journal or Dow
Jones executives had knowledge of or a role in alleged criminal
activity at News Corporation publications?"
The lawmakers also asked about Les Hinton, who stepped down as
the chief executive of Dow Jones last week. Hinton's stint at News
Corp.'s News International, whose papers included the now-shuttered
News of the World, had come under increasing scrutiny amid
allegations about reporting tactics at the newspaper.
The lawmakers asked whether the Dow Jones committee investigated
"Mr. Hinton's knowledge of alleged criminal activity at News
International before or after he was named publisher of the Wall
Street Journal and CEO of Dow Jones."
News Corp. owns Dow Jones & Co., the publisher of Dow Jones
Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. A News Corp. spokesman
declined to comment.
In testimony in 2007 and 2009, Hinton told a parliamentary
committee that the company had carried out a full investigation
into the matter and was convinced just one of the company's
journalists was involved. In his resignation letter Friday, Hinton
said that "in September 2009, I told the Committee there had never
been any evidence delivered to me that suggested the conduct had
spread beyond one journalist. If others had evidence that
wrongdoing went further, I was not told about it."
He also said that "when I left News International in December
2007, I believed that the rotten element at the News of the World
had been eliminated; that important lessons had been learned; and
that journalistic integrity was restored."
The lawmakers wrote the letter to the committee that was
established in 2007 to protect the editorial independence of the
news outlets. As part of its agreement to purchase Dow Jones, News
Corp. agreed to create a five-member panel to protect Dow Jones's
journalism from interference by its new owner.
The committee said in a statement last week that it has had
conversations with Dow Jones officials about hacking. It also said
that "to date, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to
believe" that Hinton's resignation was "any way related to
activities at The Wall Street Journal or Dow Jones or that any of
the London offenses or anything like them have taken place at Dow
Jones. We will continue to monitor the situation closely."
The lawmakers also asked whether any member of the special
committee or other senior executives expressed "any concerns
regarding the hiring of Mr. Hinton given his role in overseeing
News International's News of the World when its employees engaged
in criminal phone hacking?"
The lawmakers said that "this information will help give
Americans confidence that the illegal activity that appears to have
taken place at News Corporation in the United Kingdom did not
spread to News Corporation entities in the United States."
-By Siobhan Hughes, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6654;
siobhan.hughes@dowjones.com
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