The exdirector of the tabloid appear before the British Parliament. Brooks says that the use of investigators to salary was common in the British press. The exj Rupert Murdoch, who appeared earlier, apologized to the British and delegated responsibilities. Rebekah Brooks’s profile. The who’s who of the case. Rebekah Brooks, delegate exconsejera of News International, has admitted Tuesday to the British Parliament that in his time as Director of the News of the World used private detectives to get information. After the final question, the exdirector has asked the Committee that when the case is clarified invite him again. Brooks has however clarified that the employment of researchers was a common practice in much of the British press in the 1990s and beginning of the 2000s, when he stopped due to new laws on the confidentiality of data but has denied that it sobornase to police.

The journalist has ensured that it didn’t use to detectives when in 2003 went on to run The Sun, another of tabloids owned by Rupert Murdoch. Brooks has told the Commission that the first time that News International executives knew the extent of the illegal wiretapping of the News of the World, that they have triggered a serious scandal, was at the end of 2010, when they acted promptly and decisively. Brooks has appeared in the Committee’s means of communication of the House of Commons British nothing more conclude the statement of your exj Rupert Murdoch, Chairman of News Corporation, who asked for forgiveness and said he was embarrassed by the wiretaps of the tabloid. Suspected of approving illegal wiretapping journalist was detained on Sunday nine hours by police on suspicion of approving illegal wiretapping and paying bribes to police officers to obtain exclusive for the tabloid News of the World. He has also apologized for the wiretaps of the News of the World, which ran from 2002 to January 2003, when he underwent the mobile phone of a murdered girl.

What happened in the News of the World was terrible and dreadful, he said before a Committee without public due to aggression produced minutes earlier against Rupert Murdoch, without consequences. Rebekah Brooks had resigned Friday as CEO of News International, British branch of Murdoch Empire that includes the daily The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times, as well as 39 percent of the BSkyB television channel. News of the World carried out for years, apparently in a systematic way, a spy from mobile phones of celebrities, journalists and ordinary people.