Murdoch to meet Sun journalists after arrests
Murdoch to meet Sun journalists after arrests

- NEW: A Sunday edition of The Sun newspaper will be launched, News International confirms
- NEW: Murdoch’s visit to The Sun’s London offices follows the arrest of five journalists
- The Sun, as part of News International, falls under Murdoch’s News Corp. empire
- The arrests are part of an investigation into alleged illegal payments to police
London (CNN) — Media magnate Rupert Murdoch told staff at his embattled The Sun newspaper in London Friday that the company will launch a Sunday edition, as he seeks to rein in a crisis over alleged abuses, News International confirmed.
Murdoch’s visit to News Corp.’s London subsidiary, News International, follows the Saturday arrests of five Sun journalists as part of an inquiry into alleged illegal payments to police and officials.
Staff at the paper have reacted angrily to the arrests and internal investigations of their journalistic practices, which they have likened to a witch-hunt.
The launch of a Sun on Sunday newspaper to replace the News of the World, a sister paper to The Sun that was shuttered amid a phone-hacking scandal in the summer, had been widely rumored.
However, this is the first time News International has confirmed that it will be established. No date was given, but a company spokesman said it would be “soon.”
Following the arrests, Murdoch, chairman and CEO of News Corp, assured an executive he would continue to own and publish The Sun newspaper, according to an internal staff memo sent by News International Chief Executive Tom Mockridge.
Mockridge also said he was “very saddened” by the arrests of deputy editor Geoff Webster, picture editor John Edwards, chief reporter John Kay, chief foreign correspondent Nick Parker and John Sturgis, who is a news editor. The five journalists were arrested at their homes, police said.
“I understand the pressure many of you are under and have the greatest admiration for everyone’s continued professionalism,” Mockridge wrote.
“The Sun has a proud history of delivering ground-breaking journalism. You should know that I have had a personal assurance today from Rupert Murdoch about his total commitment to continue to own and publish The Sun newspaper.”
The arrests are part of Operation Elveden, an investigation running in parallel with a police inquiry into alleged phone hacking by the media, the Metropolitan Police said.

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The five journalists ages 45 to 68 were arrested at their residences in London, Kent and Essex on suspicion of corruption, aiding and abetting misconduct in a public office, and conspiracy in relation to both offenses, police said

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News Corp. said in a statement that it “remains committed to ensuring that unacceptable news gathering practices by individuals in the past will not be repeated.”

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News Corp.’s Management and Standards Committee, set up in the wake of the scandal that engulfed the News of the World tabloid, provided the information to police that led to the arrests.
The move has prompted fury among many reporters at the paper.
Trevor Kavanagh, associate editor of The Sun, wrote a column Monday in which he said the paper’s journalists were being subjected to a “witch-hunt.”
“The Sun is not a ‘swamp’ that needs draining. Nor are those other great News International titles, The Times and The Sunday Times,” he wrote.
“Yet in what would at any other time cause uproar in Parliament and among civil liberty and human rights campaigners, its journalists are being treated like members of an organized crime gang.”
He said it was right police inquiries are carried out separately from the journalists under investigation.
But he added: “It is also important our parent company, News Corp, protects its reputation in the United States and the interests of its shareholders. But some of the greatest legends in Fleet Street have been held, at least on the basis of evidence so far revealed, for simply doing their jobs as journalists on behalf of the company.”
Murdoch may be hoping his visit to London will lessen the anger felt by staff at The Sun, Britain’s best-selling newspaper. Editor Dominic Mohan has said the paper has a readership of more than 7.7 million.
“At the moment it appears he is ready to sacrifice the journalists and journalism in London to do whatever it takes to be seen to be cleaning up his act there so that it will play better in the United States,” said Andrew Neil, a former editor of Murdoch paper, The Times.
“The consequence of that is quite amazing — The Sun, which is the most loyal newspaper Murdoch has ever owned — now believes it is being hung out to dry and the Sun journalists are turning against them.”
Andrew Neil, former editor of The Times
Allegations of payoffs to public officials by Sun employees threaten to bring the UK crisis across the shores to the United States, where the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act prevents companies from paying bribes overseas.
The arrests of the Sun employees comes after Murdoch-owned newspaper News of the World was alleged to have hacked into private voice mails of a wide range of public officials, celebrities and victims of crime.
The phone-hacking scandal prompted Murdoch’s son, News Corp. executive James Murdoch, to shut down News of the World in July. The best-selling British newspaper was 168 years old.
So far, News Corp. and its subsidiary companies have paid more than $ 200 million in legal fees and settlement of 59 of 60 lawsuits filed over phone hacking claims.
James Murdoch is facing new e-mail evidence that would have made him aware of widespread phone-hacking at the newspaper. The younger Murdoch has appeared twice before a UK investigatory committee and said he had no knowledge of the practice.
While Murdoch started in newspapers, the UK division of his News Corp. empire — which includes movie studio 20th Century Fox, the Fox Broadcasting Co. and Harper Collins Publishers — is only a $ 1.6 billion slice of the $ 32 billion empire.
CNN’s Kevin Voight and Laura Smith-Spark contributed to this report.