Rep for that. I have seen some very sad things in my long years of trawling the net. And have to say their Repfest is the saddest thing ever. Cue them coming on saying it's just a bit of fun, when it clearly isn't.
anyone remember the little texts Cameron was sending Brookes..they live in the same region of the Cotswolds..apparently very close to one another. To quote Keegan...I would just love it...if, the prosecution have something on the both of them..My god, that would make my day, but not the biggest surprise in the world.
There's nothing the British like more than seeing the 'high & mighty' fall from grace .......... if you can shag them as well then that's a bonus
She is a ginger minger, therefore has no soul...A few centuries ago, it would have been the ducking pond, for her.
Never mind shagging her co- worker, when Cameroon and the flame haired temptress of the dirty digger went out 'riding' on the police horse....just who was 'riding' who....this of course is the great big elephant in the room that the media does not mention. It seems pretty good odds that call me Dave and the redhead were doing the dirty
You're spot on mate, it's what everyone assumes isn't it? The stern faces and clamped-tight mouths on the accused, as they trudge into court, says it all. You normally can't shut the ****ers up, especially her, but she's aging a year every week.
They're in a world ****. Evidence tampering. Notebooks went missing amid the "media firestorm" caused by the hacking of murder victim Milly Dowler's phone by the News of the World, an Old Bailey jury has been told. Prosecutors say company executive Rebekah Brooks and others hid evidence as police investigated the newspaper. Mrs Brooks and her PA Cheryl Carter deny perverting the course of justice. She denies a second similar charge, along with her husband Charlie Brooks and former security chief Mark Hanna. 'Panic-stricken' Prosecutor Andrew Edis QC told the court about events of July 2011 before the News of the World was closed by its parent company, News International, after the revelations about Surrey schoolgirl Milly came to light. He said News International had handed over three emails linked to phone hacking and claims of payments made to public officials to police and the situation at the company had become "more fevered" as it came under investigation. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote Broadsword calling Danny Boy. Pizza delivered and the chicken is in the pot” Text message to Mr Hanna from member of security team "You can imagine the extremely anxious if not panic-stricken approach to these developments that must have been going on," he told the court. He said that on 8 July 2011, News International chief executive Mrs Brooks, 45, a former News of the World editor, ordered that seven boxes of notebooks be taken from a storage archive at the company and delivered to Ms Carter. Mr Edis told the court the notebooks were Mrs Brooks's and dated from 1995 to 2007, although Ms Carter, 49, of Chelmsford in Essex, later said they mostly belonged to her. He told the jury: "You will have to decide why did these notebooks go missing." He added that, while planning to move offices, News International had decided on a new policy for deleting emails, aiming to clear the archive. It was initially supposed to include only messages before a date in 2007, but Mrs Brooks later suggested in an email that the new policy should cover any emails from before January 2010, he said. Mr Edis said: "We suggest that that shows Mrs Brooks may have had a personal interest in this email deletion policy - both to the date of the cut-off and her own personal emails - also that it should be got on with." Continue reading the main story Who are the defendants? Defendants in the hacking trial Read profiles of the eight defendants He said there was "some evidence that Mrs Brooks was keen to get rid of material that related to her activities when she was editor, first of the News of the World, then of the Sun". The second allegation of a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice involving Mrs Brooks, her husband and Mr Hanna included claims they concealed computers and other material from police, the court was told. The prosecutor said "the media firestorm was surrounding" Mrs Brooks and she was concerned she might be followed around. The court was told that Mrs Brooks resigned from her post at News International on 15 July 2011 and was expecting to be arrested. A security operation, given the name "Blackhawk", was set up on Saturday 17 July by News International's director of security Mr Hanna, said Mr Edis. She was arrested later that day. 'Risky exercise' Mr Edis said that Mrs Brooks, Mr Brooks, 50, and Mr Hanna, 50, tried to hide material from the police searching Mrs Brooks's homes in Oxfordshire and London. He said security staff picked up a laptop and other material from the couple's home in Oxfordshire and - by the Saturday night - it had been hidden in a bin bag near bins at their flat in Chelsea Harbour. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote The prosecution say that this whole exercise was quite complicated and quite risky and liable to go wrong, as it did” Prosecutor Andrew Edis QC The court heard that, after it was hidden, a member of the security team sent a text to Mr Hanna that said: "Broadsword calling Danny Boy. Pizza delivered and the chicken is in the pot." This was a reference to Richard Burton film Where Eagles Dare, Mr Edis said. But before the bag could be recovered, it was found by a cleaner and handed to police, Mr Edis added. He said Mr Brooks and a driver used by the security team went to the bin area on Sunday to recover the hidden material - to find it was no longer there. Mr Edis told the court: "The prosecution say that this whole exercise was quite complicated and quite risky and liable to go wrong, as it did." He added: "The only rational explanation was to hide material so police can't get it." Mr Edis also said two iPads belonging to Mr and Mrs Brooks had not been recovered in the course of the investigation. Of Mrs Brooks, he said it was "inconceivable that anyone could have been doing anything to hide her property or hinder the police investigation without her knowledge, agreement and consent". Mrs Brooks, of Churchill, Oxfordshire, has also pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to intercept communications, along with former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, 45, of Charing in Kent, managing editor Stuart Kuttner, 73, of Woodford Green, north-east London, and head of news at the paper, Ian Edmondson, 44, of Raynes Park, south west London. Mrs Brooks, Mr Coulson and former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman, 56, from Addleston, Surrey, also deny conspiracy to cause misconduct in public office.
"But before the bag could be recovered, it was found by a cleaner and handed to police, Mr Edis added. He said Mr Brooks and a driver used by the security team went to the bin area on Sunday to recover the hidden material - to find it was no longer there." What's the betting that the first words out of his mouth were a combination of 'God, my, oh and ****ing.' I'd pay serious money for a ticket to that courtroom ........ any spares lads?
I have personal reasons for hoping they all go down and for a substantial period. However, my feelings apart, I think every right minded member of the public should feel that way about these people. They see themselves as courageous and noble purveyors of the truth and are always seeking to 'expose corruption and hold the culprits up to public account'. So, at the same time they're pillorying the local vicar for having a quick fumble in the vestry, they're hacking innocent people's phones and invading something we all hold precious, our privacy. While these corrupt arrogant vultures are setting themselves up as judge, jury & executioner they're, at the same time, ****ting all over the law of the land, grinding it in with their heels and laughing about it. I hope they're as guilty as they look and that Christmas dinner will be eaten with a plastic knife and fork on C-wing.