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Some accuse police of failing to investigate properly for fear of upsetting their close relationship with newspapers. Official policy forbids officers from taking cash for tips, but The Sun's former editor admitted in 2003 that the paper had paid police for information. Prescott, the former deputy prime minister, believes the newspaper used phone hacking to get a story about his extramarital affair and has called for a judge-led review into the force's handling of the case. "I just don't trust the Metropolitan Police to conduct a proper inquiry," he said. The widening scandal is a headache for media mogul Murdoch, whose News International Ltd. owns four British national newspapers
-- the tabloids The Sun and News of the World as well as The Times and The Sunday Times. News International is a subsidiary of Murdoch's News Corp., whose U.S. media outlets include Fox Television, the New York Post and The Wall Street Journal. Already a powerful political player in Britain, Murdoch is hoping to expand his reach with a takeover of satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC, in which he already owns a 40 percent stake. The British government is considering whether to order a full-scale inquiry by Britain's Competition Commission to examine whether it would give News Corp. too big a share of the media market. The widening phone-hacking scandal won't make Murdoch's case any stronger. It has already claimed the prime minister's spin doctor, Andy Coulson, the former top editor at News of the World, who resigned from the paper when Goodwin and Mulcaire were convicted in 2007. Coulson has always claimed he knew nothing about the hacking but last week he quit as Cameron's communications chief, saying "when the spokesman needs a spokesman, it's time to move on."
Even with the number of suspects and alleged victims growing, many doubt the scandal will change Britain's keenly competitive tabloid culture. Newspapers believe readers are hungry for scoops
-- and will forgive tabloids their transgressions if they get juicy ones. "I mean, secretly, doesn't everyone read this gossip?" said Lesley Miller, a 59-year-old retiree and News of the World reader. "With all these celebrities, I think when you become one, your privacy goes down the toilet. It's a fact of life you have to accept."
[Associated
Press;
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