Leveson Inquiry To Hear From Kate And Gerry McCann And Phone Hacking Lawyer Mark Lewis
The Leveson inquiry into press ethics is due to hear from the parents of missing Madeleine McCann on Wednesday afternoon.
Gerry McCann is expected to give evidence in the same way as previous witnesses while his wife Kate is expected to read a statement.
The McCanns have previously spoken about intrusion by the media after their four-year-old daughter went missing while on holiday in Portugal in 2007.
The inquiry opened today with evidence from Mark Lewis, the lawyer who has been at the forefront of the campaign to get justice for the victims of phone hacking.
As well as acting on the behalf of victims of hacking, it was recently revealed that journalists from the now defunct News of the World trailed him in order to dig up stories on him that would undermine his campaign against the tabloid.
Sheryl Gascoigne, the ex-wife of former England footballer Paul Gascoigne, and former Daily Telegraph journalist Tom Rowland who learned his phone had been hacked, will also appear on Wednesday.
Yesterday the inquiry heard from comedian Steve Coogan, who attacked the behaviour of the tabloid press and called for the introduction of a privacy law.
He said: "There needs to be a privacy law so genuinely investigative journalism isn't besmirched by tawdry muckraking."
Also on Tuesday Elle Macpherson's former adviser Mary-Ellen Field recounted how she was fired after the supermodel wrongly believed she had leaked stories to the press about her private life.
The stories were later believed to have been obtained by journalists hacking into Macpherson's voicemail.
Leveson also heard from former premier league footballer Garry Flitcroft, who said he believed the Sunday People had hacked his phone in order to obtain stories alleging he had extra-marital affairs.
Gerry McCann says the newspaper articles that suggested he and his wife played a part in the disappearance of their daughter have had a long reach.
"We have experienced long lasting damage as a result of the headlines," he says.
Kate McCann is recalling the moment she found out her diary had been published in the paper.
"I felt totally violated," she says."I'd written these thoughts and words at the most desperate time of my life."
She says it was her "only way of communicating with Madeline" and it showed "no respect" for her as a "grieving mother or a human being". Gerry McCann is recalling the time he and Kate agreed to give an interview to 'Hello' magazine.
They agreed to give the interview for free in order to promote a EU wide child abduction alert system.
He says that the then editor of the News of the World, Colin Myler, then called them to "berate" them for giving an interview to a rival publication.
"Mr Myler was irate when he learned of the publication," McCann says."He was berating us for not doing an interview with the News of the World and told us how supportive the paper had been.
"He basically beat us into submission verbally…and we agreed to do an interview the day after"
Gerry McCann's written evidence is now on the Leveson Inquiry's website. Gerry says that because they were unable to reveal the facts of the investigation as they knew them for legal reasons, they were unable to challenge untruthful stories in the press that suggested they were involved in their daughter's disappearance.
"We were being tried by the media and were unable to defend ourselves," he says.
Kate and Gerry are recounting what it was like for them when they returned from Portugal to England.
They say they were "hemmed in" their house for days before the police moved the press away from their property.
Kate says that photographers would hide behind hedges and then jump out at her in her car in order to photograph her looking startled or scared.
"They would bang on the windows sometimes with the camera lenses," she says.
Gerry is recalls a headline in the Daily Mirror that read "She's Dead".
He said this was presented as fact, even there was no proof. He said he and Kate read this at 11pm and it was one of the "most distressing headlines" they had read. Gerry says that it is "crass and insensitive" to think that just because they engaged with the media with a view to find their daughter the press could then write "anything they want" without punishment. Gerry McCann says when his daughter disappeared he made the decision it would be in the best interests of his daughter to interact with the media who had descended on Portugal.
"We got a distinct impression there was a genuine want to help attitude from journalists there," he says. "There was a huge amount of empathy." Gerry McCann says he has four main points he wants to address.
Sat side by side, the McCanns say they have agreed to give evidence for the first time because they feel a system has to be put in place to prevent the "damage the media can cause". Gerry and Kate McCann are now giving evidence to the inquiry. Former Daily Telegraph journalist Tom Rowland is now giving evidence to the inquiry. He had his phone hacked by the News of the World.
Simon Greenberg is perhaps best known for speaking on behalf of News International when the phone hacking scandal broke.
His rather ineffectual performances attracted some rather unwanted attention, as noted by the Daily Telegraph at the time. The lawyer for News International has challenged Mark Lewis' written evidence.
He said that the suggestion Simon Greenberg of News International worked at the Evening Standard when an unnamed journalist was "coached" on how to hack phones is untrue.
Greenberg is said to have left the ES before the conversation occurred.
The lawyer also said that Greenberg subsequently had no involvement in hiring the unnamed sports journalist for the Times as he did not work for News International at the time. Gascoigne says the fact that she had such a high profile public life meant she was "asking for it" when it came to press intrusion.
She tells Leveson that she is not asking to be left alone by the media, rather she wants the press to have to ensure they print stories that are true.
Her main complaint about the media in the UK appears to be that too often then print inaccurate stories. Leveson hears that Gascoigne was friends with former News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks.
She says she "wouldn't have a bad word to say about her personally". Gascoigne says it's "common knowledge" for people in the public eye that the Press Complaints Commission will do "absolutely nothing" about stories they are felt to be unfair. Gascoigne says journalists who followed her "hoped I would give birth on the pavement".
She is speaking about the effect of the media pursuit had on her family. She says it was especially tough on her children, who often could not go out and play. As the BBC's Ross Hawkins reports, Lewis' statement appears to have been removed from the Leveson website.
Lawyers for News International had challenged it.
Gascoigne says she has had to put up with news articles about her relationship with Paul that were "untrue".
But she says that she was advised not to challenge them as "you don't win" cases against the papers. Sheryl Gascoigne, the ex-wife of former England footballer Paul Gascoigne, is now giving evidence to the inquiry. Lewis' full written statement has now been published online. You can read it here.
Lewis tells the inquiry that "a certain section of the press" acts as if it's above the law and treated phone hacking in the same league as driving 35mph in a 30mph zone.
As the FT's media correspondent notes below. Lewis says the infamous 'For Neville' email was known at the time 'we've got them' email.
The email revealed the extend to which senior News of the World staff were involved in hacking - something they had denied.
@ rosschawkins :
Gerry McCann at #leveson : anomaly commercial organisation can make profit from your image without consent
@ rosschawkins :
Link to Mark Lewis' witness statement appears to have been removed from the #leveson inquiry website
@ skymarkwhite :
Lewis said journalists often talk about freedom of the press, but what they really mean is freedom to do what they like #leveson
@ rosschawkins :
Mark Lewis at #leveson : Was told Mail Ed Paul Dacre would sue him if he suggested Associated were involved
@ SkyFixer69 :
#Leveson Lewis claims #phonehacking was so easy to do that journos thought it was no worse than doing 35mph in a 30 zone.
@ benfenton :
Lewis tells #leveson that the smoking gun email from Met was not known as "for Neville" then, but the "we've got them" email.







The Huffington Post UK First Posted: 23/11/11 09:50 GMT Updated: 23/11/11 10:51 GMT