Leveson Inquiry: 'Treasure Trove' Of Information In Private Detective's Records

Grant

First Posted: 05/12/11 13:21 Updated: 05/12/11 16:27   PA

Journalists commissioned a private detective to find out personal details about sportsmen and celebrities including Hugh Grant and his former girlfriend Liz Hurley, the Leveson Inquiry has heard.

Records seized from investigator Steve Whittamore in 2003 contained a "veritable treasure trove" of information about how newspapers ordered searches on everything from addresses to criminal records, the hearing was told.

The paperwork includes references to investigations into members of a UK national sports team and a "B&B sex party".

Whittamore was asked to do an address search for Grant and Hurley in south London and a vehicle registration mark (VRM) check relating to the Love Actually star, the press standards inquiry heard.

Alec Owens, senior investigating officer for the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) from 1999 until 2005, recalled: "We went to see Mr Grant at his offices because a VRM comes up against his name. As it turned out he couldn't recall this and possibly thought he may have been in a friend's car or talking to somebody standing by that car."

One newspaper paid £800 in 2002 for the June 2001 phone bill of an unnamed sports star from a national side, the inquiry was told.

Whittamore's Hampshire home was raided in March 2003 as part of a major ICO investigation into the illegal purchase of confidential information called Operation Motorman.

The private detective was convicted in 2005 of illegally accessing data and passing it to journalists.

Robert Jay QC, counsel for the inquiry, said there was a "veritable treasure trove" of information in Whittamore's files.

Inquiry chairman Lord Justice Leveson added: "Mr Whittamore had collected together a vast amount of personal data. The documents identify the names of titles, specify journalists at the titles apparently or inferentially making the requests."

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Journalists commissioned a private detective to find out personal details about sportsmen and celebrities including Hugh Grant and his former girlfriend Liz Hurley, the Leveson Inquiry has heard. R...
Journalists commissioned a private detective to find out personal details about sportsmen and celebrities including Hugh Grant and his former girlfriend Liz Hurley, the Leveson Inquiry has heard. R...
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14:48 on 05/12/2011
Quote --- "Records seized from investigator Steve Whittamore in 2003 contained a "veritable treasure trove" of information about how newspapers ordered searches on everything from addresses to criminal records, the hearing was told."
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Records seized in 2003......

What were the police doing since 2003?

Was this a police cover up? Who is investigating the police?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FanaticRealist
Romney's Dog: 21st Century Schrodinger's Cat
15:58 on 05/12/2011
Well, Operation Elveden deals with the police's relationship with the press and the last arrest (the 6th in total) was Jamie Pyatt of The Sun back on November 4th.

I thought VRM checks through the PNC were audited through an activity log and that it was illegal to do them without an appropriate cause. So someone should look forward to being #7 if they weren't on the existing list.

As for "was this a police cover-up?"; let's be charitable and say that there appears to have been a degree of wilful ignorance in the interests of maintaining a "productive" relationship with News International for the purposes of agitating certain stories and (to be blunt) making it appear as if the police are making progress on key cases and the "fight on crime".

The police got positive publicity and the press got easy access to stories and, somewhere in the middle, the right to privacy and the protection of personal data got sacrificed.
16:00 on 05/12/2011
Sounds more like the protection services of the MOB than the police.
14:37 on 05/12/2011
No surprise. The difference between a journalist and a private eye is the latter actually goes out and researches facts.
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Gavin Saunders
we only have each other
22:05 on 05/12/2011
And as David Yelland, an ex-editor of Muckmurdoch's has said, ........."After all, what is the difference between the criminally insane and the mass-marke­t press? An ability to write..."