Wednesday, 26 October 2011
(10.30 am)
(Proceedings delayed)
(10.34 am)
Directions Hearing
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Find yourself somewhere to sit,
Mr Sherborne.
MR SHERBORNE
I apologise, my Lord.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's all right. It's an irritating
habit but 10.30 normally means 10.30.
MR SHERBORNE
I've been in another court unfortunately.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's tough, but the perils of
success.
Thank you all for coming. We're not, I think, going
to be able to do quite as much today as I would have
wanted to do, and I'm not being critical of anybody in
that regard, but there are issues which touch upon the
material that will be deployed by the inquiry, which
certainly create concerns, and understandable concerns
within the Met Police and the Crown Prosecution Service
and which therefore need resolution.
But let's see how far we can get dealing with the
issues that we want to raise and get some of the nuts
and bolts out of the way.
Right, Mr Jay, take us through where we are.
MR JAY
As you know, I've provided a note which has been
circulated and has generated responses from all the core
participants.
Some of the core participants, as you know, are here
today, some are not. Sir, the first issue is the start
date. The note put forward two competing dates, 7 and
14 November, and human nature being as it is, everybody
has plumped for 14 November.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, except for me. That was the
problem, wasn't it? I was keen to get going as quickly
as possible and everybody else is causing me to exercise
caution.
MR JAY
Yes. Ultimately, sir, obviously it's a matter for
you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, yes, I have more votes than
everybody else put together.
MR JAY
Yes, indeed, the ace of spades, but no doubt the
core participants will continue to press for
14 November, which if you were to accede to that, would
mean that written submissions would be lodged on the
9th.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, well, I have read everything
that everybody has said, and I recognise the points
made. My concern throughout has been the general
timeframe within which this inquiry has to operate to
produce a solution, if a solution there is, to be
debated by those who will debate it.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And to be acted upon expeditiously,
so that's the end of the line, and my concern has been
and remains that every time we push back the start, the
risk is that we either push back or concertina very
important debates that we're going to have to have
during the course of the next few months.
But I accede to the overwhelming submission that
everybody has made, that the 7th is just a little bit
too early.
MR JAY
Sir, may we look then at the first week of the
inquiry and then subsequent weeks.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
The first week of the inquiry will be occupied by
oral opening submissions. It is conventional that
counsel to the inquiry go first, and I propose, subject
to your view, to open the case neutrally -- I say the
case, the inquiry -- over the course of about two and
a half to three hours. I will not be providing a
written opening.
Then it needs to be decided who will go next and how
long each core participant would like in oral
submissions, indeed how long you give them in oral
submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
They may not be the same thing.
MR JAY
Sir, that's fully understood.
It is anticipated that the first week will be over
in about three days. We will hear oral submissions, and
you may be asked to make rulings on issues which have
arisen, if such issues arise over the next two or three
weeks. It may be convenient to have half a day to tie
everything up before the evidence starts the following
week, 21 November.
The week beginning 21 November will be a four-day
week. We will hear evidence from 18 individuals, who
are core participant victims and whose witness
statements will be provided as soon as possible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
By "victim", we mean those who are
either admitted to have been the subject of either
illegal or --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- potentially unethical behaviour or
who contend that they have been so subject.
MR JAY
Yes.
Sir, the agenda for the succeeding weeks of the
inquiry will be made much clearer on about next Monday
when we will provide to the core participants
a provisional list of witnesses and batting order. It
may be convenient to provide those week by week, so that
witnesses will know in which week they'll be intended to
be called. It may not be possible at this distance to
identify the particular day.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
Our current view, but it's evidently a movable
feast, is that we will conclude the evidence in module 1
at some stage in earlyish February, but obviously when
that jumbo jet lands has to be slightly uncertain at
this distance.
At the moment, we have about 130 witnesses whom we
intend to call but some of those witnesses will no doubt
either be read or treated as read.
We'll obviously have regard, in deciding in the end
whether to call or to read witnesses, to the time
available, because that is not the overriding
consideration, but it's going to be a highly relevant
consideration.
The general plan, if I can set it out --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In that regard, Mr Jay, presumably
you will be circulating the broad list as well as the
more definitive week-by-week list.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So that core participants can
identify, to such extent as it's appropriate, witnesses
from whom they believe the inquiry should hear in
person, as opposed to those whose evidence which they
will then have read --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- which can be simply put into the
system.
MR JAY
Sir, absolutely. As the protocol or the note
I prepared on 4 October indicated, the core participants
will always be given the opportunity to make submissions
to you that a witness whom we think might be read should
in fact be called.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. But everybody has got to have
to regard to the timeframe as well.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
Sir, the issue then of sitting days: the view at
the moment, having regard to the range of competing
considerations, is that we will sit seven days in each
ten working-day period, so some weeks will be three-day
weeks, some weeks will be four-day weeks.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. There may be occasional days
that aren't Fridays that I won't be able to sit, because
of other public duties.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I hope to keep that very much to
a minimum.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
MR JAY
So those are the reasonably straightforward areas.
Perhaps a less straightforward area is what I have
called in the notes the interface between the inquiry
and the ongoing police investigation.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Let's deal with that --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- in a moment. Let's deal with the
mechanics first, and discuss openings and the approach
which you've identified in relation to witnesses, but
before we do that, what's the position in relation to
the web-based evidence availability?
MR JAY
Yes. Well, as far as I'm aware, but I may need to
take more detailed instructions about this, I know that
documents are being uploaded on to the system daily and
certainly as regards the inquiry team, 1,021 documents
were uploaded as of this morning. I know that because
I have read most of them now.
It's also clear from the system that about 150 of
those documents have been released to the core
participants.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Okay.
MR JAY
Exactly how long it will take to cause necessary
redactions to take place so that documents can properly
be released to the core participants, I cannot say with
precision, but what I can say is it's being done as fast
as it possibly can.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I think that -- I don't know
whether there are any of the statements yet from those
for whom Mr Sherborne appears, but they obviously will
need to be in good time so that everybody can see
them --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- before the witnesses give
evidence.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Well, let's see what
everybody has to say about that.
If I establish a batting order which is not
necessarily intended to be final, I hope everybody will
understand.
Mr Sherborne, thank you for your written
submissions. You having joined the 14 November camp --
MR SHERBORNE
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- that's not a topic upon which you
need to address me.
I make it clear that I am very content to receive
submissions in writing as substantial as anybody wishes
to make them, and the submissions can be uploaded on to
the Internet, so that anybody else can read them and
that it isn't thought there's some private communication
system. The purpose of an oral opening is really, as it
were, to set the stall out a little bit more but not
necessarily in the detail that would be in writing. On
the basis that you've heard that Mr Jay thinks of two to
three hours, my own initial view, and I'm talking to you
because -- but everybody is here -- is that -- there are
a large number of media representatives present.
I would hope, perhaps with one exception, which I shall
come to, if it's made the subject of an application,
they could open the case within about an hour.
I am prepared to say that your brief may require
a little bit more because you'll be covering the
territory in a slightly different way.
MR SHERBORNE
My Lord, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But have you given thought to the
length of time that you would want an opening to be?
MR SHERBORNE
My Lord, yes, I have. Obviously at this
stage, it's a provisional view, but I hope it's one
which finds approval. I was going to suggest 90
minutes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that's entirely appropriate,
and carries with it the balance that I'd been hoping to
identify. I'm just conscious of what we've got to fit
in within the period that's available, and we must also
have regard to those who write it all down.
MR SHERBORNE
Yes, your Lordship is right to anticipate, as
I think I say in my note, that will we be providing
written submissions, but they will form to a large
extent a slightly different purpose. The purpose of the
oral submissions will be, as your Lordship says, to set
the stall, to set the scene, I should say, for the core
participant victims who are giving evidence; as well as
more generally, the claimant position if I can put it
that way, in relation to the issues your Lordship has to
address.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I am entirely comfortable with that.
Are we on course to ensure that those for whom you
appear who are going to give oral evidence will have
disclosed their evidence in sufficient time for us to
read it, and for us to make it available to those who
may be interested in it?
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, given the start date of 14 November, we
are on course, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That course is aiming at what date?
MR SHERBORNE
As I understand it, we are going to provide
the witness statements on a rolling basis, as far as
that's possible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In other words, as and when they're
available.
MR SHERBORNE
As and when they're available, so I won't
outline in court, given that there are a number of
people who want to speak, the process that that
involves. You'll have seen from my note, it's not an
easy process.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I don't for a moment suggest it
is, but we all have to cope with the difficulties of
life. What we do need to do is make sure we've got on
with it.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, absolutely, and I hope that the
impression that's been received is that we are getting
on with it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, we do hope to have them ready in good
time, as I say, for 14 November, and certainly we'll
provide those statements that are ready in advance of
that as quickly as we can, and that's what we're doing.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think you meant the end of October.
MR SHERBORNE
I am talking about in good time for
14 November. In terms of the date by which they're all
delivered, it is hoped that it will be by the end of
this month.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The end of October.
MR SHERBORNE
But certainly we will deliver, as
I understand it, a sizeable number of them by the end of
this month. If there are some others that may take
a few days more, that's what I envisage is the worst
case scenario.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's becoming a moving feast,
Mr Sherborne. I think you're about to get some
instructions.
MR SHERBORNE
Can I turn then, just to receive them?
Mr Crossley says that we do hope to have more by the
end of next week. What I didn't want to do is to raise
expectations only for them to be, as I say --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You can raise expectations and then
meet them.
MR SHERBORNE
We certainly intend to do that. If there are
one or two other statements that come after that, I hope
it will be understood that it isn't through the want of
us trying to provide them to the inquiry as quickly as
we can.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, and if I am pressing,
it's not because I don't recognise the problems; it's
because pressing is what I am going to do from first to
last.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I understand that. I'm sure it doesn't
just apply to the core participants.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It absolutely does not.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, you'll appreciate, can I just tell you
that currently, as it stands, we anticipate providing 19
or 20 witness statements.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Thank you. Yes. Do you have
any representations to make as to sitting times, days,
and timetable?
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I don't, unless you wish me to address
any particular matters? You have our submissions in the
note or observations.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, I think the problems you
identify in paragraph 12 of your note --
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes, it's the -- you'll appreciate that
there is a civil trial which starts on 29 January.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, and I recognise how
real these problems are, but I'm afraid they're your
problems. I can't stop and you're not suggesting I do.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, no.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I can't stop while the civil
litigation goes on, but I've no doubt that you will be
able to be kept informed of precisely what we're doing
then, and if we've -- if we can organise things in a way
that least inconveniences you, then we shall do so.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I am grateful. It may be nearer the
time that obviously matters will be somewhat clearer in
terms of timetabling.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR SHERBORNE
That's why at this stage I'm not asking you,
sir, to make any ruling.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I'm just -- you fired a warning
shot over my bow and I am returning fire.
MR SHERBORNE
I am very grateful for the return of fire.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, is there anything I can assist you
further on?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I think that's sufficient for the
moment. We'll come to the other matters which are going
to be more contentious in a moment. Thank you.
Mr Garnham, simply on timing, do you have any
submissions to make?
MR GARNHAM
No, none at all on the matters Mr Jay addressed
you on, sir. As to opening statements, we would
certainly be less than the hour you indicated; we would
think half an hour is sufficient for us.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine. Less is always more in
these circumstances, but I am just really trying to
provide a parameter for everybody to work with. All
right. Thank you.
Right. Again -- I was about to say in no particular
order but of course it's a particular order, Mr Davies.
MR DAVIES
Thank you, sir. I have very little to say on
what's been discussed so far. So far as Mr Sherborne's
clients are concerned, just to be precise, can I take it
that we will expect the statements from his clients who
are giving the evidence by 4 o'clock on Friday,
4 November, I think is the point --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I have no doubt about that. He is
hoping to be the end --
MR DAVIES
That is the end of next week.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That is the end of the next week.
That's what he hopes. That's what he hopes.
And I hope so too.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All he said is that if there's one or
two that are missing, we'll have to cope with it and we
will see.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We'll be able to schedule the
witnesses a little bit in any event. I've no doubt at
all that you'll have ample opportunity to read them and
to take instructions upon them, and then to feed into
counsel any issues that you want raised, which I think
is quite an important part of this exercise,
particularly in connection with those witness
statements.
MR DAVIES
Yes. It is, but we're conscious that that is
a time-consuming exercise, because if one is feeding
questions to someone else to ask, you have to be very
precise about what the question is, and where the
references are and why it would be a good idea to ask
it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, but I'm sure that you
will equally understand why, in the context of this
inquiry, that approach for those witnesses is
particularly important.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And Mr Sherborne hears it,
Mr Crossley hears it. I am very keen to keep it within
the bounds of what is appropriate, and we'll see how we
get on.
MR DAVIES
Yes. I just wanted to be clear what the target
date was, and I think we are clear: it is 4 November, if
at all possible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think actually --
MR DAVIES
Or earlier if possible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- I think it was, wasn't it,
Mr Sherborne?
MR SHERBORNE
Can I just explain, I don't know whether Mr
Jay is going to stand up before me, but the date
I provide is the date that we supply the witness
statements to the inquiry. Once we've done that, then
the mechanics is really with the inquiry. That's why
Mr Jay may stand up, to deal with the timing of when
they're provided to all the other core participants.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I would hope the inquiry won't take
long to join that up. You originally said the end of
October.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I did. I just wanted to be clear that
the mechanics is that we provide them to the inquiry by
that date. I have no control over that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, you have no control once you've
handed them over, and nobody will suggest that you do.
But your original target was the end of October.
MR SHERBORNE
It is, sir, and it remains the target.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And still is, and therefore the extra
days to which Mr Davies refers allow the leeway that
you're just a bit concerned about, and equally time for
us. I'll ask Mr Jay to deal with that point.
Mr Jay, it is not going to take us long, is it?
MR JAY
No, we will prioritise putting these statements on
to the system. Any section 19 issues, if they arise,
will have to be dealt with very speedily indeed.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, but presumably things like
addresses can be provided on a separate sheet of paper
and not put in the statement at all, and in that way,
I would anticipate that there's going to be very little
by way of necessary redaction, and I would have thought
that actually the point of the statements is that they
should not be redacted. It's providing material. But
obviously personal details which would normally go in
a statement, I would be perfectly content was put on
a separate schedule which then needn't be provided, just
to stop somebody having to -- but if it's -- whatever
way is convenient for you and Mr Sherborne, to maximise
the time that everybody else has to look at these
statements, because they are the first statements,
aren't they? Right.
MR DAVIES
Other points very briefly, sir. Oral opening,
we do envisage making an oral opening; I was thinking
not more than an hour and a half and very probably less.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I thought that if you had identified
the exception that was in my mind, it was you. So
I recognise the dynamic of what's going on. I'm not
encouraging people to take that length of time. They'll
take however little time they need, but I am going to
say I don't really want it to exceed that, given the
number of people who have to talk.
MR DAVIES
Yes, well, on current thinking, that will be
enough.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine. Good.
MR DAVIES
We will also be making a written opening, and we
will try and get that in by, I think it will be the 9th
now. The only other points I wanted to mention was
newsroom visits, which Mr Jay raised in his note. We
have no objection to you visiting a newsroom and if you
would like to visit one of ours, that is The Times, The
Sunday Times or The Sun, then we would be happy to
arrange that, but we have no strong views.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We will come back to that. The
reason I put it in the note is that I received a couple
of invitations, and I felt it right, first of all, to
share it with everybody and to identify what I would do,
but secondly then to list -- we'll come back to it.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Well, Mr Dingemans, you're
next.
MR DINGEMANS
Sir, just on timings of disclosure of
documents to us, as I understand it, we're going to get
the provisional timetable of witnesses on 31 October,
but we haven't yet got a date when we're going to be
given access to the documents. Obviously that's on the
critical path for producing any short written
submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand that. Does that mean
that you haven't yet had access to any documents?
MR DINGEMANS
My learned friend, I know has put in
statements, as have I. I have not seen any of his and
he won't have seen any of mine.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's as may be, but I don't yet
know whether the core participants have had access to
anything on the system.
MR DINGEMANS
No. We've no access to the system. My
learned friend said we'd got 150 documents, but I
anticipate they're the sort of preliminary notes,
et cetera, and other documents that have been exchanged.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh, I see.
MR DINGEMANS
But there's no other access and in my
submission, that is very much on the critical path to
producing what we hope will be useful submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Well, I agree with that,
although by definition not everything will be uploaded
all at once. I mean, the submissions -- the opening,
really I would have thought that most of the core
participants will have pretty strong views as to the
direction that they think I should be taking. Nobody's
being shy about making those views clear to date on
specific topics, and therefore I anticipate that people
will have views generically.
I am not suggesting that the opening submissions
will deal with the evidence that I am about to hear;
that would be quite unrealistic. It's really to set out
your submissions on a global basis, as to how I should
be approaching my task and potentially where I should be
going.
I've no problem about people saying where they think
I should broadly be going, provided there isn't a sort
of carrot and a stick involved, because I have made it
very clear to those to whom I have spoken at seminars or
otherwise, that the whole problem is an industry-wide
problem, which has to be solved in a way that works not
merely for the industry or profession, whatever word you
want to call it, but also for everybody else.
The one thing I do not want to do is to produce
a piece of paper or a document that everybody reads and
says, "Well, that's utterly unrealistic", and puts on
a shelf and allows it to gather dust.
My fear is that if one looks at the history of
investigations into these sort of areas, over the last
50 years, rather more has been put on the shelf than has
been activated.
So my ultimate aim, and if I am disclosing my hand,
I don't mind, is to produce a system, whatever it be, if
it's the same or different, that works and has the
support of everybody.
Now, that doesn't give the press a trump that says,
"Well, we're going to say no to everything", because
that also will be obvious.
It's critical that we move forward the debate,
I think.
MR DINGEMANS
My only submission really is that the chances
of us being able to assist you, sir, in that process,
are going to be much better if we've got access to the
material sooner rather than later.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I agree with that and access to
the material, we'll ask Mr Jay about that, shortly.
MR DINGEMANS
May I just, whilst dealing with access to the
material, make one other point. Obviously some of the
core participants such as the media are not publicly
funded, but there are others who are, but in any event,
to avoid wasting legal fees, whether for privately
funded or publicly funded, in our submission it would be
helpful if the inquiry was able simply just to identify,
not necessarily a detailed description of the documents,
what the document is, otherwise you have six sets of
core participants reading documents that in fact they
don't need to read, and the inquiry will have read those
documents and you will otherwise end up with
a duplication of legal effort that's simply not
required.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's a fair point. Let's see what
we can say in response to that.
MR DINGEMANS
Those are my only two submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There's one other submission that you
have to deal with. I am conscious that the date that
I've identified creates a potential problem for you.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes, I am very sorry about that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand professional commitments
are professional commitments, and I would want to do
what I could to try to fit in. I can do that -- what
I don't want to do is say: right, we'll do it the
following week.
MR DINGEMANS
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I need the whole thing to be
cohesive. What I am prepared to do is on one of the
days, possibly nearer the end, to sit very early or to
fit in with what's happening in the Supreme Court, if
I can. But that will require you to keep us informed.
MR DINGEMANS
I am very grateful. The only other
possibility, and that entirely depends on your own
proposals, would be whether one of the days for opening
submission was on a Friday. But I'm not sure whether
that's anything that is immediately attractive.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I think that one of the
suggestions was that we'd sit seven days a fortnight,
and generally always have Friday off. I mean, the
suggestion of always having Friday off --
MR DINGEMANS
For good reason and everyone can then plan.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Everybody can then plan. My concern
about making an exception is that I can readily
understand that there are lots of reasons for different
exceptions at different times. I don't rule it out, but
I would prefer you to think about whether we couldn't
start on one of the days at 9 o'clock for you to make
the submission, and then go to -- I won't call it
Middlesex Crown Court.
MR DINGEMANS
I am very grateful, sir, and we'll try and
sort that out. At the moment, all I have to say is only
20 minutes, but if I look at further material, then it
may extend a wee bit more.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine. I want to help, but
I don't want to start creating hostages to fortune for
me later on in the process.
MR DINGEMANS
I am very grateful.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much.
Right. Mr Glen.
MR GLEN
Just in terms of start date, I don't think we have
anything more to add if the 14th is settled on, and
anything which is further to be said with regard to the
document management system, and how that's going to
operate. You've seen in our letter, we have some
concerns about access to documents, but it sounds like
those are in hand.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We'll come back to document
management and we'll ask Mr Jay to elaborate upon how
this is going to work.
MR GLEN
Sir, the only other point we have, we have
indicated that we would wish to make an oral opening
statement. That's unlikely to be much more than 20
minutes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine. That's good.
Right. (Pause)
Is there any other core participant here who wants
to say anything about any of this?
MS PALIN
Sir, on behalf of Associated Newspapers, only to
say that whether we make an opening statement or whether
it's in writing or orally is a matter under
consideration, but we're happy with the time limit that
has been suggested -- indicated by the inquiry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I mean, to some extent you're
absolutely welcome to do so, but one of the interesting
issues, which Associated Newspapers can think about, is
the extent to which they wish to adopt what Mr Dacre
said at the seminar. I don't -- I am not saying they
should or they shouldn't. What I have said about the
seminars is that they're part of the record of inquiry,
they don't constitute evidence, and the reason I said
that was because I wanted to make it clear that nobody
would be cross-examined on the basis of an inconsistent
statement in the inquiry, based upon what they said at
the seminar, because here it's a rather more measured
environment.
But that's not to stop anybody saying, "Well,
actually, what I said is what I mean to say and I am
content for that to be part of the record". I'm not
saying that Mr Dacre would want to do that, but
I wouldn't want him to feel that he wasn't able to if he
wished to. If that makes sense?
MS PALIN
Yes, sir, thank you. The only other submission
I make is just to simply say that we agree with the
concerns expressed by Mr Davies and Mr Dingemans in
relation to timetabling, but we're conscious that the
submissions have been made and that you have our
concerns in mind.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Anything else?
Right, well, Mr Jay, let's deal with document
management. There are documents on the system, but then
documents have to be put into a place where the core
participants can get them.
MR JAY
Yes. Sir, I can assist you to this extent, that
documents obviously have been coming in over the last
six to eight weeks, have been uploaded on to the system
as soon as possible. Some of the documents are more
important, perhaps more controversial than others.
I can give you an example, our preliminary view in
relation to documents which have been provided by the
BBC, and I must say there are a lot of them, is that
most of that material is uncontroversial, but some of it
we might wish to focus on and assist you with.
Now, we have prepared internally a note which
summarises that material. It's worthy of further
consideration, but at the moment there's no reason why
that note, either in its existing or mildly edited form,
is not made available to the core participants so that
they don't have to read all the BBC material; they can
look at the note and then decide which parts need to be
read. As I've indicated, we will then proceed to call
the relevant evidence.
Of course, we'd need to agree that process with the
BBC; they might have objection to it.
But then there's other documentation, in particular
witness statements and then exhibits to witness
statements, for which commercial confidence has been
claimed by the originators of the statement. In each
case consideration needs to be given to the exercise of
power under section 19, and the application of the
principles set out in the documents protocol which we
finalised last time. Now, that take some time, but it
involves the participation of the core participants at
each stage, so that the solicitor to the inquiry knows
how to proceed.
I should indicate, some of the documents have
already been redacted, and there may or may not be issue
with that, but insofar as they have been redacted, one
assumes that no further redactions need to take place.
But some have been provided entirely unredacted. Now,
we need to move forward as quickly as we can, so that
the section 19 process, as foreshadowed in the protocol,
is addressed and complied with.
I can't indicate to you at this stage, but I'll
discuss the matter with the solicitor over our short
break, which will probably take place in about 20
minutes' time, indicate perhaps in more detail to assist
you as much as we can with how long we think this going
to take and in what order.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I appreciate that there's a lot
of paddling underneath the surface.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Which is not merely an assimilation
of the information contained within the statements and
the material with which we've been provided.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But also putting it in a form where
it can be disclosed and then disclosing it.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It obviously should be done on a sort
of structured basis. To such extent as it is possible
to provide a route map to prevent very expensive lawyers
from having to spend --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- time retreading over territory
which actually has been trodden without problem, would
be desirable. But I don't want to put extra burden on
the inquiry lawyers, beyond that which is reasonable,
bearing in mind all the other things they have to do.
MR JAY
Yes, well, that might create difficulties for us.
Moreover, it's to some extent subjective; what we might
think is relevant and whatever summary we might provide
would not necessarily --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I don't think it is suggested that
anybody should summarise a statement. I mean, I'd have
to think about whether it advances matters much, because
I anticipate that the statements, people will want to
read. I'd be very surprised if anybody wasn't very keen
to run through what all the witnesses actually say, and
then they'll very quickly pick up whether or not the
exhibits to those statements justify further work. If
there's a particular chunk of work that you've done on
the BBC, then so be it.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I am not suggesting there should be
any summary.
MR JAY
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's sufficient to identify the name
of the witness, and perhaps the occupation of the
witness so that you know what to go to. I am not being
dogmatic about any of it, but I do think it is probably
worthwhile having a discussion, so that if the system --
if it's sensible to organise out work which we'd have to
do anyway in a particular way that makes it easier for
others, then we should do it. If not, then not. But
I'm sure that the general cooperation which is apparent
between those who are appearing for core participants
will operate to make it as easy as possible.
MR JAY
Yes. Fortunately, the system has got a very
powerful and effective search engine. If, for example,
one wanted to find at the click of a switch all the
evidence relevant to a particular newspaper, well, then
the machine will sort out all that evidence for you
immediately, and will list it.
So a lot of the work can be done using the powers
which are available. Of course, we have prepared
various internal documents to assist us. It may or may
not be possible to release those to the core
participants. It probably will be.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You'll have to decide that on
a case-by-case basis, but one thing which is important
is that all those who are involved in this should be
appropriately assisted on learning how to use the system
that we've got in operation.
MR JAY
Yes. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I know that one of the solicitors to
the core participants has used it on a different inquiry
and was helpful, and we'll just need to make sure that
everybody is appropriately trained.
MR JAY
I am sure that's taken place. Indeed, I know it
has taken place.
It's largely an intuitive system, but people's
intuitions vary when it comes to this sort of
technology, but the search engines are, I've found, very
easy to use, and can be used either in a general way to
sort documents out, according to theme, according to
individual or according to newspaper, or can be used
more precisely. If one keys in a particular name, for
example, an alleged victim, well, then, that would throw
up all references to that individual throughout the
whole of the database.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I am sure that the technologically
capable Bar and solicitors' profession is more than able
to use equipment that a young relative of mine would
also be able to use, but with which I would struggle.
All right.
MR JAY
I will come back to the section 19 redaction
process, if I may, shortly after 11.45.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine.
MR JAY
Our break. Is it appropriate, sir, now to move on
to the issue of the interface between the inquiry and
the police prosecution?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I think that it is.
MR JAY
I say "police prosecution"; there aren't any
proceedings afoot.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Police investigation.
MR JAY
Yes, individuals have been arrested as you know.
All of this is in the public domain and the
investigation continues. What has been provided --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course, the proceedings are active
within the meaning of the contempt of court legislation.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In relation to those persons who have
been arrested.
MR JAY
That's right. My understanding of schedule 1, the
relevant date is the date of arrest.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Correct.
MR JAY
Then the strict liability rule applies and
everybody will understand what that means.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Everybody in this room should
understand what it means.
MR JAY
Yes. If they don't understand, I would recommend
that they look PDQ as to what the Contempt of Court Act
says. We haven't, as it were, reached that point,
because we are still discussing how the inquiry might
proceed, and as you know, joint submissions have been
provided to you this morning, and furnished to the core
participants and then will be made publicly available,
on behalf of the CPS and the
Metropolitan Police Service.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. Well, it's not fair to anybody
to ask them to deal with this on the hoof --
MR JAY
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- I don't think, although I'll
listen to anything that anybody wants to say on the
topic.
I say immediately that it is entirely understandable
that the investigation, focusing purely on the
investigation, should want to minimise to the point of
extinction the slightest risk and the way to do that is
to effectively shut it all down. The problem that
I have, and this is going to be the subject of -- going
to have to be the subject of argument, is balancing the
absolute requirement that anybody who is ultimately
charged should be able to receive a fair trial, against
the competing dynamic that I have to resolve the issues
that I have to resolve probably well before any trial,
if there is to be one, would ever take place; and I have
to do it in a way that satisfies the public that I've
not just walked past the problem. That's my concern.
MR JAY
Yes, and part 1 of inquiry requires you, as we all
know, to investigate the culture, practices and ethics
of the press. And culture and practices are concerned
with systems and with quantity of activity.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And oversight.
MR JAY
And oversight.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
System -- that comes within systems.
MR JAY
Yes. So one cannot ignore that, nor can they
ignore the fact that you have been set up under
statutory powers, and provided that those statutory
powers are exercised fairly, there's an overriding duty
to act fairly under section 17 of the Inquiries Act; and
provided that you keep within your terms of reference,
and provided that you respect all privileges which
witnesses might claim under section 22 of the Act -- it
may be that this would have to be the subject of further
argument -- the risk of an eventual abuse of process
argument ever succeeding would be extremely low.
But these are all preliminary thoughts that need to
be dwelt upon at greater leisure. The police and the
Director of Public Prosecutions will need to give --
have the opportunity to -- may develop submissions on
those points and the other core participants may have
matters to draw to your attention.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We're going to have to get into at
least two areas of law, it seems to me. The first is
we're going to have to get into the area of law that
surrounds abuse of process.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The area of law that surrounds fair
reporting and contempt.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Also, it would be foolish not to
identify the need to look at the extent to which
Parliament sets out subjudice rules.
MR JAY
In relation to its own proceedings.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In relation to its own procedure,
because it would be foolish not to recognise the risk
that what is discussed here might be discussed in
another place.
MR JAY
Yes. Perhaps the fourth item would be the content
and scope of the privilege against self-incrimination --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
-- which in fact can be dealt with succinctly.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And its effect.
MR JAY
And its effect.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Now, that's a distinct piece of work
which we're going to have to do.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It seems to me that it ought to be
done sooner rather than later, and doesn't need to wait
for the start. We can get on with it.
MR JAY
Yes. (Pause)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The issue may be rendered less opaque
by what's in the public domain or could be in the public
domain from the civil litigation; what could be, not
necessarily what is at the moment, but what could be,
and that involves News International.
But steering a course between the need properly to
address my terms of reference and the need not to cause
undue risk to any other process is important.
MR JAY
Sir, they're the four rubrics which you have
identified. In my submission, for the smooth running of
the inquiry, this needs to be sorted out, to use the
vernacular, as soon as possible, but in a manner which
isn't too hasty so that the interested parties, by which
I mean those parties most interested in this issue,
which will be Mr Garnham's clients, Mr Davies' clients
and obviously our team, we have sufficient time to put
in proper submissions.
In terms of the timetable, you may think it
appropriate that there be a further preliminary hearing
to address this particular and important issue as soon
as possible, and perhaps early next week.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, we need to find out when people
would be ready to argue it, this document only having
recently come into being.
But it's certainly going to have to be resolved, not
merely argued but resolved, which actually means
a ruling from me, as soon as possible.
Right, well, let's see what everybody has to say
about that.
Mr Garnham, let me start with you on this topic.
You understand -- I quite understand the Director's
perspective. The easy answer is "nothing", and
I recognise the force of the argument without
necessarily feeling that it's a way that I could go,
given the other pressures and the terms of reference
that I have to deal with.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, I should say straightaway that although
the Met Police and the Director have had conversations
about this, and are of one mind, I, formally speaking,
don't stand here representing the Director of Public
Prosecutions today; I represent the Met; and there is
a distinction there which is important to maintain.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand that. Does that mean
that you believe that the Director of Public
Prosecutions is likely to want to intervene to make
submissions on this himself?
MR GARNHAM
It is possible. I can say no more than that.
It may be that I'll be instructed to make such
submissions on his behalf. It may be not. But we would
respectfully agree with Mr Jay's suggestion to you, sir,
that a time is put aside to deal with this in the near
future, and we will convey back to the DPP the
importance that you are attaching to this, and it will
be for him to decide whether he has representation
separately, whether I am instructed to deal with his
points as well as the Met's, or whether he chooses not
to appear. I can't speak for him on that topic.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, that's entirely fair enough.
MR GARNHAM
Sir --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, and I'm sure he
understands the -- and you understand the issues that
I face, which are slightly different to the issues that
he faces.
MR GARNHAM
Absolutely. Sir, the note that was circulated
today recognises those competing imperatives.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
It sets out the concerns that the Director has
in relation to any prosecution, and the police have in
relation to the continuing investigation and those two
are distinct as well. It attempts to suggest for your
consideration, sir, one way in which those competing
observations can be dealt with.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The problem with the suggestion, and
of course I've only recently had the chance to read
them, is that it runs a risk that we'd never end out of
the Divisional Court, and I'm not prepared to have a
situation which means that every three minutes --
MR GARNHAM
No. We too would be anxious to avoid that,
sir, but there is a problem in that the subjects which
you and Mr Jay identified a moment ago are all of
importance and all directly relevant, but it will be
necessary on occasions to test their application by
reference to particular documents.
It is, we would respectfully suggest, impossible to
deal with this entirely in the abstract. So whilst
I respectfully agree with what Mr Jay says as to the
need to address and reach resolution in respect of those
points of principle, there may yet be a need to look at
it against hard emails and documents. I say that merely
by way of anticipation of submissions I'll make next
week --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, I understand the point. I can't
stop anybody challenging a ruling of mine because the
legislation provides that avenue, but if I am even to
start to be able to address the issues I have to address
within the timeframe, this bus will not be stopping.
MR GARNHAM
Sir, no, I understand -- I respectfully
recognise those points and we would say now, as we say
at the end of this note, that we think it exceedingly
unlikely that we will need to challenge a decision. One
can never rule it out, but one hopes that it will be
possible to deal with this without troubling the
Divisional Court or the Administrative Court at all.
But nonetheless we will be inviting you, sir, to
consider the force of some of the points we make against
the documents where it's at its most acute.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, we don't -- I understand the
point. I understand the point.
MR GARNHAM
That aside, sir, we are of course entirely
content to prepare submissions as Mr Jay and you have
suggested, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Who else -- I make it clear
that the fact that a core participant is a core
participant doesn't mean that they have to take part in
every single debate. It may very well be that some core
participants will not feel it necessary to enter into
this debate at all, this argument, and leave it to me.
But does anybody have anything to say about the
general topic? Let me pick up the two most obvious
people. Mr Davies?
MR DAVIES
Well, I don't think there's anything I want to
say about the general topic now, sir. I think our
position will be that we don't wish to obstruct the
inquiry and we don't wish to obstruct the police
investigation, not surprisingly.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DAVIES
If a modus operandi can be agreed between the
inquiry on the one side and the DPP and the police on
the other, I am sure we won't want to get in the way.
But on the other hand, the particular matters which
I suspect are going to be discussed are of close
importance to us, and I think we may well have some
observations to make. I don't intend to make any now.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I understand that.
MR DAVIES
Particularly, if I may say, I think what Mr
Garnham was saying is that in the course of the hearing
which is envisaged on this subject, perhaps next week,
it may be necessary to refer to particular documents by
way of illustration of the problems which arise, both
for the prosecution and for the inquiry, and if those
are our documents, then that's -- or documents which
concern us, then we may well be interested in that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, we'll have to see how far we
go.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It may be necessary to make
a section 19 order in relation to -- so that I've just
not, as it were, thrown the baby out before I've even
decided whether the baby is going to have a bath.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The other aspect is this, and this
does concern you, and I'm absolutely not asking you to
comment upon this now but I am asking you to think about
it, I am concerned with culture, practice, ethics --
that's the rubric of the terms of reference -- and less
on who did what to whom, which is another shorthand form
of words that I've used.
That's part 2.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
For our grandchildren. What I am
concerned that you think about is the extent to which,
with your knowledge and your instructions, the picture
at the News of the World can't be painted in a way that
doesn't require over-descent into detail. I am not
saying any more than that, and I am not -- you may feel
this is not somewhere you can go, or you want to go, or
you're prepared to go.
But there is an element of this which, in order to
paint the bigger picture, requires me to paint -- may
require me to look at the detail. If it doesn't require
me to look at the detail, then as far as I am concerned,
that's all to the good. And that's not just a point
that's relevant to News International, because if one
goes back to What Price Privacy? and the Information
Commissioner's report and that table, which involves
others.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Then, again, it is the overarching
position I am seeking to reach for the purposes of this
part of the inquiry, in order to provide a factual --
a sound foundation to consider the other parts of my
terms of reference. I would prefer not to get bogged
down, if I can avoid it, in detail which is highly
relevant to part 2, and is obviously that which the
police and the CPS are focused upon; if I can avoid the
detail, because I've got a sufficient substratum of
fact, a narrative as I've called it, then I would be
keen to do so because I don't want to interfere more
than is absolutely necessary with an investigation or
any possible prosecution, if there is to be one, and
I certainly don't want to prejudice either of those.
So I don't think that's too coded, but you
understand the issue. It is, as I say, not just an
issue for News International, but an issue for others
because of What Price Privacy?
MR DAVIES
Sir, we understand the point and whether we can
solve it, I don't know, but we'll take it under
consideration.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand and I'm not requiring --
I couldn't require you to go beyond that which your
instructions permit, however -- whatever advice you give
to your clients. That's for you and for them --
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- to think about. But -- and I'm
not holding a carrot out, I'm merely saying that for the
purposes of part 1, I have to do what I have to do, but
I don't need to go beyond that which I have to do.
That's the point I am seeking to make.
MR DAVIES
Well understood.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So you will be present, is quite
clear from what you've said?
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I am going to ask you next,
Mr Sherborne.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes. These are issues which we say are
relevant or potentially relevant to number of the core
participant victims who are giving evidence to this
inquiry in part 1, both potentially to their evidence
and to the submissions that I might make on their
behalf.
I mean, of course we understand the concerns about
creating any risk to the criminal investigation and to
any proceedings. It's certainly not my client's desire
to cause any such risk, but the phone hacking scandal is
part of the narrative of the very real experiences
a number of the core participant victims suffered, and
are going to give evidence about in part 1, because, as
you say, sir, that's part of your remit.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, there's no question about that.
It's not the story from their perspective.
MR SHERBORNE
I understand that. It is the extent to which
one goes into the story and the issues which you're
going to decide are therefore relevant --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Or behind their story.
MR SHERBORNE
Behind their story.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Their story. Anyway, of course
nothing that I do in connection with the evidence that
I adduce or that Mr Jay adduces in front of me, I should
put it, in any way controls what you say or do. I can't
do that and I am not intending to exercise censorship
rights over you. You will be aware of the law, as well
as everybody else and I've no doubt at all that your
clients don't want to prejudice what is happening,
because in large part they are the object of the
exercise.
MR SHERBORNE
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So -- all right.
MR SHERBORNE
I will be there, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you. Does anybody else want to
say anything about that? (Pause)
Right. Well, as I say, nobody need feel obliged to
attend. I've made it clear that although I teased
Mr Sherborne about 10.30, the fact is nobody need be
here at any of these hearings unless they wish to be.
That's a matter for their professional judgment.
Right. Well, how long -- when is it appropriate to
set a timetable for to do this?
MR JAY
Well, I would have thought that the hearing would
take half a day.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
At least, yes?
MR JAY
When I suggested the beginning of next week, that
balances time required to prepare submissions against
the need to have this issue resolved as soon as
possible.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Does anybody have any
objection to that? Mr Garnham, you're probably slightly
ahead of the game on this.
MR GARNHAM
Yes, we are, because we've done the work that
went into that note.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GARNHAM
I don't know whether Mr Jay is expecting us to
produce something further in writing or whether we can
proceed straight to oral submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, the only question is whether
you want to produce anything that identifies where you
think the law takes us, because your note doesn't
presently do that.
MR GARNHAM
No, certainly we will. The question is whether
we do it in writing or orally. It is often beneficial
to do it in writing because it speeds things up.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, and it can be pre-read. You
needn't worry that -- I am pretty familiar with the law
on abuse of process. I am pretty familiar with the law
of contempt. But there are obviously other things that
are less familiar.
MR GARNHAM
I am conscious of the fact that because we have
thus far tried to do this in concert with the DPP, and
that takes a little bit of time to organise that, but
we'll fit in, sir, with your timetable.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Is the beginning of next
week difficult for you, Mr Davies?
MR DAVIES
No, my Lord.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Very good. Or anybody else that
might want to participate?
Right. Well, I think that that's a good idea, and
there's no reason why we shouldn't have a hearing, then,
next Monday to deal with this discrete issue.
Right, we'll have a short break and then deal with
what else remains. Thank you.
(11.45 am)
(A short break)
(11.52 am)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. There is an associated topic
which will require consideration. It really comes up
under "any other business" today, because it's not
mentioned by Mr Jay, which concerns the fact that
a number of persons have expressed a real interest in
providing evidence to this inquiry, but wish to do so
under conditions of anonymity. Mr Jay, where are we on
that?
MR JAY
Sir, that is right. Sir, you would have, in
principle at least, power under section 19 to safeguard
the Article 8 concerns of witnesses, if satisfied that
those concerns trumped any Article 8(2) consideration.
The matter is touched on in Mr Beer's book, under
the section, "Protective Measures for Witnesses",
paragraph 6.92 and following.
He deals, as you might expect, with the Article 2
and the common-law position, but it's page 308, at
paragraph 6.110. He deals with Article 8, admittedly in
quite general terms, and you'll note under
paragraph 6.111 that a person's professional life may
come within the scope of his Article 8 rights. (Pause)
There are a number of witnesses who have come
forward and doubtless others might do so, who are saying
that they will not give their evidence without the
protection of anonymity, which is the fear presumably of
losing their employment and/or their professional
reputations.
Now, each case would have to be considered on a, as
it were, case-by-case basis, which one would need to
weigh up the strength of the Article 8(1) concerns
against the competing considerations in Article 8(2),
which would include the desirability of public justice,
as it were, that witnesses give their evidence in the
full glare of publicity and not under the cloak of
anonymity, and also the obvious point that if witnesses
are giving evidence anonymously, that will restrict the
possibility of cross-examination.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
These are all obvious concerns. They can be
discussed in general, but as I've indicated, one would
need to delve into the facts of individual cases before
you can reach a decision. What seems appropriate in the
first instance is that witnesses who wish to claim
anonymity may be invited to give their account to the
solicitor to the inquiry, and perhaps in a separate
document the reasons for the anonymity claim, but until
the issue is determined by you, such witnesses will have
the benefit of interim protection under section 19, but
in due course, you will have to decide in each
individual case whether anonymity will be granted in
respect of their evidence.
If you were to decide, for example, that anonymity
will not be granted because the Article 8(2)
considerations outweigh the Article 8(1), well, then,
presumably the witness will decide not to give evidence,
and that will be the end of the matter. If, on the
other hand, you decide to give anonymity in an
individual case, well, then, the evidence will be
disseminated on the basis of whatever protections you
deem appropriate.
Then there are ancillary or adjectival questions of
how the evidence is going to be received: will screens
be erected in the inquiry room, and matters of that
nature; or indeed will the evidence be heard in private?
So these again are all theoretical. One will need
to consider the needs and demands of each individual
case.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But it's sufficient at this stage for
me to say, is it, that I am interested for the inquiry
to hear from anybody, that I will respect a request for
anonymity entirely and will not breach that anonymity
unless I have the express approval of the person who has
sought it? In other words, I will receive anything on
the basis upon which it is provided and would be
entirely content to allow that person to drop out of the
system, as it were --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- if I did not accede to a request
for anonymity. That's the approach.
MR JAY
That must be the bottom line, and the other axiom
is that any core participant who wishes to make
submissions to you, either that as a matter of
principle, anonymity simply should not be granted, or
that in a particular case anonymity is inappropriate,
should have that opportunity before the evidence is ever
given.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
The exact mechanics for achieving that will need to
be thought through, because there are difficulties in
providing witness statements even under the protection
of a confidentiality undertaking which each core
participant will need to sign in any event, in a way
which might disclose to a core participant the probable
identity of the witness. I confess that the exact
mechanics of this have not been considered.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, any statement would have to be
drawn up in such a way that did not, as it were, allow
a jigsaw to be put together.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Otherwise, there's no point in it.
MR JAY
Absolutely.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But that's -- presumably whoever
offered me evidence on that basis would be very mindful
of that risk.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But can I reach that conclusion at
this stage, and then, should it arise, allow for an
argument as to whether I should admit any evidence as
a result?
MR JAY
Yes. Well, in my submission you can, but other
core participants may choose to submit now that as
a matter of principle, this proposed procedure is simply
wrong, that the Article 8(1) considerations I've
mentioned would never override the need for public
justice. So let's hear what they have to say.
But --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But Mr Beer certainly says somewhere
in relation to section 19 that it specifically covers
witnesses giving evidence under a cloak of anonymity.
MR JAY
Oh, yes. Yes, but the paradigm case would be an
Article 2 or Article 3 consideration --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
-- or similar common-law considerations. Those are
in play in the Baha Mousa inquiry. The Article 8
considerations are less clear-cut.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But again, it is important to go back
to what I am trying to do, isn't it, which is not, for
this part of the inquiry, cast blame or make findings of
fact about specific people, but rather seeking to obtain
evidence of culture, ethics, practice.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Which can be more generic than
specific. Can be.
MR JAY
Can be.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Well, anything else on
that topic?
MR JAY
Sir, no.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Very well. All right, this is called
a fast ball. Mr Sherborne, do you have anything to say
on this at this stage?
MR SHERBORNE
It is coming my way first. Nothing other
than to endorse your approach; since we're talking in
the abstract, if I can put it that way, we would endorse
the approach that witnesses should be encouraged to give
evidence in whatever form they can, and it's a matter
then for you, sir, to decide whether or not, balancing
Article 8(1) and 8(2), which is a familiar exercise
certainly in other courts, as to whether or not that's
appropriate. We have nothing more to say about it than
that at this stage.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I think that at the moment it
is, as I say -- it's not theoretical because of the
approach, but I'm not making any definitive conclusions
about any person.
MR SHERBORNE
I understand that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Does anybody else want to
say anything about that?
MR DINGEMANS
Just this: that although you have the power
to say and order evidence to be given anonymously, if
someone does contact the inquiry and you decide on --
having looked at the matter and having heard submissions
from core participants, that that shouldn't be given
anonymously and the person says, "I don't want now to
give evidence", you still also have the power to compel
a person to give evidence, and of course you may then
have other core participants saying that evidence ought
to be adduced, and the person contacting the inquiry may
need to be made aware of that possibility, however
remote it may be.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But it may not be, because I can
say -- I mean, and help me, this is exactly the sort of
issue that I wanted to think about. Why can't I say
I will receive such material if I feel that no -- that
it's inappropriate even, at first blush, to grant
anonymity, then I can simply return the statement,
because I won't have disclosed it to anybody and I won't
pay any attention to it?
MR DINGEMANS
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If I do what you suggest, then
actually I am requiring whoever might have important
information, one way or the other, not to provide it
because I am saying: I can't even give you the warranty
as you write to me that your name won't be made public
because I have the power to subpoena and I have the
power to do all these things. Unless I say: I will not
exercise that power and I will be prepared to send the
statement back, not deal with it in any way, unless you
agree otherwise; then if I can't do that, then
I effectively discourage the sort of assistance I might
otherwise get.
MR DINGEMANS
No, and everyone -- it's common ground that
you should be encouraging that assistance, but you need
to contemplate these possible steps. You receive
a document, a statement, which on the face of it you
think should remain anonymous. It is then circulated
with that anonymity respected for the core participants
to make representations as to anonymity, and
representations are made which persuade you, in those
specific circumstances, that there ought not to be
anonymity.
Then, of course, the person -- the inquiry can
return the statement in that situation and say no more,
but really has to make a ruling at this stage that that
will be its approach, to avoid the core participants
coming back and saying: and what is more, not only
should you not maintain anonymity, you should also call
this person.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You should actually call this
evidence; this evidence is very important evidence.
MR DINGEMANS
But of course you may take the view that to
encourage it in the light of the approaches you have
had, that that would be a proposed way forward.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, because if I don't say that,
they'll never do it.
MR DINGEMANS
Exactly, and that would be antithetical to
the whole purpose of the inquiry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's the point. Thank you.
Mr Davies, do you have anything to say about this?
MR DAVIES
No, I don't think so, sir. The only thought
that I've had -- and this is, as you said, a fast ball
--
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm sorry about that.
MR DAVIES
Not at all. I think as Mr Jay says, the
Article 8 issues could be quite difficult to balance,
and I don't think we would want to get drawn into an
argument in principle about that. But we certainly
would want to have the right to make submissions in any
particular case, and those submissions might -- you
know, will very likely also embrace the principle. But
I think an abstract argument would probably take a lot
of everybody's time.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. But the general principle has
to be identified along the lines I've just discussed
with Mr Dingemans, otherwise I don't get past the first
hurdle, do I?
MR DAVIES
Well, I don't think we would have any objection
to the procedure which was debated between you and
Mr Dingemans, under which you retain the right to say:
all right, I am persuaded that this evidence should not
be given anonymously, but in those circumstances it's
not going to be given at all.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Unless the witness is prepared to
say: all right.
MR DAVIES
Unless the witness is prepared --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So, in other words, I give the
witness the trump, if you like.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The ultimate decision.
MR DAVIES
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Thank you.
MR DAVIES
Could I just say, this discussion I think
relates to complete anonymity, and not to a slightly
different question of witnesses who may wish -- not to
have their appearance bandied about, because that may
occur with a number of witnesses. The particular
example I have in mind is Mr Mahmood, who is perhaps
better known as the fake sheikh.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DAVIES
But that, I think, raises much easier issues
than complete anonymity.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that does raise easier
issues. I don't exclude the possibility of taking
evidence remotely, if it's appropriate and necessary.
We'll have to see. Thank you.
Does anybody else want to say anything about that?
Yes, Mr Garnham?
MR GARNHAM
Sir, only to add what Mr Davies has just said:
you will be aware of the range of options that are open
to you from an order for full anonymity with no evidence
being given in public; down through anonymous evidence,
given behind a screen; anonymous evidence without
a screen; cipher so that only core participants know the
identity of the person concerned; an order for no
publication of name or appearance or addresses all the
way down; and a particular solution may fit a particular
set of facts.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I entirely agree. One size won't fit
all, but the critical point that I am keen to
establish -- and this is why I wanted to raise it now --
was whether to make it clear that I would receive such
material without prejudicing the person who provides it
from withdrawing.
MR GARNHAM
On that I have nothing else to say.
MR GLEN
Sir, I think Mr Garnham may have pre-empted one of
the things I was going to raise. It is simply to
understand the process by which a witness statement that
your Lordship receives and considers of interest, but
the witness wants to retain anonymity. Would the
witness statement, when it is passed to the core
participants, be redacted to the point where the core
participants at that stage wouldn't be able to discern
the identity of the witness concerned?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Otherwise, it defeats the purpose,
doesn't it?
MR GLEN
I can see that, sir. That's my point really. It
is quite difficult then to make submissions on whether
anonymity may be justified in the abstract without
knowing the identity; if, say, the witness is making
allegations about newspaper X, in certain circumstances,
it may be that newspaper X would like to submit evidence
in response to that --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR GLEN
-- but without knowing the identity.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand the point but we'll only
be able to do it on a case-by-case basis, and given that
I am not, as I say, here to seek to unpick one newspaper
as opposed to another, this isn't going -- I am not
going to produce a report that says: well, I think this
newspaper has a wonderful system and that newspaper has
an awful system. That's not my job. My job is to see
what's going on in the business and whether as a result,
because it really is the follow-on, the method
whereby -- the controls that are in place, the PCC or
whatever, are sufficient.
MR GLEN
I understand.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's only to get to that last
question that I've got to go through the first, isn't
it?
MR GLEN
I understand that, sir. It's just in terms of the
wider culture or practice that's going on, it is
inevitable that if evidence is put forward, either by
Mr Sherborne's clients or by anonymous witnesses coming
forward and contributing themselves, if that evidence is
put forward, that's going to be specific examples, and
one can see a situation where a misleading impression of
the culture and practices and ethics of the press is
created, if press are not able to answer individual
allegations.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I take the point, and therefore
that's the balance and therefore one will have to look
and see what's going on and have to see whether it adds
to the corpus of knowledge. I'm not saying how much
weight could ever be attached to this evidence, which is
an entirely different question. That's an entirely
different question.
MR GLEN
I think that maybe is the fundamental --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, I understand. Yes.
MS PALIN
Sir, the last point your Lordship made is the key
point here; this is a fast ball and I wonder whether the
way forward is for us to consider what your Lordship and
the inquiry have said this morning and then make further
submissions on Monday, if so minded.
Our concern is that in receiving the evidence -- but
obviously your Lordship will need to see the application
for anonymity and the reasons that lie behind it first
of all, but we are concerned that while you should have
to see the evidence, the anonymous evidence that the
witness wishes to give at that stage, in order to --
when at that stage all that needs to be considered are
the reasons why the applicant wishes to have anonymity.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But the reasons might be balanced,
but the evidence potentially to be given may be of
significance, even if only limited weight can be
attached to it. I am not troubled about looking at
material which I am later going to exclude from my mind.
I spent a lifetime doing that. So nobody need have
concerns about it, but I am perfectly happy if you want
to say something else about this subject on Monday for
you to do so.
MS PALIN
I think that would be the appropriate way
forward, that we could all consider this fast ball and
the ramifications and the fairness of the procedure
being indicated.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's not too fast a ball. We won't
debate it. Don't worry.
I am very happy to continue to hear you on the
subject, because I am conscious that it wasn't in the
note that Mr Jay circulated, because this is an issue
which has only comparatively recently arisen.
So if on Monday you want to say something else about
the subject, then you'll be absolutely at liberty to do
so and I won't do anything that runs counter to that in
advance of Monday.
MS PALIN
I am grateful.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Except I might start to prepare
a protocol that deals with it.
MS PALIN
I think that would be --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
When I say "I might start", I don't
actually mean that. Right. Does anybody else want to
say anything on this subject?
Just Mr Sherborne, you ought to pick up the point
that's been made, and the possibility is that you may
say: well, actually, I want this person to give evidence
but that might just have to be the quid pro quo.
MR SHERBORNE
It may be. You'll appreciate that in
relation to the core participants there is only one, and
we've already debated this, or ventilated this --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh no, I'm not talking about the core
participant who is himself or herself anonymous. That's
quite different. I'm not talking about that all.
MR SHERBORNE
I appreciate the point. I just wanted to be
clear in case there was any suggestion it was somehow
core participant victims.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you for making that point.
Right. What else am I dealing with, Mr Jay?
MR JAY
The uploading of material on the system and
dissemination.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
The first stage, and this can be completed almost
immediately, is that the core participants will be
invited to sign a confidentiality undertaking. That is
being prepared in draft. I have approved it. It is in
a standard form. It is based on a similar undertaking
given in a previous inquiry, and I imagine will be
entirely uncontroversial.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, because obviously one can't have
what one is showing to core participants in advance
enter the public domain.
MR JAY
Yes. Sir, the most interesting evidence from the
core participants' perspective, save for a category of
evidence I'll need to address in a moment, are the
witness statements from other core participants and
indeed from ordinary members of the public.
It occurs to us or appears to us that those
statements can probably be provided in full to the core
participants, save that essential personal data can be
redacted, and by that I mean the address at the start of
the statement, where it's not a professional address.
So that process can occur almost immediately in
relation to the witness statements. There are then
two --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The other one -- yes, you might --
MR JAY
There are two categories of documentary evidence
which are slightly more tricky. The first category are
the exhibits to many of the press witness statements,
which are multifarious but many of them contain what are
said to be commercially sensitive material, for example
details of bonuses, details of disciplinary procedures,
the minutiae of contractual matters, et cetera, and it's
said that to provide that material to competitors might
be commercially damaging.
Now, the strength of that objection is difficult to
assess, certainly from an outsider, but what I would
suggest in order to accelerate the process and without
prejudice to the protocol is that if individual members
of the press can identify more precisely and as quickly
as possible what redactions are sought in relation to
what I am calling the commercially sensitive material,
insofar as redactions have not already been made in
material supplied to the inquiry, if that could be done
as soon as possible, well, then, rapid decisions can be
taken by the inquiry as to whether to accept the
proposed redactions or if not to accept them what -- how
the matter can be resolved, hopefully consensually and
without the need to trouble you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Is it possible to provide the
statements without those exhibits that --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- about which concern is expressed
by the makers of the statements?
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And then ask the makers of the
statements to identify the redactions they seek, given
that they've asked for it to be redacted, whether in
whole or in part. But I would have thought that much of
the material to which you refer would not be of primary
interest to the core participants, the history of -- it
might be of interest.
MR JAY
Well, given that I, having read most of these
exhibits, can see that most of the press core
participants have very similar bonus structures.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You had better be careful about this,
Mr Jay.
MR JAY
Perhaps I've already given away too much. It is
hardly of surprise, because the range of possibilities
here is not going to be too plentiful. The concerns
which have been expressed, I can see one or two
instances where they might have force, but generally
I don't see the strength of the point, but I would
invite the core participants in relation to these
exhibits just to be more specific.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, you're not talking about the
core participants; you're talking about the witnesses.
MR JAY
Yes, they are -- we're talking about press
witnesses who are --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, but the BBC might be in the same
position, I don't know.
MR JAY
Yes, they are. That's true.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So you disclose the statements, you
disclose the exhibits about which no complaint or
concern has been raised by the maker of the statement,
and you ask the maker of the statement to identify
precisely how the documents which he wishes to be
redacted should be redacted, and then you make
a decision?
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That seems eminently sensible.
MR JAY
There is another category of documentation, which
is more problematic because the issue precisely overlaps
with the one you're going to determine or at least hear
argument about next Monday. There's documentation which
has been provided pursuant to the order of
Mr Justice Vos in the civil proceedings, has been
provided to the inquiry either by the Met Police or by
the claimants to those proceedings, it matters not
which. Some material has been provided to the inquiry
in entirely unredacted form, where the police might wish
to say, in line with the submissions they've been
making, that that material should not be published in
that form or at all.
So all I can say at this stage is that that
material, and there isn't a huge amount of it, but
there's certainly a fair amount of it, the approach to
that material and its provision to the other core
participants will have to await your ruling as and when
you give it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Absolutely. That must follow. But
the witness that I was going to refer to and wondered
whether he was in one of your other groups was the
evidence that comes from the Information Commissioner.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And his predecessors.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Has anybody sought redactions in
relation to that?
MR JAY
I don't believe so. I think we can provide all of
that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So that's a fair amount of material.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I mean, I am just concerned about the
free time of the core participants.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And to use it sensibly.
MR JAY
Well, the witness statements I am referring to,
there are a significant number of witness statements.
The redaction of the personal data can take place
reasonably quickly; in most cases only a professional
address has been provided. I can assure the core
participants that to read all that will take just a bit
of time. It's the exhibits. Most of the exhibits are,
with respect, particularly interesting, need to be other
than skim read.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You mean they're not particularly
interesting.
MR JAY
They're not, no. But they provide evidence of
systems and of corporate governance --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, that's important.
MR JAY
-- which you do need to consider. I am not seeking
to diminish their importance.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that's interesting.
MR JAY
What is really interesting, and I mean it, is the
material I've just been referring to; indeed I was
reading some of it this morning and I am going to say
nothing more about it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I think you shouldn't. All
right. Well, I understand that and there are all sorts
of decisions which will have to be made before one gets
down the territory of revealing anything with which
we've been provided that the police or the Director is
expressing concern about. That's the subject of the
argument we're going to have on Monday, and will lead to
a ruling and will doubtless lead to at least further
consideration, or may do in any event. I'm not jumping
any particular gun.
So everybody will just have to wait for that.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But -- sorry, Mr Garnham.
MR GARNHAM
I was only going to say in that context that we
would invite the inquiry not to upload the witness
statements from the "victims" until you've heard the
argument on Monday, because it strikes us that there may
be -- we haven't seen it so we don't know -- there may
be material in those statements that would be
prejudicial to police investigations.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, are you suggesting that I can
redact things that the victims themselves wish to say?
MR GARNHAM
I don't want to foreclose on the use to which
those statements are made before you've heard the
argument, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, it may be you should have
a discussion with Mr Sherborne, because I am going to
require a lot of convincing to shut out those who allege
that they are victims --
MR GARNHAM
I understand that, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- from saying what they want to say.
MR GARNHAM
Absolutely, and I would be slow to make the
point but I don't want to make it impossible to make the
point.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I don't think that we'll be
putting any statements -- as I understand it, we don't
yet have any, have we, Mr Sherborne?
MR SHERBORNE
Well, I am conscious of not taking up
Mr Garnham's invitation to put back any statements any
further as a result.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No.
MR SHERBORNE
Can I say this: we're alive to this concern,
not least because of our involvement in the civil
litigation in the Chancery division. It is not the
intention of any of the core participant victims who are
giving evidence to prejudice the police investigation or
the proceedings.
I understand that's a general statement and there
may be specific points that Mr Garnham wants to raise.
I understand what you're saying, sir. All I can say at
this stage is we're very alive to it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. But the answer is that this
isn't even going to be in the first tranche of
statements to be uploaded, not least because the inquiry
doesn't have them yet.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I was trying to do that calculation
whilst I was sitting here. I think it is right to say
that none of us -- actually, it may not be right to say
that -- I think there are statements, at least one
statement in the first tranche as envisaged is going to
be delivered, which will come from someone who was
a victim of phone hacking. But it is something that
we're very alive to.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR SHERBORNE
I can have a discussion perhaps with Mr
Garnham.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You're very welcome to do that,
provided you make your decision about what you want to
put in, and then if somebody wants to rule that
I haven't got to hear it, then they can make an
application.
I would, for my part, be slightly surprised if
anything that the victims wanted to say, given that
they're at the very end of this process, of whatever
process there has been, would itself create a risk of
substantial prejudice to an investigation or a trial.
It may very well identify how significant it's been, and
it may very well talk about the impact that conduct has
had, but I don't consider that as likely to engage the
issues of substantial interference in the process of
investigation or any potential prosecution.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, I agree. It's extremely unlikely, but
it is something that we want to reassure the police
about, because we have no interest at all, I think
that's clear from everything I've said this morning, we
have no interest at all in prejudicing --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No I understand. Right. Well,
that's a useful exchange of views. Does anybody else
want to enter into this discussion? (Pause)
Right. Anything else, Mr Jay?
MR JAY
Sir, no.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, there is one and that's the
question of -- the final item on your note, which
concerned visits.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I've said that I've received
invitations, possibly because the comment has been made
that I don't understand the media, and I am prepared on
a low-key basis to accede to them, but would not accede
to them if there was any objection from either -- from
any of the core participants, and of course I am
particularly focused on Mr Sherborne here, because he
doesn't run a newsroom.
What I would do is arrange a visit, as I say, low
key with one member of the team, not one of the counsel
but one member of the team, and I would not listen to --
I mean, I don't want presentations, I just want to see
-- I am happy to see how it works, which is what we're
talking about, and take that away.
Mr Sherborne, your note said you had no observations
to make about the proposed visit, if I believed it would
be of assistance.
MR SHERBORNE
Sir, yes, we have no objection. I am sure
they will look very pristine when you go.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, well, at the moment there hasn't
been agreement about the language that's used in these
rooms.
Mr Garnham, do you see any problem with that?
MR GARNHAM
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I don't ask any of the media
representatives. If any feel that it would be useful
for me to visit them, then communicate with the inquiry.
I will not consider it amiss if they don't, and I will
not draw any inferences from that.
I would quite like, I think if I am going to do it,
to visit one at least regional newspaper. The point has
been made that nationals are different from regionals.
One of the invitations that I received was from a core
participant who also owns regional titles. So that's
not terribly difficult to work out who that is. But
otherwise nobody need feel it necessary to fall over
themselves to offer me facilities. Equally, nobody
should feel inhibited. All right?
Is there anything else that I can do to encourage
the process of discussion that I know has been taking
place, so as to ensure that we can start now on Monday,
I think it's 14 November, and proceed at a steady pace,
without interruption, hesitation or deviation
thereafter?
MR JAY
Sir, only one minor point.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
The hearing next Monday, 31 October, I will be
putting in a submission in writing. I want to do so by
4.00 pm this Friday. It may be appropriate for you to
rule that anybody who wishes to put in a submission in
writing should do so by the same date.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much. That's a good
time. 4.00 pm Friday is a good time. Thank you for
arranging my weekend, Mr Jay.
(12.33 pm)
(The inquiry adjourned until 10.30 am
on Monday, 31 October 2011)