(The luncheon adjournment)
(3.15 pm)
Opening submissions by MR DINGEMANS
MR DINGEMANS
Sir, Mr Field and I appear for the Daily and
Sunday Express and the Daily Star and the Daily Star
Sunday newspapers.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
May I thank you for fitting these opening
submissions into your timetable and may I reassure you
that the newspapers we represent hope to provide full
assistance to your Inquiry and avoid any further
disruption to the timetable.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much.
MR DINGEMANS
We have lodged some short written
submissions, and may I just pick up a couple of points
from those.
First, we noted your comments yesterday about
considering freedom of expression and freedom of the
press to be fundamental to our democracy, but also
noting that all freedoms have to be exercised with
regards to the rights of others.
One authority that was referred to in our note was
McCartan Turkington Breen v the Times newspapers, and
Lord Bingham, just at the end of that, had noted that
courts here and elsewhere have recognised the cardinal
importance of press freedom, and the need for any
restriction on that freedom to be proportionate and no
more than is necessary to promote the legitimate object
of the restriction, which is of course easy to say and
then sometimes difficult to work out in practice.
That does bring me on to the first substantial point
that we hope to raise before you, sir, today, which is
the extent to which any investigation into possible
changes to the civil law governing the relationship
between the press and public will be a matter for your
Inquiry.
We had noted in the written submissions the comment
that you had made in your ruling on the application by
Ms Elaine Decoulos to become a core participant, and you
noted that the approach of the press to proceedings in
court to correcting libelous errors "may, I repeat may,
arise at one end of the spectrum of issues to which this
Inquiry relates".
Plainly, if any regulation is to be no more than is
necessary, to paraphrase Lord Bingham's comment, then
the existing civil and criminal remedies are plainly an
important part of the picture that will need to be
addressed by the Inquiry. For those reasons, we submit
that, properly engaged within the terms of reference,
will be at least some consideration of the extent to
which civil law remedies provide, both for the reader
and complainants and for the press, speedy, effective
and reasonably cheap proceedings.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That breaks down into two, doesn't
it? The first is whether the substantive law is
appropriate or sufficient, and secondly whether the
process is.
MR DINGEMANS
Indeed, sir, and as far as the law is
concerned, one can well understand the proposition that
that might be a step too far for any Inquiry dealing
with the full range of issues that are engaged before
you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm pleased that somebody thinks
there are some steps that are too far.
MR DINGEMANS
But so far as process is concerned, then,
of course, if one is looking at any structures that
might engage both civil and other matters, there are
possible ways in which those matters could be raised
before you.
That, sir, really is as far as we wanted to take it.
It's obviously very much a matter for you and your team
how far you consider the extent to which you have time
to explore that consistently with the terms of the
reference.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Let me just argue with that a moment.
I would be very keen that if you felt that there were
things that I ought to be thinking about which I'm not,
particularly if you've canvassed the views of others of
the core participants, that you raise them with Mr Jay
and the team to see how, if at all, they can be coped
with.
I am very happy to be responsible for what emanates
from this Inquiry, but in taking the spirit of the
assistance which everybody has promised me, that extends
to suggesting things that I really need to be looking at
and then seeing how one can fit the time around them.
MR DINGEMANS
We will certainly attempt to do that, and
I entirely accept that the hard work of any core
participant is all done behind the scenes rather than
necessarily in open court.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's true.
MR DINGEMANS
Can I then turn to the other matter that we
wanted to raise, and I hope in the same vein, and that's
regulation of the press in other jurisdictions.
If one looks around the world -- and there was
a very short comparative review, not in any sense to be
relied on --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
-- of different approaches in different
jurisdictions, we do respectfully submit that there are
some lessons that might be learned from that review and
other lessons that can be absorbed for all from the
different approaches that have been taken.
In that respect, we had noted a principled
distinction between regulation of the print media and
regulation of the Internet media, and in circumstances
now where you have, for libel awards that are made
against national newspapers, an attribution normally of
about 50 per cent towards the print media and
50 per cent towards the Internet media -- because, of
course, no one is interested in arguing between the
two -- then it is perfectly plain that regulation, if
there is to be any and if it is to engage newspapers,
has to deal with the Internet publication of online
papers.
In those circumstances, one can see, for example,
the approach taken in the United States, which appears
to be very permissive, to the distinct approach taken,
for example, in India. I have shown those examples. We
will certainly attempt to assist and feed in some
further information as it becomes available to the team
in relation to those matters.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One of the questions which is
particularly going to cause me some pause for thought is
the question of the voluntariness of the whole process.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes, sir.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's particularly relevant,
I think --
MR DINGEMANS
To those newspapers that I represent?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Correct.
MR DINGEMANS
Indeed, sir. At the moment, the requests
from the Inquiry haven't yet been targeted to the
approach and the reasons why, and therefore any
submissions will be made in relation to the evidence of
that, but there has been, as you can see in the past,
engagement with the process, and then, because of views
taken about whether that was a proper process,
a disengagement --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Dingemans, your clients are
entitled to take what view they like about a system that
is entirely voluntary.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's the necessary conclusion of it
being voluntary.
MR DINGEMANS
Indeed.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The question is whether any more that
system is -- I suppose the buzz phrase these days is
"fit for purpose", whether it does what it says on the
tin.
MR DINGEMANS
And whether you end up with the situation in
the United States, broadly speaking, for print media,
where there is effectively the civil and criminal
regulation, or whether you end up with something more
sophisticated, and indeed whether you can then engage
the Internet, and if so, how, in circumstances where, of
course, publications can be made both within this
jurisdiction and outside this jurisdiction, to be read
within this jurisdiction.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. This is the litany of problems
that I do have to address.
MR DINGEMANS
My short submission, sir, which I accept has
limited help is that there is at least a starting point
to be gained from looking around the world and --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm sure that's right.
MR DINGEMANS
-- taking those into account --
Those were the very few short matters that we
respectfully wanted to raise. Everything else we
propose to do we would hope to feed directly into your
team and wouldn't need it to be said in opening. Thank
you very much.
Housekeeping
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you. Well, we're all here,
back. Is there anything else that I can do this
afternoon? Mr Jay?
MR JAY
Sir, I need to update you and the core participants
with the state of the evidence on the system.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
MR JAY
There are, in my understanding at the moment, eight
or possibly nine witness statements on the system.
Either by close of play tonight or first thing tomorrow
morning, there will be seven or eight more, namely the
statements of HJK, who has been anonymised pursuant to
your order, JK Rowling, Christopher Jefferies, Sheryl
Gascoigne, Gary Flitcroft, Graham Shear and Margaret
Watson.
There are five or six further statements which
should be available by close of play tomorrow. Various
redactions have been looked at and I think now have been
agreed: Steve Coogan, Ian Hurst, Charlotte Church, Anne
Diamond, a supplementary statement from Hugh Grant, and
a statement from Jane Winter.
So we're waiting for the statements from Sienna
Miller and the supplementary statement from Mark Lewis.
We don't believe Sienna Miller's statement, once
available -- I understand it's been approved but not yet
signed -- will give rise to any difficulty in relation
to possible redaction. The same may not be true of Mark
Lewis's supplementary statement. Consideration will
have to be given to that. We don't know yet what it
says.
Various of the exhibits are available on the system.
Others are being looked at as a matter of some urgency.
Some proposed redactions have been made, but there's
been a difficulty with one copy sent through to us.
These are teething problems which we will resolve in the
very immediate future.
The exhibits contain material some of which is in
the public domain, all of which, however, will be
confidential to the core participants at this stage. Of
course, we will make those available as soon as
possible. How exactly some of the exhibits are treated
when the witnesses give evidence will be a matter of
discussion. May I, as it were, highlight a point?
I can do it in relation to Mr Mosley's evidence.
He quite rightly puts within his bundle the original
article in the News of the World which gave rise to the
claim in the tort of breach of privacy. It will not be
the Inquiry's intention to, as it were, place that
article again in the public domain.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That would defeat the very object and
I made it abundantly clear that I didn't intend to allow
the Inquiry to revictimise those who had been described
as victims or to risk victimisation of those who
complained that they are victims.
MR JAY
Yes. However, the article will be made available
to the core participants, subject to the confidentiality
undertakings they have given, and it may be necessary to
me to refer to a line or two in the article to make good
the points Mr Mosley wishes to make good. The last
thing I'm going to do is, as it were, display anything
which is, as it were, pictorial in the article on any
screen in this room.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Sherborne is probably quite
familiar with this article, and therefore you'll
doubtless discuss with him --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- how you intend to present it.
MR JAY
Yes. What is likely to happen is that everybody in
this room will have the article in front of them. I say
"everybody in this room"; the core participants will,
but any member of the public, I'm afraid, will not see
the article on the screen and therefore the material
will not be on the live system, which we know about.
So the proceedings will be 98 per cent intelligible
but not 100 per cent, and the missing 2 per cent is to
protect Mr Mosley from precisely --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
They're likely to be intelligible,
but perhaps not the full --
MR JAY
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- depth of colour.
MR JAY
Yes. It's that sort of point. We will be very
sensitive to that. We fully understand that these are
public proceedings, this is a public Inquiry, but it's
a question of just applying judgment and common sense,
and that's what we propose to do throughout. The same
sort of principles are going to apply elsewhere, but
each of the 21 cases we'll be looking at next week is
slightly different from the others.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Next week is a little bit
different from the rest of the Inquiry because all the
witnesses are, for want of a better phrase, members of
the public.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I am somewhat concerned that the
core participants should have sufficient time to read
and assimilate the material --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- and that we develop a system which
gives them plenty of time. I don't suppose there will
be a very great deal for suggestion to the Inquiry in
relation to them, because they're providing the Inquiry
with a window on the impact on them of whatever has
happened.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Which is hardly likely to be
extremely contentious, even if it's not agreed.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But we're going to come into
witnesses where different considerations may well
obtain.
MR JAY
Sir, I agree with that. As I said, next week's
statements are -- how should I put it? -- multifarious.
There are some common themes, but each witness has
something different to say. I think the largest
statement is only about 21 pages. The statements will
not take long to read. Core participants may have lines
of questioning to suggest in some of the cases.
I wouldn't have thought very many.
Some of the exhibits appear quite forbidding. In
Mr Mosley's case, his second exhibit is 450 pages long.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, but he includes all the
statements in his --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- civil action and the submissions
made to the European Court and the judgment of the
European Court.
MR JAY
Yes, and we're not going to go there. I'm going to
summarise it. We're not going to relitigate what
happened before Mr Justice Eady. Certain points will be
brought out.
The position may be a little different elsewhere.
What I'm saying is that although the statements are
going or some of the statements are going on the system
slightly late, this is not going to prejudice anybody
and I would hope that any lines of questioning, which of
course we will treat on a confidential basis -- we're
not going to attribute, if I ask a question, that
question to any particular core participant because that
would be quite wrong.
But those will doubtless come by the end of this
week or perhaps over the weekend and if there is any
line of questioning which I consider to be
inappropriate, we will let the relevant core participant
know, which will give rise to the possibility -- I put
it no higher than that -- of an application under rule
10(3), I think it is, for the core participant to ask
the question, although you've already indicated that
your preliminary view is that that would be highly
unlikely in any of these 21 cases.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
The position may be different elsewhere, although
you haven't excluded it out of court in time.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The considerations are, it seems to
me, different.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Given what Mr Rhodri Davies has said
this morning, all those that come within the generic
descriptions that he there talked about, it is only to
provide -- I say "only"; it is importantly to provide
that background and to paint the impact side of the
picture.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In relation to other potential
alleged ethical abuses, slightly different
considerations might arise but it doesn't seem to me
that they're likely.
MR JAY
No.
Sir, the remainder of -- well, next week is catered
for. It's a four-day week starting on the 21st and
finishing on the Thursday, and the core participants
have seen the list. We're working on the basis of
usually four, but on one occasion I think five witnesses
a day. My assessment is that some of the witnesses may
be quite short. Others, however, may be longer than the
average one hour that is being allotted, but it ought to
be quite obvious who those are. Mr Mosley, for example,
may be a bit longer. Mr Grant, and one or two others.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course, to some extent, we now
have to cope with the additional material that's
emanated quite recently, both in relation to Mr Grant
and in relation to Mr Lewis.
MR JAY
Yes. That last issue is a bit of an open question,
because although one can speculate on reasonable grounds
what that additional material might relate to, we
haven't seen it. But there is enough flexibility in the
timetable with goodwill all around to accommodate that,
but the basic point is that we will finish -- I repeat,
we will finish -- these 21 witnesses by, if necessary,
5 pm on Monday, 28 November, and then within the next
day or so, we will have finalised the witness list for
the succeeding three days; that's to say 29 November to
1 December.
By way of sneak preview, I'm able to say that we'll
be having Mr Richard Thomas, the former
Information Commissioner. He will be on the Thursday,
1 December, and his statements, which I think at the
moment run to three and we're waiting for the fourth,
will be made available in the next day or so. We're
just finalising with him that there are no redactions
which he wishes to be made. His material is quite
voluminous and there is a range of background material
which may need to be put to him. So we are allocating
a whole day, exceptionally, to his evidence. As
I anticipated in my opening yesterday, we expect there
to be lines of questioning put to us by core
participants, and Mr Caplan has already indicated or
foreshadowed what one of those lines may be, because
there's a witness statement from Ms Hartley which
indicates precisely that.
We also expect to be hearing that week from
Mr Alastair Campbell and one or two other witnesses
whose identities will be vouchsafed in the very near
future.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
What we're aiming to do is to give 10 to 14 days'
advance notice of witnesses so that everybody can be
geared up.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'd be grateful for that. I'd also
be grateful if forewarning could be given of the
contents of statements, because I am sure that much
value can be obtained from meetings between counsel --
I don't necessarily mean members of the bar; it could be
solicitors, it could be legal advisers of the relevant
core participants -- as to perceptions of time.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You will know broadly what you want
to elicit and how long that will take, but I'm very keen
to fill up the days.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I've been conscious of the problem
today. We allowed rather longer for people to speak
than some have spoken. That's not a mistake I'll make
in the future. It's not a mistake at all, actually,
I hasten to add. But I don't want to have many days
that, as it were, we have the afternoon off.
MR JAY
No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Neither do I want particularly to
have days where I have to start at 10.00 and finish at
6.00 to get through it, because that suggests a rush
which I don't wish to --
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- provide by way of impression at
all.
MR JAY
Yes. It's quite difficult, though, to calibrate
this. We form a judgment as to how long a witness might
take. We were going to build into the timetable the
possibility of summarising statements, inviting you to
read statements. Of course you'll do that behind the
scenes, not during Inquiry time, but we still have to
make allowance for that, since you're not working until
1.00 am in the morning, I hope, reading statements.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm no longer of the bar, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
In fact, frankly the priority is, although we don't
want to be working to 6 o'clock in the evening and then
preparing for the following day, it seems to us more
important that we don't have fallow periods during the
hearing.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well --
MR JAY
Perhaps we'll err slightly on the side of toughness
than on the side of laxity --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I have no doubt that everybody will
work together very quickly and you'll get an impression
very quickly about the pace that we can take this.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But that's one of the areas where I'm
looking to everybody to assist.
MR JAY
Yes. Certainly, the last point, in relation to the
first 21 witnesses, we do not wish to give the
impression that any of this evidence will be rushed. It
won't be.
In our view, given the likely absence of any, as it
were, probing questions -- most if not all of the
questions will merely be to elicit the evidence -- one
hour or one and a quarter hours is a long time for
a witness, and we are confident that the periods
allocated will be more than sufficient to give each
witness the opportunity to say precisely what he or she
wishes. Of course, it should be understood by everyone
that you will have pre-read the witness statements and
any background materials we provide. The witnesses will
be invited to confirm that their statements are true and
that they've signed them and of course they're giving
the evidence on oath. We will be treating their
evidence more expansively than some of the later
witnesses, where perhaps there will be more highlighting
just of key points and then moving on to the more
probing questions, but basically there's, I hope,
a degree of common sense and sensitivity in relation to
all the evidence you're likely to hear over the next few
months.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Good. Well, it's important that
I get the right picture and everybody can help me do
that by applying their minds to the way in which it's
presented and the time it takes.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right, thank you.
One other thing, Mr Jay. Mr Caplan mentioned the
protocol for anonymous witnesses.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Without pressing the pressed team,
I would be quite keen that that was resolved --
MR JAY
Yes. It has been put out for consultation, so the
core participants have seen it. We've invited
representations. If there are any representations on
the protocol, then we will probably have to sit early at
some point and resolve them.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We'll resolve it. Okay, thank you
very much.
MR JAY
Let's see how we get on. Mr Caplan has raised on
point of principle on anonymity which he may well invite
you to resolve without prejudice to the protocol.
That's absolutely fine. We'll just have to make time
for that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I've already dealt to some
extent with that issue in the ruling that I've given.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Caplan.
MR CAPLAN
Sir, thank you. May I just make one or two
comments about the witness statements?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, please.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you for the observation, obviously, that
the core participants need early sight of the
statements. Sir, I fully understand that the private
individuals, 1 to 21, are coming to give primarily
impact evidence. Of such statements that we have seen
of those 21 individuals, though, they also do make
allegations against a number of publishers and it is
important, if I may respectfully say so, that we have as
much forewarning of the evidence that they're proposing
to give so that we can do our own researches and respond
to those allegations if necessary.
Of the witnesses next week, there are eight whose
evidence we simply have not seen at all.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I hope those are the ones that Mr Jay
says you'll see tonight --
MR CAPLAN
Or tomorrow.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- or first thing tomorrow morning.
MR CAPLAN
The other matter is -- I'm sure this is the
case -- if witness statements can be distributed as soon
as they are available. I know, for example, Mr Thomas
is going to give evidence all day on 1 December. His
evidence, we're told by Mr Jay, contains a vast amount,
or a significant amount of documentation. That may
involve us making enquiries of our own journalists and
therefore the sooner we can have this evidence, the
sooner we can --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Caplan, I entirely agree. It's
obviously important, and I recognise that some
allegations are made against publishers by some of the
victims, but you will understand -- and I hope that they
will understand -- that I will not be making findings of
fact specifically in connection with particular
complaints because that takes me down a track which
would be very difficult to reach the end of, not least
because of the police investigation.
MR CAPLAN
I understand that. It's just if allegations are
made in the public domain, it may be necessary to
respond to them.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, and balance is going to
be all.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you. Yes. Mr Jay, that's
obviously a very important point about the witnesses and
we have to sort it out.
Was there anything else that anybody else wanted to
raise? All right.
No, I'm sorry, Ms Decoulos, you're not a core
participant and therefore you have no standing in front
of me. You've been told that if you wanted to submit
a statement, you could do. You haven't. That's it.
Thank you.
MS DECOULOS
(inaudible)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fair enough. Then you'll be
dealt with like all the other witnesses but you don't
have a standing in the Inquiry. Thank you very much.
Right.
MR JAY
Tomorrow morning, 10 am, I think, we're hearing
from --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
What's the order?
MR JAY
NUJ first, through the general secretary. I think
about one hour. Mr Rusbridger of the Guardian is coming
at 11.00. He'll be however long he'd like to be and
then Mr Sherborne at quarter to 12, 12 o'clock. Again,
he's indicated about an hour and a half-ish.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
We'll have a slightly longer day than
today.
MR JAY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Not quite perhaps as long as
yesterday. Not as long as next week will promise to be.
Thank you very much indeed. Tomorrow.
(3.46 pm)
(The hearing adjourned until 10 o'clock the following day)