April 12, 2012 | 8:07
am
LONDON -- The British phone hacking scandal
that resulted in scores of arrests and the July closing of the popular
tabloid News of the World could spread to the United States, a media
lawyer who represents several victims said Thursday.
Attorney Mark Lewis said inquiries by British police into illegal
phone interceptions by the tabloid were widening and he would be seeking
documentation in the U.S. on behalf of three of his clients, who he
said were victims of illegal phone interceptions.
The tabloid is owned by News International, the British branch of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
“The cases I am pursuing were by the News of the World against people
who were in the U.S. at the time they were hacked or were U.S.
citizens,” he said in a email to The Times sent while he was en route to
the airport.
“The scandal is not just confined to the United Kingdom or U.K.
companies,” he told the BBC, “but this goes to the heartland of News
Corp. and we will be looking at the involvement of the parent company
and in terms of claims there and that is something that I think will be
taken more seriously by investors and shareholders in News Corp.”
He also said that of his three clients, whom he declined to identify,
one had connections to Hollywood, another to the late Princess Diana
and the third to English national soccer. READ MORE
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