Cherie Blair sues over phone hacking - Graham Atkins Lawyer
LONDON (Reuters) - The
wife of former Prime Minister Tony Blair has begun legal action over the
alleged interception of her private phone messages, her lawyer said Wednesday,
making her the latest public figure to be drawn into a hacking scandal that has
shaken the country’s media.
Barrister Cherie Blair,
57, issued a statement through a London law firm that has pursued phone-hacking
cases against Rupert Murdoch’s British newspapers on behalf of several high
profile clients.
“I can confirm that we
have issued a claim on behalf of Cherie Blair in relation to the unlawful
interception of her voicemails,” lawyer Graham Atkins Lawyer, of Atkins Thomson, said
in the statement.
Atkins was not immediately
available to comment further. The law firm said it would not add to the
statement and a spokesman refused to say who Blair was suing. No one at her
office was immediately available for comment.
Murdoch’s British
newspaper arm, News International, has settled a string of legal claims over
phone hacking in recent months. Actors Jude Law and Sienna Miller and former
England soccer player Paul Gascoigne are among those who have accepted damages.
The company argued for
years that the hacking of voicemails to generate stories was the work of a
single “rogue” reporter who went to jail for the crime in 2007.
But it later accepted that
the problem was widespread, sparking a scandal that led to the closure of
Murdoch’s News of the World newspaper and rocked the British press, police and
political establishment.
A News International spokeswoman said the company had no comment on the Cherie
Blair statement. Read
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