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World

Former editor faces arrest over phone hacking scandal

Andy Coulson, who resigned as an aide to British Prime Minister David Cameron in January under pressure over allegations of hacking during his tenure as editor of the News of the World, will be arrested on Friday, according to a report.

More advertisers quit tabloid in protest, Fayed lawyer may have been hacked

Andy Coulson, whoresigned as an aide toBritish Prime Minister David Cameron in January under pressure over allegations of hacking during his tenure as editor of the News of the World, will be arrested on Friday, according to a report.

The Guardian said that Coulson, who had been Cameron's communications director, has been informed by police that he will be arrested over suspicions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, the hacking of mobile phones during his editorship.

Coulson was contacted on Thursday by detectives and asked to present himself at a police station in central London on Friday, where he will be told that he will be formally questioned under suspicion of involvement in hacking, The Guardian reported

The BBC also reported that Coulson had been told he would be arrested. Police declined to comment on the reports.

Coulson, who was editor of The News of the World between 2003 and 2007, has always denied any knowledge of the hacking.

Andy Coulson, former editor of the tabloid News of the World, and later David Cameron's director of communications, will reportedly be arrested Friday over the phone hacking scandal. Oli Scarff/Associated Press (Oli Scarff/Associated Press)

News ofCoulson's impending arrest comes as News Corp. announced Thursdaythat it will shut downits tabloid paper.

James Murdoch, who is the son of founder Rupert Murdoch and heads the media company's European operations, announced in a statement that the 168-year-old newspaper will publish its last edition Sunday.

The closing appeared aimed at easing pressure on the parent company, which is awaiting British government approval of its takeover of BSkyB, the satellite television company.

The scandal has cost Rupert Murdoch and hisnewspaper bothprestige and advertising revenue.

As well, alink with military veterans was terminatedThursday after The Daily Telegraph reported that the News of the World had collected the telephone numbers of relatives of slain troops.

The Telegraph didn't cite any evidence that relatives' phones had been hacked or that the newspaper had done anything illegal in obtaining their numbers. Nonetheless, a storm of outrage followed.

"If these actions are proved to have been verified, I am appalled," said Gen. David Richards, the head of the armed forces.

The commander of London's Metropolitan Police, bowing to public concern about the quality of its investigation of alleged illegal payments by the paper to officers, announced that the Independent Police Complaints Commission would supervise the probe.

"I will personally supervise this investigation to give independent oversight and ensure that it is robust in its attempts to identify any officer who may have committed an offence," said Deborah Glass, deputy chair of the commission.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Paul Stephenson said he was "determined" to see any officers who received payments facing criminal conviction.

The police officer in charge of the burgeoning phone hacking probe appealed Thursday to the public for patience as authorities contact thousands of potential victims.

Prime Minister David Cameron speaks in the House of Commons in London Wednesday, answering demands for an inquiry into newspaper conduct in the U.K. ((Associated Press))

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Sue Akers issued a statement saying police are sorting through 11,000 pages of material containing almost 4,000 names that could be linked to the News of the World scandal.

She says officers will contact everyone whose personal contact details were found in the documents seized in 2005.

"I am more than ashamed I am determined to see them in a criminal court," he told Sky News.

The share price of British Sky Broadcasting fell Friday, amid growing concern that Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. the tabloid's owner would be blocked from mounting a bid to take full control of the broadcaster. News Corp. shares were little changed at $17.71 in New York trading.

J. Sainsbury, Britain's third-largest supermarket group, energy company Npower, pharmacy chain Boots and mobile phone company O2 announced that they were withdrawing advertising from the paper, joining Ford, Vauxhall and others which previously backed out.

The Royal British Legion, one of the nation's most revered institutions, said it was dropping the News of the World as a partner in campaigns on veterans' issues and had suspended all other ties until the allegations are resolved.

Rupert Murdoch's global media empire, News Corp., announced Thursday that it was shutting down its tabloid paper the News of the World. ((Bob Edme/Associated Press))

"We can't with any conscience campaign alongside News of the World on behalf of armed forces families while it stands accused of preying on these same families in the lowest depths of their misery," the legion said. "The hacking allegations have shocked us to the core."

The Daily Telegraph did not identify the source for its report, which could not be independently verified. There was no indication whether any of those telephones had been hacked.

The News of the World issued a statement saying it would be "absolutely appalled and horrified" if there was any truth in the allegation.

Geraldine McCool, whose law firm has represented Samantha Roberts, widow of Sgt. Steven Roberts, the first British soldier killed in Iraq in 2003, said she had seen no evidence that confidential information had been obtained through hacking.

The BBC reported that relatives of some soldiers say they have not been contacted by police, but that a newspaper had asked them about the possibility that their phones may have been hacked.

Lawyer for Diana's lover

A lawyer who represented the family of Princess Diana's lover Dodi al-Fayed at the inquest into her death said Thursday police have also warned him his voicemails may have been hacked.

Michael Mansfield said he received a letter from Scotland Yard saying he was on a list of possible targets of phone hackers from Britain's News of the World tabloid. He said the revelation that journalists may have been trying to uncover stories about Diana from his messages was "particularly disturbing."

Police are investigating allegations that the newspaper hacked into telephones of relatives of murder victims, politicians and celebrities. It is also investigating payoffs allegedly made by the newspaper to corrupt police officers for information.

A former senior commander of London's Metropolitan Police said some corrupt officers had accepted money from the newspaper to provide information.

"It goes all the way from tipping off the press that George Michael had been arrested for driving into Snappy Snaps (a photo shop) through to jeopardizing serious criminal investigations by giving out confidential information that could be useful to criminals," said Brian Paddick, former deputy assistant commander of the London force.

The department has said only a handful of officers are suspect, but it declined to give a precise number.

Very clandestine way

In an interview on British Broadcast Corp. television, Paddick said he had met a journalist who spoke of paying officers up to 30,000 ($50,000) for information. Paddick did not specifically identify the journalist as working for News of the World.

"All of this is done in a very clandestine way. You know the stories about a drive-thru, fast-food restaurant near the News International headquarters, that's where police officers used to go to collect envelopes. It was all done very discreetly," Paddick said.

However, "I personally never came across it during my career," he said.

Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International and former editor of News of the World, told a legislative committee in 2003 that "we have paid the police for information in the past."

Asked if she would do so in the future, she said, "it depends." A colleague then interrupted her to say the newspapers operated within the law.

Brooks later said she had not meant to give the impression "that I had knowledge of any specific cases," but was commenting "on the widely held belief that payments had been made in the past to police officers."

With files from CBC News