Ahoy there! Welcome to the middle of the working week. While you’ve been sleeping events have been unfolding in Australia and around the world. Here’s your news-to-go for Wednesday morning brought to you by Bec.
1. ‘Devastating’ new evidence emerges that Brit phone hacking scandal was covered up.
The select parliamentary committee investigating the wide-ranging phone hacking scandal in the United Kingdom has received ‘devastating’ new evidence that implicates the paper and News International. Former Royal Editor Clive Goodman, the first to be jailed for phone hacking offences in 2007 and thought to be a lone wolf, wrote a letter to human resources saying that phone hacking was discussed at editorial meetings. He also claimed that former editor Andy Coulson offered him extra money and his job when he was released from prison if he didn’t implicate the entire paper during court proceedings. There were two versions of the letter, one heavily redacted by News International.
2. Collar-bomb suspect tracked down via email
Theories have swirled around the country for weeks but last night the truth began to emerge. Fifty-year-old father of three Paul Doug Peters has been arrested over the collar-bomb attack on Sydney schoolgirl Madeleine Pulver. The tip-off? A Gmail account accessed from the Kincumber Library on the NSW Central Coast. The email address was listed in the note left by the extortionist for the Pulver family. Created at Chicago Airport in May, the email account was only ever accessed three times, once from Kincumber library and twice from a video store in Avoca Beach which has public access computers. At both locations police found CCTV footage of man aged between 50-60.