UK police seek information on newspaper eavesdropping

LONDON, (Reuters) – British police said yesterday  they had sought more information about claims that reporters at  the News of the World newspaper illegally hacked into voicemail  accounts to eavesdrop on people’s phone messages.
  
The issue shines an awkward spotlight on the former career  of the head of communications in Prime Minister David Cameron’s  office, Andy Coulson, a former editor at the mass-market weekly  paper, which has Britain’s highest circulation.
  
In 2007, Clive Goodman, who reported on the royal family for  the paper, was jailed for four months after writing stories  based on information from a private detective who had illegally  accessed the voicemail messages of palace aides.
  
The newspaper, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp,  has always maintained that Goodman acted without the knowledge  of senior editors, including Coulson. Coulson has said he knew  nothing of the practice. 

The issue resurfaced last week after the New York Times  reported that illegal eavesdropping by reporters at the paper  was widespread. Since then, former News of the World reporter  Sean Hoare has said in a BBC interview that Coulson knew of it.
  
John Yates, assistant commissioner of London’s Metropolitan  Police, said the force had sought more information from the New  York Times “and will consider this material, along with Sean  Hoare’s recent BBC Radio interview, and will consult the CPS  (Crown Prosecution Service) on how best to progress”.