Tech firm says News International deleted emails

LONDON, (Reuters) – A technology firm has told British  legislators it was aware of the deletion of hundreds of  thousands of emails at the request of News Corp unit  News International between April 2010 and last month,  parliamentarian Keith Vaz said on Monday.

The revelation came in a letter by the firm, HCL, to the  Home Affairs Select Committee, of which Vaz is chairman.

“I am most surprised by the contents of the letter sent on  behalf of HCL,” Vaz told Reuters. “The fact that so many emails  have been deleted at the request of News International raises a  number of further questions which we will continue to probe.”
British police are investigating the extent of phone-hacking  at the now defunct News of the World Sunday tabloid which was  owned by News International, the British newspaper arm of Rupert  Murdoch’s media empire.

The paper had long maintained that illegally hacking into  the voicemails of celebrities and members of the royal family  had been confined to one “rogue reporter” who was jailed for  four months in 2007.

But police now have a list of 4,000 possible targets  including a missing schoolgirl, later found murdered, and  families of victims of the 2005 London bombings, as well as  politicians and celebrities.