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Phone hacking: key claims from Tom Watson's book - live Phone hacking: key claims from Tom Watson's book - live
(40 minutes later)
12.52pm: News International says it has no comment on Watson's allegations about intermediaries or surveillance.
12.50pm: One of the most extraordinary claims that Watson makes is that he was offered a deal if the committee didn't touch Rebekah Brooks.
"Two intermediaries close to News International offered a deal. One told Watson the company would 'give him' Andy Coulson, but Rebekah Brooks was 'sacred'," says the book.
12.32pm: Watson on the alleged surveillance of Rebekah Brooks's office in June 2011:
Increasingly, Brooks's position was being questioned by those inside as well as outside the company. In June according to one well-placed News Corp source, security staff were ordered to record the times of Brook's entry to and exit from Thomas More Square [News International's headquarters] and cleaners were warned to avoid disturbing listening devices placed under the table and by her computer in her office.
Cleaners told not to disturb listening devices? Not very plausible.
12.31pm: Tommy Sheridan, the former MP, wrote to Watson from prison urging him to carry on with the investigation into News International.
Sheridan was involved in a high-profile defamation action against the News of the World in 2006 after it published a story claiming he was an adulterer who visited a swingers' club. He was jailed last year for perjuring himself in that trial, but was released in January after serving 12 months of his three-year sentence.
"Murdoch must not be allowed to assume the role of Pontius Pilate in the whole sorry affair," wrote Sheridan.
12.30pm: Watson says an News International "intermediary", who was female, asked him if he would like to meet Rupert Murdoch over a dinner meeting.
She allegedly told him: "He's a charismatic man. He'd want to square off these difficulties and put matters right."
Watson says he was not interested in cutting a deal.
12.28pm: Watson on the intimidation of the select committee.
Although the committee wanted Brooks to give evidence, its members, whose private lives News International had pored over, capitulated and decided not to summons her…
The gay Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price … claimed that the committee's members had been warned that if they had called Brooks, their private lives would be raked over.
He said later: "I was told by a senior Conservative member of the committee, who I knew was in direct contact with executives at News International, that if we went for her, they would go for us - effectively they would delve into our personal lives in order to punish [us].
12.19pm: Kevin Maguire, political supremo at the Daily Mirror, has tweeted this:12.19pm: Kevin Maguire, political supremo at the Daily Mirror, has tweeted this:
Political corruption & intimidation emerging at presser as strongest line in @tom_watson's Dial M for Murdoch. But I've not read bookPolitical corruption & intimidation emerging at presser as strongest line in @tom_watson's Dial M for Murdoch. But I've not read book
— Kevin Maguire (@Kevin_Maguire) April 19, 2012— Kevin Maguire (@Kevin_Maguire) April 19, 2012
11.54am: Watson adds:11.54am: Watson adds:
I am sorry to say that this tactic was successful, the committee's legitimate investigation was undermined and parliament was, in effect, intimidated. News International thought it could do this, that they would get away with it, that no one could touch them, and they actually did it, and it worked.I am sorry to say that this tactic was successful, the committee's legitimate investigation was undermined and parliament was, in effect, intimidated. News International thought it could do this, that they would get away with it, that no one could touch them, and they actually did it, and it worked.
Watson adds that as a result of the surveillance the committee members whose private lives had been under investigation decided not to summon Rebekah Brooks to give evidence in 2010.Watson adds that as a result of the surveillance the committee members whose private lives had been under investigation decided not to summon Rebekah Brooks to give evidence in 2010.
11.53am: Watson claims that the members of the Commons select committee investigating News International were put under surveillance by a crack squad of News of the World reporters.11.53am: Watson claims that the members of the Commons select committee investigating News International were put under surveillance by a crack squad of News of the World reporters.
Watson says he was told this by the paper's former chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck.Watson says he was told this by the paper's former chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck.
In Thurlbeck's words:In Thurlbeck's words:
There was an edict that came down from the editor and it was 'find out every single thing you can about every single member; who was gay, who had affairs, anything we can use. Each reporter was given two members and there were six reporters.There was an edict that came down from the editor and it was 'find out every single thing you can about every single member; who was gay, who had affairs, anything we can use. Each reporter was given two members and there were six reporters.
11.42am: Watson launched the book at a press conference in Westminster this morning, branding Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation a "toxic institution that has operated in Britain like a shadow state".11.42am: Watson launched the book at a press conference in Westminster this morning, branding Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation a "toxic institution that has operated in Britain like a shadow state".
Murdoch, he says "has exerted a malign and corrupting influence on Britain's public institutions, not only hacking phones and computers, but blagging and impersonating, blackmailing and bullying".Murdoch, he says "has exerted a malign and corrupting influence on Britain's public institutions, not only hacking phones and computers, but blagging and impersonating, blackmailing and bullying".
11.32am: Labour MP's Tom Watson's book on Rupert Murdoch makes some sensational allegations including claims that Rebekah Brooks's office was bugged while she was still chief executive of News International.11.32am: Labour MP's Tom Watson's book on Rupert Murdoch makes some sensational allegations including claims that Rebekah Brooks's office was bugged while she was still chief executive of News International.
We've got a preview copy of the book and are going through it for the best bits.We've got a preview copy of the book and are going through it for the best bits.
We'll also be bringing you reaction.We'll also be bringing you reaction.
Please note that comments have been switched off for legal reasons.Please note that comments have been switched off for legal reasons.