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Rebekah Brooks cleared in phone hacking trial: How the flame-haired Murdoch lieutenant became the most powerful woman in the British media Rebekah Brooks cleared in phone hacking trial: What next for the flame-haired Murdoch lieutenant who became the most powerful woman in the British media?
(about 1 hour later)
And so after months of high drama at the Old Bailey, Rebekah Brooks will be cast not as the villainess but as an innocent dupe in the film scripts of the hacking scandal. As Rebekah Brooks walked out of the Old Bailey as a free woman today, the obvious question was “What will she do next?”
A “Not Guilty” verdict may not have been the outcome film producer Gene Kirkwood hoped for after he optioned rights to a 2012 Vanity Fair magazine profile which introduced Ms Brooks to the American public and attempted to unravel the enigma of this remarkable British newswoman. “She’s a great story,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “Her rise...is almost like Great Expectations with a moral.” The magazine article talked of its subject’s “incandescent ambition” and was headlined “Untangling Rebekah Brooks”. For the past three years, since the most powerful woman in British newspapers was arrested, she has been forced out of the media machine which has been her entire life. Cleared of all charges against her, she can now return.
With her distinctive glorious corkscrew mane, the most famous woman in the British media is often described as Titian-haired and, as with many red-haired subjects of the Venetian master, she has held the public transfixed. Rupert Murdoch was prepared to fly to London to be at Brooks’s side at the height of her distress in July 2011 and when asked his priority to put his arm around her and say “this one”. We can be certain he would welcome her back to his fold.
She exercised a similar hold over some of the most powerful men in the worlds of politics and media. She will be wondering how they might help her now. But it might not be that simple. Although Brooks’s former colleagues have no doubt of Rupert’s affection for her, his News UK publishing stable is trying to create a new corporate culture that distances itself from the hacking scandal which nearly destroyed it. There are more criminal trials to come and, even as an innocent party, Ms Brooks does not help that new image.
The men she has charmed included the Prime Minister David Cameron, who we know sent her friendly texts - including one that talked of his “fast, unpredictable and hard to control but fun” ride on her horse. Tony Blair was so close to her that he was privately promising to act as her “unofficial adviser” when the hacking scandal was at its height. They were in almost daily contact and often signed off texts with an x. A role in Mr Murdoch’s US operations might appeal to her ambitions but her arrival at 21st Century Fox would not necessarily be welcomed by Rupert’s son James, who does not have happy memories of his traumatic time at News International working alongside Brooks. Rupert’s daughter Elisabeth, another key figure in the family business, is reported to have accused Rebekah of having “f***ed the company”.
Her contact with Downing Street increased further when Andy Coulson was appointed Mr Cameron’s Director of Communications in July 2007. The Old Bailey heard that Brooks regarded Coulson as her “very best friend” and that the pair had an intermittent extra-marital affair over many years. Ms Brooks may have to be patient even if her return to her former employer appears dependent on an 83-year-old maintaining his grip on his global empire.
Most importantly all, she has enjoyed the unconditional backing of Rupert Murdoch. Observers were amazed at how he treated her almost like a daughter. He has reportedly kept her on the payroll, encouraging her to travel the world at his expense. It will be to him that she will surely turn first in planning her future career. It could be that like Rupert’s son James Rebekah will be found a new role in the US, where the fallout from phone hacking has not been so great. She became a parent two and a half years ago when her daughter Scarlett was born to a surrogate mother a few months after her arrest. Brooks, 46, has never enjoyed a family life without the threat of these legal proceedings and the possibility of a custodial sentence. She has a chance of some normality now.
Rebekah Brooks enjoyed the unconditional backing of Rupert Murdoch Her network is extensive. Along with key friends such as the PR man Matthew Freud, Brooks assembled the “Chipping Norton set”, an exclusive clique of political and media figures which mingled at social gatherings in the Cotswolds, where she lived with her racehorse training husband Charlie. Rebekah Brooks enjoyed the unconditional backing of Rupert Murdoch What is clear is that, after months of high drama at the Old Bailey, she has avoided the fate of being cast as the arch-villainess of any film adaptations of the hacking scandal.
In an article in the society magazine Tatler in 2009 it was revealed that the couple liked to fly to Venice for lunch at Harry’s Bar before enjoying a spot of shopping and heading back to London in time for dinner in Jermyn Street. Weeks later, fresh revelations in The Guardian about the extent of phone-hacking at the News of the World threw her into a tail spin. A “Not Guilty” verdict may not have been the outcome film producer Gene Kirkwood hoped for after he optioned rights to a 2012 Vanity Fair magazine profile which introduced Ms Brooks to the American public and attempted to unravel the enigma of this remarkable British newswoman. “She’s a great story,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “Her rise... is almost like Great Expectations with a moral.” The magazine article talked of its subject’s “incandescent ambition” and was headlined “Untangling Rebekah Brooks”.
Rebekah Brooks and her husband Charlie are part of the exclusive 'Chipping Norton' set When Scotland Yard made its original hacking arrests in 2006, the then Rebekah Wade had already had a sparkling career as a tabloid journalist, becoming the first female editor of The Sun. But her star was not ascending and, indeed, there was speculation that she might lose her job after a succession of scoops by the rival Daily Mirror, then edited by her former News International colleague Piers Morgan. One critic noted that while the Sun editor presided over an unhappy ship, the News of the World team under Coulson was “buzzing with self-confidence” just along the corridor. With her distinctive glorious corkscrew mane, the most famous woman in the British media is often described as Titian-haired and like the subjects of the Venetian master - she has held the public transfixed. She exercised a similar hold over some of the most powerful men in the worlds of politics and media. She will be wondering how they might help her now.
Yet, months later, her friend Coulson was obliged to resign over that first wave of hacking allegations. Brooks survived her wobbly period at The Sun and despite falling circulation figures was promoted in 2009 to chief executive of News International, making her the most powerful woman in British newspapers. Tony Blair with Rebekah Brooks in 2004
Tony Blair advised Rebekah Brooks to launch a 'Hutton-style' inquiry into phone hacking at the News of the World as the issue erupted into a criminal and political scandal in 2011, the jury heard When the company’s largest-selling title, the News of the World, was closed down in disgrace two years later, Rupert Murdoch was adamant that no blame should fall on his adored protégé even if her immediate boss during the handling of the scandal, Rupert’s second son James, was facing calls for his own resignation. “I’m not throwing innocent people under the bus,” he said, after rejecting her offer to quit. The men she has charmed included the Prime Minister David Cameron, who sent her affectionate texts - including one that talked of his “fast, unpredictable and hard to control but fun” ride on her horse. After his public apology over his appointment of Andy Coulson today, the Prime Minister will find it awkward to resume his friendship with Ms Brooks.
Brooks, 46, has been a longstanding servant of the News Corp empire. After school in Warrington she briefly lived in Paris and her Who’s Who entry says she studied at the Sorbonne (where she attended a language course). It was an indication of her resourcefulness and uncompromising ambition. Brooks worked for Eddie Shah’s Messenger Newspapers in Warrington before joining the News of the World as a secretary at the age of 20. A little more than a decade later, she had become editor. Tony Blair was so close to her that he was privately promising to act as her “unofficial adviser” when the hacking scandal was at its height. They were in almost daily contact and often signed off texts with an x.
Throughout her career, colleagues have been impressed by her relentless, mesmerising networking. Such talents are likely to serve her well as she seeks to rebuild her career, although as the mother of a two-year-old daughter she may choose to pursue the family life she has been denied by the central part she and her husband have had in what has been termed “The Trial of the Century”. For two years, she faced the prospect of bringing up her child in a prison mother and baby unit. Her network is extensive. Along with key friends such as the PR man Matthew Freud, Brooks assembled the “Chipping Norton set”, an exclusive clique of political and media figures which mingled at social gatherings in the Cotswolds, where she lived with her racehorse training husband Charlie. In an article in the society magazine Tatler in 2009 it was revealed that the couple liked to fly to Venice for lunch at Harry’s Bar before enjoying a spot of shopping and heading back to London in time for dinner in Jermyn Street.
When Scotland Yard made its original hacking arrests in 2006, she had already had a sparkling career, becoming the first female editor of The Sun. She was promoted to chief executive of News International in 2009, making her the most powerful woman in British newspapers. When the company’s largest-selling title, the News of the World, was closed down in disgrace two years later, Rupert Murdoch was adamant that no blame should fall on his adored protégé – even if her immediate boss during the handling of the scandal, Rupert’s second son James, was facing calls for his own resignation. “I’m not throwing innocent people under the bus,” he said, rejecting her initial offer to quit, although political pressure later forced her to resign.
Although Brooks’s network means she will have work options beyond News Corp, she has devoted her career to the company. After school in Warrington she briefly lived in Paris and her Who’s Who entry says she studied at the Sorbonne (where she attended a language course). It was an indication of her uncompromising ambition. She joined the News of the World as a secretary at the age of 20 and, a little more than a decade later, became editor.
During the Old Bailey proceedings, Brooks’s barrister, Jonathan Laidlaw QC, complained that his client was being portrayed as an “arch-criminal” starring in a “pantomime”. If she remains on the stage of British life there will be many who will continue to hiss and boo at the sight of her. But at least this still enigmatic figure is free to come and go as she pleases.During the Old Bailey proceedings, Brooks’s barrister, Jonathan Laidlaw QC, complained that his client was being portrayed as an “arch-criminal” starring in a “pantomime”. If she remains on the stage of British life there will be many who will continue to hiss and boo at the sight of her. But at least this still enigmatic figure is free to come and go as she pleases.