Former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks leaves the Old Bailey courthouse in London yesterday. Photo: ReutersFormer News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks leaves the Old Bailey courthouse in London yesterday. Photo: Reuters

Rupert Murdoch’s former editor Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson, Prime Minister David Cameron’s ex-media chief, oversaw a system of phone-hacking and illegal payments to officials when they ran the now defunct News of the World, a London court heard yesterday.

Prosecutor Andrew Edis told the Old Bailey that Brooks and Coulson were in charge at the Sunday tabloid or its daily sister paper the Sun when the illegal behaviour was alleged to have taken place.

Edis said both had sanctioned illegal payments to be made to public officials, including one by Brooks for nearly £40,000 to a senior Ministry of Defence official. Coulson is accused of authorising a payment to a royal police protection officer to secure a phone book with contact details for royal staff.

When police finally began to reveal the truth, Brooks and other figures at Murdoch’s British newspaper business – then known as News International – mounted a cover-up, Edis said.

Brooks, Coulson in charge of the purse strings

Brooks and Coulson are on trial with six others, accused of conspiring to hack phones and make illegal payments. They deny all the charges. Brooksalso faces two counts of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

The court heard yesterday that three former senior journalists from the News of the World had pleaded guilty to charges relating to phone-hacking and Edis said the jury would have to decide whether Brooks and Coulson were likely to have known about the illegal behaviour.

“There was phone hacking, and quite a lot of it,” Edis said.

“Given they (Brooks and Coulson) were so senior, if they knew about it, well obviously they were allowing it to happen. They were in charge of the purse strings.”

The court was told that ex-chief correspondent Neville Thurlbeck, former assistant news editor James Weatherup, and ex-news editor Greg Miskiw had admitted conspiracy to intercept communications at earlier hearings.

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