The New Statesman can reveal that the Times has settled the civil claim brought by “Nightjack” blogger Richard Horton for £42,500 plus legal costs.
Horton brought his civil claim for breach of confidentiality, misuse of private information and deceit after it emerged that his identity had not been uncovered by some brilliant piece of detective work by a staff journalist, as was maintained by the newspaper at the time, but had been established instead by unauthorised access to the blogger’s email account.
There will now be a statement in open court by the Times before the end of this month.
As there is now a criminal investigation related to this matter – a journalist has been been arrested and a former in-house lawyer has been interviewed under caution – not a great deal more can be said about the circumstances of the unauthorised access. It is a matter entirely for the criminal courts to determine whether there is any criminal liability arising – a settlement of a civil claim does not and should not prejudice any criminal investigation. Certainly nothing in this post should be taken to suggest any criminal liability of any person or entity connected with the case.
And given the criminal investigation, there is little which those involved can currently say about this particular case. Horton’s lawyer Mark Lewis tells me only that whilst he is delighted that his client has won substantial compensation, nothing can put Horton back in the position that his identity was secret.
And Horton says, “I am happy to have settled with the Times and I can now put that incident behind me and get on with my life”.
A “Nightjack test” for press regulation?
However, there is perhaps a wider issue about the case apart from the now settled civil claim and the current criminal investigation.
The Nightjack case raises a general point relevant to the debate on press regulation which will follow publication of the recommnedations of the Leveson Inquiry.
Quite simply, without the Leveson Inquiry’s effective use of statutory powers, the Nightjack incident would never have come to light. It is thereby a perfect example of what remains hidden with “self-regulation”, still the the preferred model of many in the newspaper industry.
Here it is important to note that the story only emerged when the New Statesman analysed witness statements submitted by various figures from News International in response to formal (and legally backed) requests for evidence (the full account is set out here).
Even then, News International was initially reluctant to give a full account, and it was only when both the editor and the former legal manager of the Times were summoned to give oral evidence to the Leveson Inquiry on the incident that the fuller picture emerged of what had actually happened.
As Prof Brian Cathcart, director of Hacked Off, told me earlier today:
The Nightjack affair is a clear case of a newspaper behaving unjustly and it would never have come to light but for the scrutiny of the Leveson Inquiry, a body with real legal clout.
No voluntary, self-regulatory regime would ever have unearthed the facts.
This is further proof that we need an effective press regulator that has teeth and is genuinely independent the press industry as well as of government.
Tom Watson MP agrees:
I hope the Prime Minister and other members of the cabinet now realise that without the statutory powers of the Leveson Inquiry none of this whole sorry saga involving Times Newspapers and News International would ever have seen the light of day.
One test – which perhaps should be called the “Nightjack test” – of any non-statutory proposals for press regulation will be how an envisaged regulator can obtain relevant documentary and witness evidence from an unwilling news title.
Would some non-statutory regulator really be able to obtain information from a title akin to that which the Leveson Inquiry was able to prise from News International in respect of the Nightjack incident?
For many it is difficult to see how any contractual or voluntary basis for press regulation could pass this important “Nightjack test” – it would merely (again) be regulation at the fiat of the regulated.
And unless any post-Leveson press regime can pass such a “Nightjack test” then the old pre-Leveson abuses could well continue.
David Allen Green is legal correspondent of the New Statesman
POSTSCRIPT
Richard Horton has now made the following comment below the line:
None of the above would have happened without the patient, detailed forensic dissection of the facts by David Allen Green at the New Statesman. It feels like a huge weight has been lifted from my life and after 3 years of not writing anything worth a damn, I am back writing for pleasure again. Leveson was undoubtedly the lever but without David’s work at the fulcrum, I would still be sat here 3 years later strongly suspecting wrongdoing but entirely without evidence.