Police Link Belgian Gunman to a Killing Before Rampage
Published: December 14, 2011
LIÈGE, Belgium — Belgians sought to make sense on Wednesday of a spasm of killing by a man with a history of trouble with weapons and drugs who unleashed his attack near a Christmas market at a historic square, bringing random death to a familiar scene of European holiday bustle.
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The attacker, identified as Nordine Amrani, 33, killed a year-and-a-half-old toddler and two teenage boys and left more than 120 wounded, with five of those people still in intensive care on Wednesday. Mr. Amrani killed himself with a bullet to the forehead. Compounding the gruesomeness of the case, the police found the body of a woman at a building he used to store guns, and, in the past, to grow marijuana. Prosecutors said they believed Mr. Amrani killed her before he went to the square.
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Leveson Inquiry: I told James Murdoch about phone hacking evidence, says ex-legal manager
Dec 14 2011
THE News of the World’s ex-legal manager said he told James Murdoch there was “direct and hard evidence” that phone hacking extended beyond one reporter.
Tom Crone said he showed the News International chairman a printout of the now-notorious “For Neville” email at a meeting on June 10 2008 also attended by the paper’s then-editor Colin Myler.
The email, which contained transcripts of illegally intercepted voicemail messages, was apparently destined for the News of the World’s chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck.
Mr Crone told the Leveson Inquiry into press standards he showed Mr Murdoch a number of documents.
“I cannot remember whether they were passed across the table to him, but I am pretty sure I held up the front page of the email,” he said.
“I am also pretty sure that he already knew about it – in terms of it had been described to him already, which I think the other documents that have come out suggest anyway.”
Mr Crone also warned Mr Murdoch that News International reporters were implicated in an Information Commissioner’s Office investigation into the illegal sale of private data called Operation Motorman, the inquiry heard.
Clive Goodman, the News of the World’s former royal editor, was jailed along with private investigator Glenn Mulcaire in January 2007 after they admitted intercepting voicemail messages left on royal aides’ phones.
The “For Neville” email apparently contradicted News International’s previous stance that phone hacking at the paper was confined to a single “rogue reporter”.
Mr Crone said: “What was certainly discussed was the email – not described as For Neville, but the damning email – and what it meant in terms of further involvement in phone hacking beyond Goodman and Mulcaire.
“And what was relayed to Mr Murdoch was that this document clearly was direct and hard evidence of that being the case.
“At the same time, I think I must have referred at some stage to Operation Motorman.”
Mr Murdoch has insisted that he was not shown the email or told that it proved phone hacking was more widespread at the News of the World than previously thought.