which has rocked Britain's media and political institutions and led to criminal charges against several people including Rebekah Brooks, the former head of Rupert Murdoch's British newspaper division. Penrose was not the first Mirror journalist arrested
Former News of the World editor and Rupert Murdoch lieutenant Rebekah Brooks will testify next week at Britain's media ethics inquiry, organizers announced Thursday. Brooks, who resigned in July
Former News of the World editor and News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks will learn Tuesday whether she faces charges stemming from Britain's phone hacking investigation, a spokesman for the
police investigations into media misbehavior. More than 40 people have been arrested and several have been charged, including Rebekah Brooks, the former head of Murdoch's British newspaper division. Police arrested three more people in early-morning raids
his seriously ill baby son. July 13: News Corp. pulls its bid to take full control of BSkyB. July 15: Resignations of Rebekah Brooks, the chief of News Corp.'s British operations, and Les Hinton, publisher of Dow Jones & Co. and one of Murdoch's
in the May 2007 blaze on the Army post on the Kentucky-Tennessee border. Nine-year-old Sam Fagan and 2-year-old Rebekah Smallwood died in the blaze. Smallwood's husband, Army Spc. Wayne Smallwood, and their toddler daughter, Nevaeh, survived