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Sky News admits e-mail hacking by reporter

LONDON, April 5 (UPI) -- A Sky News reporter hacked into e-mails written to a man who faked his death in a 2002 canoeing accident, the British broadcaster admitted.

Sky News said a senior executive authorized the e-mail hacking on two separate occasions, saying it was "in the public interest," even though intercepting e-mails violates the Computer Misuse Act, to which there is no such defense legally available, The Guardian reported Thursday.

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Sky News correspondent Gerard Tubb accessed e-mails belonging to John Darwin, accused of faking his own death, when his wife, Anne, was to be tried for deception in July 2008. The reporter compiled e-mails he said he believed would help overcome Anne Darwin's defense. John Darwin pleaded guilty to seven charges of deception before his wife's trial.

Tubb also accessed e-mail accounts of a suspected pedophile and his wife during an investigation in which none of the material was published or broadcast, Sky News said in a statement sent to The Guardian. Sky is part-owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., which has been beset by a hacking scandal at its defunct News of the World.

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Both times the hacking was approved by Simon Cole, Sky News' managing editor.

John Ryley, head of Sky News, said the broadcaster "authorized a journalist to access the e-mails of individuals suspected of criminal activity" and the action in both instances was "justified and in the public interest."

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