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Murdoch tabloid journalist held in computer hack probe
AFP
Last Updated IST

British police today arrested a journalist from Rupert Murdoch's market-leading tabloid The Sun on suspicion of computer hacking, its publisher said.

Police said one man was arrested in a dawn raid on his home in north London as part of Operation Tuleta, an investigation into computer hacking linked to Britain's phone-hacking scandal.

"Officers from Operation Tuleta arrested a man at his home in north London at about 6:30 am (0530 GMT) this morning," a Scotland Yard spokesman told AFP, saying that no further details were immediately available.

British media named the journalist as Sun reporter Rhrodri Phillips.

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News International, the British newspaper arm of Murdoch's US-based News Corporation media empire, confirmed that one of its employees had been detained.

"A journalist from The Sun was arrested this morning," a spokeswoman told AFP.
The arrest is the seventh as part of Operation Tuleta.

Tuleta is one of three linked inquiries sparked by the phone-hacking scandal at Murdoch's now defunct News of the World weekly tabloid.

The operation is being run alongside Operation Weeting, an investigation into phone hacking at British newspapers, and Operation Elveden, into inappropriate payments by journalists to police and public officials.

More than 60 people have been arrested in the three investigations, including Rebekah Brooks, a former top aide to Murdoch and friend of British Prime Minister David Cameron, and Cameron's former media chief Andy Coulson.

Australian-born tycoon Murdoch closed the 168-year-old News of the World in July 2011 after revelations that it had accessed the voicemail of a murdered schoolgirl, as well as dozens of public figures.

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(Published 19 July 2012, 19:50 IST)