Exaro

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Exaro
Web address www.exaronews.com
Commercial? Yes
Type of site
News website
Available in English
Owner New Sparta Ltd. (Jerome Booth)
Launched October 2011; 12 years ago (2011-10)

Exaro is a British investigative news website based on Fleet Street, London. Its editor-in-chief is Mark Watts.

History

Exaro is an investigative news website. Launched in October 2011, it specialises in carrying out in-depth investigations. Its journalistic creed is "Holding Power to Account.” It sets out to produce “evidence-based, open-access journalism – not spin, not churnalism, not hacking – just journalism about what should be transparent but isn't."[1][2]

Exaro is majority owned by the city entrepreneur Jerome Booth.

Booth owns a group of companies called New Sparta.[3] These include the telecoms company New Call,[4] the film finance company New Sparta Films and the film distribution company Icon.[5]

Civil service tax avoidance

On 1 February 2012 an investigation by Exaro revealed that the UK's Student Loans Company was paying its chief executive, Ed Lester, through a private company, enabling him to reduce his tax bill by tens of thousands of pounds.[6][7] The day after the story broke the Chief Secretary of the Treasury, Danny Alexander was summoned to the House of Commons for an urgent debate. He announced a review of all civil service contracts.[8]

At the end of the Treasury review more than 2,400 civil servants were found to be making use of "off payroll" contracts that could allow them to minimise tax.[9] Civil servants found to have underpaid tax will have to pay money back with interest and penalties. They could be billed for unpaid tax going back up to six years, as well as penalties of thirty per cent or more of the amounts owed. One accountant estimated that the HMRC could recoup as much as £100 million in unpaid taxes as a result of the crackdown.[10]

Danny Alexander thanked Exaro in Parliament for exposing the scandal.[11]

Rupert Murdoch

In partnership with Channel 4 news, Exaro revealed secretly recorded tapes of Rupert Murdoch talking to The Sun journalists, criticising the "incompetent cops" who handled the phone-hacking investigation and promising to take care of any journalist that had broken the law.[12] Murdoch reportedly characterized the inquiry as a fuss over nothing "Why are the police behaving in this way? It's the biggest inquiry ever, over next to nothing." Whilst it was working in partnership with Channel 4 news, Exaro also broke the story that Murdoch was aware for years that his journalists were bribing public officials.[13][14] On the tape Murdoch can be heard saying that bribery was part of the culture of Fleet Street and that every newspaper did it.

Later on that year Exaro released another secretly recorded audio, this time of News International CEO Tom Mockridge.[15]

In the tape Mockridge admits that News Corp is facing an estimated $1.62bn in costs for phone hacking, far more than any previous estimates given to shareholders.[16]

Elm Guest House child abuse investigation

Exaro journalist David Hencke passed Tom Watson MP evidence that child abuse had taken place at Elm Guest House in Barnes in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[17][18] Watson raised the allegations in parliament and the police subsequently launched a scoping exercise under the name "Operation Fairbank". Five Metropolitan Police officers considered allegations relating to Elm Guest House, and other allegations gathered by Watson. Later a full-scale criminal investigation specifically addressing allegations relating to Elm Guest House was launched under the name "Operation Fernbridge".

Military intervention in Syria

In July 2011 a RUSI expert told Exaro that the chances of foreign military incursion into Syria to secure chemical weapons had risen to "more than 50 per cent".[19] The same month Exaro also reported that hawks in the US administration were pressing for military intervention to topple the regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.[20]

Exaro broke the news that the UK Foreign Office negotiated a secret deal with the Libyan government to pay £450m to IRA victims.[21]

Bribery in defence contracts

In August 2012 the Serious Fraud Office launched a criminal investigation into bribery allegations in connection with a UK-Saudi Arabian defence contract between the EADS subsidiary GPT Special Project Management, and the Saudi Arabian National Guard.[22] Exaro persistently investigated the allegations, writing more than 20 stories over seven months before the SFO launched its criminal investigation.

Private investigators

In June 2012, Exaro outed Kroll Inc. as having convinced the City of London police to instigate an unnecessary investigation costing £1 million to protect the reputation of one of its clients.[citation needed]

Interviews

The outgoing head of the UK Serious Fraud Office (SFO) used an interview with Exaro to admonish Tony Blair's government for curtailing an investigation in Saudi bribery allegations. Richard Alderman, who headed the SFO for four years until April 2012, told Exaro that the UK's reputation around the world suffered great and lasting damage from Tony Blair's "very regrettable and very unfortunate" decision to quash the SFO investigation into the alleged bribery of Saudi officials by BAE.

Former Chancellor Lord Lawson used an interview in Exaro, by David Hencke, to call for an orderly dismantling of the Euro. He also condemned the financial markets for making a series of superficial assessments of the Eurozone crisis.[23][24][25]

Lord Hunt, chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, revealed to Exaro his plans to scrap the PCC and replace it with an alternative regulator two months before he outlined his proposals to the Leveson Inquiry.[26]

Plaudits

In June 2012, Exaro was commended in the Best Investigative Journalism category of the Online Media Awards.[27]

In the Leveson Inquiry witness Nick Davies, a journalist from The Guardian, described Exaro editor-in-chief Mark Watts' book The Fleet Street Sewer Rat as "the best single source, hugely detailed, of information about the dark arts of journalism."[28]

In October 2012, The Guardian published a lengthy article about Exaro, including a profile of Mark Watts.[29]

Exaro editor-in-chief Mark Watts was nominated for the European Press Prize Editor of the Year for 2012. The nomination described Exaro as "an insightful, agenda setting website." It credited the site for its "serious investigative journalism" saying "this is not standard, not-for-profit journalism, but document-based, niche performance at a high level of expertise."[30]

Exaro senior reporter David Hencke won the Political Journalist of the Year 2012 award for his work uncovering tax avoidance in the civil service.[31] Hencke was longlisted for the Orwell prize for political journalism in 2014.[32]

Exaro was shortlisted for two 2013 British Journalism Awards. Exaro's expose of Rupert Murdoch was shortlisted for Story of the Year, and reporter Fiona O’Cleirigh[33] was nominated for New Journalist of the Year for her series that revealed how Northern Irish and Irish government officials gave £1.3 million to former IRA members in a serious of suspicious deals.

Exaro was shortlisted for two 2014 British Journalism Awards. Exaro's campaign for an inquiry into child sex abuse was nominated for Campaign of the Year, and reporter David Hencke[34] was nominated for Political Journalist of the Year.[35]

Criticism

Private Eye magazine wrote on 18 September 2015 that "Exaro is struggling to live up to its strapline of 'holding power to account.' For several months the investigative site has published no news at all apart from the latest paedo developments and, slightly bizarrely, items on a corporate insolvensy monitoring service it runs alongside its 'news.' The latter centres on the supposed 'Whitehall paedophile ring' and the lurid allegations against former Tory MP Harvey Proctor, and involves magnifying the slightest procedural development and tweeting like mad under the hashtag #VIPaedophile."[36]

Barrister Matthew Scott, a consistent critic of the site's modus operandi, stated that "it has generated a poisonous atmosphere of outrage and hysteria in which wild and immensely hurtful accusations can be made and believed on the flimsiest of evidence; and that by publicising detailed allegations of paedophile orgies and murder it has risked destroying the prospect of fair trials either for victims or defendants."[citation needed] A report in The Guardian stated that the conduct of Exaro had been the subject of complaints to officials supporting the Goddard Inquiry into child abuse.[37]

Dame Janet Smith called the editors "irresponsible" following Exaro's publication of a leaked draft copy of her report into child sex abuse, stating that “Exaro’s decision appears to have been taken for its own commercial gain without any thought for the interests of the many victims of Savile or the integrity of the reporting process.”[38]

Exaro journalists

Notable Exaro journalists include David Hencke, David Pallister, Nick Fielding and Mark Watts.

Facilities

The site has also a Wikileaks-style secure dropbox that people can use to leak documents to the organisation.

References

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  3. New Sparta group website | http://newsparta.net/group-companies
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  12. Revealed: The Rupert Murdoch Tape
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  28. Transcript Leveson Inquiry into Press Standards, 29 November 2011
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  36. Private Eye No 1401 (18 September 2015), p. 8.
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  38. http://www.theguardian.com/media/2016/feb/25/janet-smith-exaro-irresponsible-publish-draft-savile-report

External links