1 00:00:21,080 --> 00:00:23,080 [tense music] 2 00:00:27,200 --> 00:00:30,160 [presenter] Good evening, welcome to the BBC news at six. 3 00:00:30,240 --> 00:00:33,080 After days of intense pressure and public anger 4 00:00:33,120 --> 00:00:34,680 over the phone hacking scandal, 5 00:00:34,760 --> 00:00:37,840 the News of the World, the country's biggest selling newspaper 6 00:00:37,920 --> 00:00:40,680 has said that this Sunday's edition will be its last. 7 00:00:40,760 --> 00:00:43,880 [presenter 2] Police investigating allegations of phone hacking 8 00:00:43,960 --> 00:00:48,440 said they were working through a list of 4,000 potential victims. 9 00:00:48,520 --> 00:00:50,680 I feel so appalled by what has happened. 10 00:00:50,760 --> 00:00:54,080 Murder victims, terrorist victims who've had their phones hacked 11 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:55,960 is quite disgraceful. 12 00:00:56,040 --> 00:00:59,480 [reporter] Arrests followed, with editors, executives and journalists 13 00:00:59,560 --> 00:01:01,680 all implicated in the scandal. 14 00:01:03,400 --> 00:01:05,560 Everybody came after us. 15 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:10,760 Although we'd done great stuff and put a lot of baddies away, 16 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:12,920 we just became the villains of the piece. 17 00:01:13,280 --> 00:01:17,080 [Steve Coogan] It's morally bankrupt, totally, and you are morally bankrupt. 18 00:01:17,160 --> 00:01:20,560 The whole notion of press freedom is a smokescreen 19 00:01:20,680 --> 00:01:23,120 for selling newspapers with tittle-tattle, 20 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:26,480 and you hide behind this whenever it comes up, it's absolute B.S. 21 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:28,080 [applause] 22 00:01:28,760 --> 00:01:31,400 [reporter] This was the scene in Wapping last night 23 00:01:31,480 --> 00:01:35,200 as the staff bid goodbye to their newspaper and their jobs. 24 00:01:37,240 --> 00:01:40,960 [Emma Morgan] I remember hearing that the News of the World had closed down 25 00:01:41,040 --> 00:01:45,200 and I was so pleased, I was so pleased to see the back of it. 26 00:01:45,280 --> 00:01:49,080 I actually visualised the News of the World's news desks, 27 00:01:49,440 --> 00:01:52,720 the empty chairs and the vacated desks, 28 00:01:52,800 --> 00:01:54,600 and I just thought, brilliant. 29 00:01:57,520 --> 00:02:01,280 I thought that would be the end of Mazher Mahmood, 30 00:02:02,760 --> 00:02:04,000 but it wasn't. 31 00:02:10,680 --> 00:02:13,040 [intense music] 32 00:02:16,160 --> 00:02:20,160 [reporter] The trial of Mazher Mahmood, the journalist known as the Fake Sheikh, 33 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:22,320 has opened at the Old Bailey. 34 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:27,400 {\an8}[Jodie Kidd] It was so unbelievable, it was believable. 35 00:02:27,440 --> 00:02:29,280 You know, this can't be fake. 36 00:02:33,840 --> 00:02:37,400 {\an8}[reporter] For 30 years he has revelled in hiding his identity. 37 00:02:39,120 --> 00:02:44,680 {\an8}[George Galloway] His anonymity, his secrecy was the key to his entire act. 38 00:02:46,240 --> 00:02:49,080 {\an8}[reporter] The self-styled King of the Sting, 39 00:02:49,160 --> 00:02:52,600 {\an8} turning up to court every day beneath a balaclava. 40 00:02:54,160 --> 00:02:58,800 {\an8}[Jeremy Dein] I think he was ruthless, dishonest, and a merciless individual. 41 00:02:59,640 --> 00:03:03,120 {\an8}[reporter] Mazher Mahmood has been behind some huge tabloid scoops, 42 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:06,200 things like uncovering match fixing in Pakistani cricket, 43 00:03:06,280 --> 00:03:08,880 and a plan to kidnap Victoria Beckham. 44 00:03:11,160 --> 00:03:13,760 [Neil Wallis] Maz played on this caricature 45 00:03:13,840 --> 00:03:17,760 that money literally could be no object and if you got close, 46 00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:19,920 you could grab your share of it. 47 00:03:27,760 --> 00:03:31,840 {\an8}[Emma Morgan] I hate to say it, but he's very, very, very good at what he does. 48 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:58,800 [reporter] The Sun on Sunday will publish for the first time next weekend. 49 00:04:00,920 --> 00:04:03,840 It follows the closure of the News of the World last July, 50 00:04:03,920 --> 00:04:05,800 in the wake of the phone hacking scandal. 51 00:04:07,960 --> 00:04:12,160 [Paul Connew] Rupert Murdoch didn't like the idea that he wasn't going to have 52 00:04:12,240 --> 00:04:15,680 a Sunday newspaper because he still believed 53 00:04:15,760 --> 00:04:17,440 there was a big market 54 00:04:17,880 --> 00:04:21,440 and that's how the idea of the Sun on Sunday was born 55 00:04:21,520 --> 00:04:26,440 with the idea that it had to be untainted by the News of the World 56 00:04:26,800 --> 00:04:29,880 The first edition of the Sunday Sun, how about that. 57 00:04:30,440 --> 00:04:34,920 Mazher had the reputation of being a journalistic born survivor, 58 00:04:35,360 --> 00:04:40,600 he was never charged with phone hacking, or linked directly to phone hacking 59 00:04:40,680 --> 00:04:44,360 so he was given a birth on the Sun on Sunday. 60 00:04:48,920 --> 00:04:50,240 [tense music] 61 00:04:51,800 --> 00:04:54,520 [Aylia Fox] I think when the News of the World closed, 62 00:04:54,600 --> 00:04:59,320 there was definitely a seismic shift in terms of how people perceived the press 63 00:04:59,360 --> 00:05:03,480 {\an8}and there was less tolerance for shenanigans 64 00:05:03,560 --> 00:05:06,720 and journalists had to be more careful, 65 00:05:06,800 --> 00:05:10,160 only I don't think Mazher Mahmood got that memo. 66 00:05:14,360 --> 00:05:18,120 {\an8}In the Sun, he was trying to re-establish himself 67 00:05:18,240 --> 00:05:19,520 {\an8}as the King of the Sting, 68 00:05:19,600 --> 00:05:22,760 He wanted to put his stamp on. This is me, I'm back, 69 00:05:22,800 --> 00:05:24,640 look and weep. 70 00:05:27,120 --> 00:05:29,520 [Aylia Fox] When Mazher joined the Sun on Sunday 71 00:05:29,600 --> 00:05:32,840 I think there would have been a lot of pressure 72 00:05:32,920 --> 00:05:34,960 to secure a big story fast 73 00:05:35,040 --> 00:05:38,240 because he was constantly on a mission to prove himself 74 00:05:38,320 --> 00:05:40,840 and you are only as good as your last story 75 00:05:40,920 --> 00:05:43,560 and in his case, all his stories were big, 76 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:45,680 so he had to come up with a bigger one. 77 00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:48,880 ♪ I'll make mistakes that I learn from ♪ 78 00:05:48,960 --> 00:05:52,960 ♪ 'Cause I'm young, yeah I'm young ♪ 79 00:05:53,040 --> 00:05:56,520 ♪ I'm sorry, I'm not even done ♪ 80 00:05:56,600 --> 00:06:00,720 ♪ 'Cause I'm young, yeah I'm young ♪ 81 00:06:01,360 --> 00:06:03,680 [Aylia Fox] Tulisa was a popstar. 82 00:06:03,760 --> 00:06:05,200 [crowd cheering] 83 00:06:05,280 --> 00:06:08,000 She was a TV personality 84 00:06:08,520 --> 00:06:12,400 and people knew her because she was a judge on the X Factor. 85 00:06:17,720 --> 00:06:20,400 She was on our screens every Saturday night, 86 00:06:20,480 --> 00:06:21,880 prime time television. 87 00:06:24,240 --> 00:06:28,760 I thought she was great, and my daughter did and still does like N-Dubz, 88 00:06:28,840 --> 00:06:29,920 as do I. 89 00:06:30,520 --> 00:06:32,120 [cheering and screaming] 90 00:06:34,520 --> 00:06:37,680 But show business can be cutthroat. 91 00:06:39,440 --> 00:06:42,160 [reporter] Tulisa confirmed the wildly unexpected news 92 00:06:42,240 --> 00:06:44,400 that she is leaving the X Factor. 93 00:06:44,480 --> 00:06:45,880 [paparazzo] Morning, Tulisa. 94 00:06:48,440 --> 00:06:51,560 Sadly for Tulisa she'd just left the X Factor, 95 00:06:53,240 --> 00:06:59,800 which almost certainly made her vulnerable and an ideal sting target. 96 00:07:08,600 --> 00:07:14,000 {\an8} I was approached by these two "film producers." 97 00:07:14,080 --> 00:07:17,720 They wanted me for this massive lead role 98 00:07:17,800 --> 00:07:20,520 in a Bollywood slash Hollywood production. 99 00:07:20,600 --> 00:07:23,920 All in all, I was offered 3 to 3.5 mil. 100 00:07:25,680 --> 00:07:28,320 I'm thinking "Wow this is a dream come true." 101 00:07:31,800 --> 00:07:37,480 {\an8}Maz was a terrific newspaper investigative reporter. 102 00:07:37,560 --> 00:07:43,040 What his skill was would be to see a situation, 103 00:07:44,240 --> 00:07:47,520 work out how to get to it 104 00:07:48,280 --> 00:07:51,960 and quite quickly set up a path 105 00:07:53,280 --> 00:07:55,080 to then bring it all together. 106 00:07:58,200 --> 00:08:00,520 [Aylia Fox] His Fake Sheikh days were over 107 00:08:00,600 --> 00:08:04,440 because people did know about him, they'd read about him, 108 00:08:04,520 --> 00:08:06,600 so he had to change who he was 109 00:08:06,680 --> 00:08:12,200 and he became a high-flying Bollywood producer. 110 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:17,000 When I saw the footage, it was very clear to me 111 00:08:17,080 --> 00:08:18,760 that this was a typical sting. 112 00:08:18,840 --> 00:08:23,920 Everything was meticulously planned even to the point where she was sitting 113 00:08:24,000 --> 00:08:27,760 was in exact view of where his secret camera was set up. 114 00:08:28,320 --> 00:08:32,200 Ok the story outline very briefly is that we want an English girl, 115 00:08:32,280 --> 00:08:36,600 - Kind of a... from humble... -Are we talking posh British or... 116 00:08:36,680 --> 00:08:38,400 No. 117 00:08:38,760 --> 00:08:42,600 [Aylia Fox] To get what he wanted, he had to reflect the desires 118 00:08:42,640 --> 00:08:45,400 of the person that's sitting in front of him. 119 00:08:45,480 --> 00:08:47,840 He was incredibly convincing. 120 00:08:47,880 --> 00:08:49,520 He got her tipsy, 121 00:08:50,360 --> 00:08:52,440 he offered her the world, 122 00:08:52,520 --> 00:08:56,240 and the footage shows that she was excited about it. 123 00:08:56,320 --> 00:09:00,200 -We want a kind of a... -Oh I can do cockney. 124 00:09:00,600 --> 00:09:03,320 ...someone who comes from kind of a very low background 125 00:09:03,760 --> 00:09:05,120 -Perfect! -Before that... 126 00:09:05,200 --> 00:09:06,240 {\an8}Ta-da! 127 00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:13,760 [Aylia Fox] Mazher Mahmood was a little bit stuck 128 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:17,640 because she'd not done anything illegal, she'd not taken drugs 129 00:09:17,720 --> 00:09:21,200 but Mazher was a dog with a bone and he would find a way 130 00:09:21,280 --> 00:09:23,720 to get the story by hook or by crook. 131 00:09:24,760 --> 00:09:28,160 [Neil Wallis] Nothing fazed him. If a good story was a good story, 132 00:09:28,240 --> 00:09:30,080 he would go for it and not be put off 133 00:09:30,160 --> 00:09:33,240 just because it seemed difficult 134 00:09:33,880 --> 00:09:35,720 and he was determined. 135 00:09:37,480 --> 00:09:40,360 [Aylia Fox] He left it a week or two, contacted her 136 00:09:40,440 --> 00:09:43,720 and asked her if she knew anyone who could supply him with drugs. 137 00:09:46,000 --> 00:09:49,760 Now she wanted to impress him, she wanted the work. 138 00:09:50,400 --> 00:09:53,160 Tulisa said she'd reached out to a contact 139 00:09:53,240 --> 00:09:56,360 and told them to pretend they were able to get Maz drugs 140 00:09:56,440 --> 00:09:58,600 so she would appear streetwise. 141 00:09:59,440 --> 00:10:03,360 But that person actually did end up supplying Maz with cocaine 142 00:10:04,400 --> 00:10:06,120 and that was enough for the story. 143 00:10:17,760 --> 00:10:18,880 [sniffs] 144 00:10:20,280 --> 00:10:23,760 My life is ruined, it's over. 145 00:10:28,080 --> 00:10:30,720 I just want my life back. 146 00:10:32,280 --> 00:10:35,040 {\an8}[sobs] They've ruined me. 147 00:10:35,880 --> 00:10:40,640 This would never have happened unless they created the situation. 148 00:10:40,760 --> 00:10:42,880 They made it happen. 149 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:46,880 This would never have happened unless they made it happen. 150 00:10:47,000 --> 00:10:50,160 They made it happen! 151 00:10:57,960 --> 00:11:01,400 [reporter] The singer and former X-factor judge Tulisa Contostavlos 152 00:11:01,480 --> 00:11:04,000 has appeared in court to face drug offence charges. 153 00:11:04,880 --> 00:11:06,680 [paparazzi shouting] 154 00:11:08,920 --> 00:11:11,520 [reporter] Tulisa had to make her way past a crowd 155 00:11:11,600 --> 00:11:13,800 of photographers, news crews and reporters, 156 00:11:13,880 --> 00:11:15,880 making her way to courtroom number one. 157 00:11:17,400 --> 00:11:21,600 She faces a charge of being concerned in the supply of Class A drugs 158 00:11:21,680 --> 00:11:23,000 to an undercover reporter. 159 00:11:36,760 --> 00:11:39,640 We're going to make a short statement on behalf of Tulisa. 160 00:11:40,280 --> 00:11:43,920 Tulisa's been charged with a serious criminal offence, 161 00:11:44,000 --> 00:11:46,400 to which today, she's pleaded not guilty. 162 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:51,400 As has been widely reported, this entire case 163 00:11:51,480 --> 00:11:54,320 has been manufactured by Mazher Mahmood, 164 00:11:54,400 --> 00:11:57,120 sometimes known as the Fake Sheikh. 165 00:11:57,960 --> 00:12:00,920 Tulisa is the latest in a long line of people 166 00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:04,080 who have been treated as fodder by greedy newspapers. 167 00:12:06,240 --> 00:12:09,200 [Steve Grayson] I remember reading the Tulisa story 168 00:12:09,760 --> 00:12:12,200 {\an8}and I thought, this is exactly what we did. 169 00:12:13,160 --> 00:12:16,960 {\an8}There's no difference, it's exactly the same as what Mahmood did 170 00:12:17,040 --> 00:12:18,520 to Emma Morgan. 171 00:12:22,560 --> 00:12:24,160 The story's the same. 172 00:12:25,440 --> 00:12:29,200 The splash was "Page 3 Girl's Drug Shame." 173 00:12:31,200 --> 00:12:34,760 [Emma Morgan] When I saw the article about Tulisa, 174 00:12:35,280 --> 00:12:39,400 I knew exactly what had gone on, I looked at the byline and of course, 175 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:42,880 {\an8}there he was Mazher Mahmood, up to his old tricks. 176 00:12:42,960 --> 00:12:46,400 {\an8}I wanted to shout out and say, he's done that to me as well 177 00:12:46,600 --> 00:12:50,000 many many years before, the details were slightly different, 178 00:12:50,240 --> 00:12:52,720 but the way in which he had gone about it 179 00:12:52,800 --> 00:12:54,400 was exactly the same. 180 00:12:57,800 --> 00:13:01,280 What I have noticed with Mazher's stings 181 00:13:01,760 --> 00:13:04,600 is that although his victims can be very very different, 182 00:13:04,680 --> 00:13:07,960 he still used the same blueprint, 183 00:13:08,040 --> 00:13:12,000 he still sold them the dream, he gave them what they wanted. 184 00:13:12,080 --> 00:13:14,400 He dangled the biggest carrot ever, 185 00:13:14,480 --> 00:13:17,080 knowing they were going to reach for that carrot 186 00:13:17,160 --> 00:13:19,040 and that's how he brought them down. 187 00:13:19,560 --> 00:13:25,280 I fell for the Fake Sheikh's bullshit 188 00:13:25,360 --> 00:13:28,920 because I was offered an opportunity of a lifetime. 189 00:13:37,840 --> 00:13:40,240 We flew to Lanzarote. 190 00:13:44,920 --> 00:13:47,680 It was a really, really big calendar shoot. 191 00:13:51,280 --> 00:13:55,160 he said that I'd be getting paid far more money than I had ever been paid 192 00:13:55,240 --> 00:13:56,480 on any job before. 193 00:14:01,480 --> 00:14:04,520 But he asked me if I could get him some cocaine. 194 00:14:07,320 --> 00:14:11,320 I was duped, I was encouraged so much, 195 00:14:11,400 --> 00:14:14,680 I honestly thought if I had said no, 196 00:14:14,760 --> 00:14:16,520 it could have cost me the job. 197 00:14:18,680 --> 00:14:21,720 He asked me if I could get some cocaine for him 198 00:14:21,800 --> 00:14:24,160 from this guy called Billy. 199 00:14:27,200 --> 00:14:31,200 [Steve Grayson] Billy is buying the cocaine and we're paying him. 200 00:14:31,280 --> 00:14:36,440 Because Mazher Mahmood paid him from the expenses. 201 00:14:36,520 --> 00:14:39,600 "What about if we put that in the paper? What a joke! 202 00:14:39,680 --> 00:14:43,000 "Oh, it's okay. We bought the coke for her! 203 00:14:43,080 --> 00:14:45,200 "Ah, that's a good idea." 204 00:14:45,280 --> 00:14:47,280 We bought the coke, we give it to her. 205 00:14:47,360 --> 00:14:50,720 Billy gets paid, everybody gets paid, she gets ruined. 206 00:14:55,120 --> 00:15:00,560 He halted my career just as it was about to blow up. 207 00:15:00,640 --> 00:15:02,520 I never recovered from it. 208 00:15:07,000 --> 00:15:11,520 And I just cried and cried and cried 209 00:15:11,600 --> 00:15:14,800 and I was just so scared about what my mum and dad would think. 210 00:15:17,760 --> 00:15:20,760 [voice shaking] I remember... Sorry. 211 00:15:22,800 --> 00:15:25,560 I remember calling and I spoke to my dad 212 00:15:25,640 --> 00:15:29,400 and he just said, "Do you need help?" 213 00:15:29,480 --> 00:15:31,840 "Have you got a drugs problem? 214 00:15:31,920 --> 00:15:34,680 "because we'll get you sorted, we'll get you to rehab." 215 00:15:34,760 --> 00:15:39,000 And he was really worried about me and I said no. 216 00:15:39,080 --> 00:15:41,240 He said, you can tell me the truth, 217 00:15:41,320 --> 00:15:44,160 and I remember thinking, even my dad believes it. 218 00:15:44,600 --> 00:15:50,120 And then after that everything just, everything just went to shit. 219 00:15:54,800 --> 00:15:57,040 [Steve Grayson] In the end I got sacked 220 00:15:57,120 --> 00:16:00,560 over another story and fell out with Maz, 221 00:16:01,000 --> 00:16:03,480 but I felt bad for Emma. 222 00:16:03,560 --> 00:16:05,400 You know, I really did feel bad. 223 00:16:07,040 --> 00:16:09,840 It's OK feeling bad but I done it. 224 00:16:09,920 --> 00:16:11,640 But I did feel bad. 225 00:16:13,120 --> 00:16:16,440 [Emma Morgan] If my own dad is wondering whether or not it's true, 226 00:16:16,520 --> 00:16:19,640 you know, how is my voice ever going to be louder 227 00:16:19,720 --> 00:16:21,680 than the voice of the News of the World? 228 00:16:21,760 --> 00:16:25,640 I can't shout as loud as the 6 million people who are going to read about me. 229 00:16:26,520 --> 00:16:29,040 He would have had me slung in jail if he could, 230 00:16:29,120 --> 00:16:32,760 just thankfully it was in Spain so it was out of our jurisdiction. 231 00:16:32,840 --> 00:16:36,320 Had this been in London, maybe I'd have been up in court as well. 232 00:16:42,960 --> 00:16:46,520 [reporter] A court in London has told the singer Tulisa Contostavlos 233 00:16:46,600 --> 00:16:50,120 that she will go on trial in July to face a charge of supplying drugs. 234 00:16:53,880 --> 00:16:57,920 {\an8}I'd become aware of Tulisa Contostavlos being arrested, 235 00:16:58,000 --> 00:16:59,640 {\an8}and I'd followed that story. 236 00:17:01,120 --> 00:17:03,160 I was actually a fan of N-Dubz, 237 00:17:03,240 --> 00:17:06,960 and my children were young at the time, we all used to watch the X Factor 238 00:17:07,040 --> 00:17:08,400 avidly on a Saturday night. 239 00:17:08,480 --> 00:17:13,520 And then, low and behold my clerk got a call from Tulisa's manager. 240 00:17:13,560 --> 00:17:15,640 So, it was all a bit intimidating for me, 241 00:17:15,720 --> 00:17:18,080 I was very nervous about meeting her, actually. 242 00:17:21,080 --> 00:17:23,320 [Jeremy Dein] You were set up and entrapped. 243 00:17:24,280 --> 00:17:28,320 Entrapment is not a defence to a criminal charge. 244 00:17:29,000 --> 00:17:34,560 But a judge is entitled to stop the proceedings, 245 00:17:35,160 --> 00:17:41,880 if he or she feels that this was crime manufactured by Mahmood. 246 00:17:41,960 --> 00:17:44,760 Obviously we'll be drawing from the facts of your case, 247 00:17:44,800 --> 00:17:49,160 the whole business of the carrot of the 3.5 million, 248 00:17:49,240 --> 00:17:54,080 the carrot of the major part in the film, that you were lured. 249 00:17:57,080 --> 00:17:58,560 [ominous music] 250 00:18:01,080 --> 00:18:03,040 {\an8}No matter what the size of the carrot, 251 00:18:04,200 --> 00:18:06,880 {\an8}you cannot entrap people into committing these crimes, 252 00:18:08,040 --> 00:18:12,320 however the public perception is that's because they've offered a huge carrot. 253 00:18:12,400 --> 00:18:14,800 That is resulting in the crimes taking place. 254 00:18:21,160 --> 00:18:25,080 I wanted to do the case, as any, you know, professional would. 255 00:18:25,200 --> 00:18:27,800 It was, you know, an exciting prospect. 256 00:18:27,920 --> 00:18:31,760 but it was also, you know, incredibly worrying, 257 00:18:31,800 --> 00:18:33,880 because he did seem to be unstoppable. 258 00:18:36,560 --> 00:18:41,280 We researched Mahmood's old cases before the Tulisa case 259 00:18:41,320 --> 00:18:46,200 and the view I formed is that this was a journalist 260 00:18:46,280 --> 00:18:49,880 whose working practices could not be trusted. 261 00:18:51,000 --> 00:18:54,880 The defendants had been lured in by inducement 262 00:18:54,960 --> 00:18:57,240 by Mahmood and his cohorts. 263 00:18:57,320 --> 00:19:01,680 They're actually creating and generating the crime 264 00:19:01,760 --> 00:19:06,760 that they would later be heard to say was in the public interest to prosecute. 265 00:19:11,720 --> 00:19:16,200 {\an8}Public interest is, for me, is moral wrongdoing, obviously criminal acts, 266 00:19:16,280 --> 00:19:18,720 {\an8} hypocrisy, you know, the public being deceived. 267 00:19:20,200 --> 00:19:23,400 All 500 of my investigations that I've done, all 500 of them, 268 00:19:23,480 --> 00:19:27,080 fulfil the criteria in my view that they satisfy the public interest. 269 00:19:30,480 --> 00:19:35,560 When Maz landed those huge mega scoops 270 00:19:35,640 --> 00:19:38,080 then the papers would fly off the shelves. 271 00:19:38,640 --> 00:19:42,880 Maz delivered constantly, he was hugely valued. 272 00:19:43,640 --> 00:19:46,480 But he needed someone to watch him, 273 00:19:47,160 --> 00:19:50,680 to stop him getting out of control because he was so focused, 274 00:19:51,280 --> 00:19:54,160 he developed a kind of tunnel vision. 275 00:19:55,400 --> 00:20:01,080 And all that mattered was winning that next great scoop. 276 00:20:13,800 --> 00:20:16,680 [Jeremy Dein] In Tulisa's case we had a pre-trial hearing, 277 00:20:16,760 --> 00:20:19,720 arguing that the case should not be permitted to proceed. 278 00:20:21,800 --> 00:20:26,400 So, we were arguing that the behaviour of Mahmood was unconscionable, 279 00:20:26,480 --> 00:20:30,760 that evidence had been gathered in a background of lies, deceits 280 00:20:30,800 --> 00:20:32,320 and falsity. 281 00:20:32,400 --> 00:20:34,080 Their justification for the sting 282 00:20:34,160 --> 00:20:36,280 was that they claimed they had information 283 00:20:36,320 --> 00:20:38,800 that Tulisa Contostavlos was a drugs dealer. 284 00:20:40,080 --> 00:20:44,520 We wanted to see the information and/or be told 285 00:20:44,560 --> 00:20:46,680 who it was that provided that information. 286 00:20:47,080 --> 00:20:48,440 And we got nothing. 287 00:20:49,960 --> 00:20:54,320 So, a lot of the Tulisa case was wrapped up in alleged, journalistic privilege. 288 00:20:55,320 --> 00:20:58,200 It was definitely a case of David and Goliath, for sure. 289 00:20:58,680 --> 00:21:02,040 And there were times when it seemed overwhelming, yeah. 290 00:21:03,000 --> 00:21:06,520 One of the nights during, I actually slept in my chair in my chambers. 291 00:21:06,560 --> 00:21:10,400 Worked until about 4 or 5 in the morning and just went to sleep for an hour, 292 00:21:10,480 --> 00:21:13,920 I think I went out and bought a new shirt actually and went to court. 293 00:21:14,000 --> 00:21:18,480 You know, we knew we were up against it in the legal arguments hearing. 294 00:21:22,800 --> 00:21:25,520 [Paul Samrai] He would put in more effort, 295 00:21:25,560 --> 00:21:28,160 and I know this from first-hand experience, 296 00:21:28,240 --> 00:21:32,640 he'd put in more effort into the preparation for a court case 297 00:21:32,720 --> 00:21:35,160 than he would into the original story. 298 00:21:38,200 --> 00:21:44,800 Because the conviction effectively validated his journalism. 299 00:21:48,080 --> 00:21:50,920 [Jeremy Dein] Mahmood and his group, 300 00:21:51,000 --> 00:21:53,880 they were as uncooperative as they could possibly be. 301 00:21:58,880 --> 00:22:03,000 We were desperately trying to take a statement from a very important witness, 302 00:22:03,080 --> 00:22:05,120 Mahmood's driver Alan Smith, 303 00:22:05,200 --> 00:22:06,640 and they stood in our way. 304 00:22:11,440 --> 00:22:16,040 Just after the main meeting between Tulisa and Mahmood, 305 00:22:16,120 --> 00:22:20,360 Tulisa was offered a chauffeur driven car home with Alan Smith as the driver. 306 00:22:21,040 --> 00:22:24,480 And she was talking about family members being affected by drugs 307 00:22:24,560 --> 00:22:28,200 and explaining that's why she was so anti-drugs. 308 00:22:30,280 --> 00:22:33,400 Alan Smith clearly overheard what she was saying. 309 00:22:36,560 --> 00:22:40,200 And then we, having so bitterly complained about that, 310 00:22:40,280 --> 00:22:43,200 they obviously gave in and just took a statement from him. 311 00:22:43,280 --> 00:22:47,880 In which Smith said that Tulisa spoke against drugs, 312 00:22:47,960 --> 00:22:51,000 in the car, coming back from the Metropolitan Hotel. 313 00:22:51,080 --> 00:22:54,720 So, obviously this was, you know, an incredible moment. 314 00:22:56,000 --> 00:23:01,160 We've now got a statement in which her case was supported. 315 00:23:01,240 --> 00:23:04,240 So I thought, this was gold dust. 316 00:23:08,920 --> 00:23:13,840 But within 24 hours, Alan Smith changed that part of his statement. 317 00:23:15,280 --> 00:23:18,200 The judge was just told that Alan Smith had made a mistake. 318 00:23:18,960 --> 00:23:22,120 Well obviously, we complained even more bitterly about that, 319 00:23:22,200 --> 00:23:26,960 but the judge's standpoint on that was, well, that's what the witness has said. 320 00:23:27,040 --> 00:23:30,360 These are all matters for the jury to consider in due course. 321 00:23:30,440 --> 00:23:32,360 And it was left at that. 322 00:23:33,840 --> 00:23:37,040 I remember saying to myself, how am I going to turn this around, 323 00:23:37,120 --> 00:23:39,720 I don't know how I'm going to turn this around. 324 00:23:57,120 --> 00:24:00,400 I'm scared for myself, I'm scared for myself. 325 00:24:06,040 --> 00:24:09,320 [Jeremy Dein] The whole experience of arriving at court, the trial 326 00:24:09,400 --> 00:24:15,240 was ten out of ten anxiety, tension, stress, you know, trauma. 327 00:24:15,320 --> 00:24:16,880 There's no question about that. 328 00:24:18,640 --> 00:24:20,600 [shutters clicking] 329 00:24:30,480 --> 00:24:33,240 This was a really difficult case to win. 330 00:24:33,320 --> 00:24:36,000 The prosecutor's key arguments were very simply put. 331 00:24:36,080 --> 00:24:41,120 She'd been exposed as a drugs dealer. She had spoken in very clear terms 332 00:24:41,200 --> 00:24:43,560 of her willingness to supply drugs 333 00:24:44,040 --> 00:24:47,520 and that she had set up a drugs deal which went through 334 00:24:47,600 --> 00:24:51,120 and that Mazher Mahmood was a very experienced investigative journalist 335 00:24:51,760 --> 00:24:56,360 who had exposed this and it was in the public interest that this should happen. 336 00:25:03,400 --> 00:25:06,400 [Jeremy Dein] Tulisa was definitely facing a prison sentence 337 00:25:06,480 --> 00:25:09,240 between 18 months and three years. 338 00:25:10,240 --> 00:25:14,080 And as we got into the trial, things weren't looking good. 339 00:25:18,760 --> 00:25:21,040 We went into a room at Southwark Crown Court, 340 00:25:21,120 --> 00:25:24,320 and it was the first time where I saw her cracking up. 341 00:25:26,840 --> 00:25:29,560 She was crying, she was very very distressed, 342 00:25:29,880 --> 00:25:33,400 and basically saying, "The judge is against us, we're going to lose, 343 00:25:33,480 --> 00:25:37,160 I'm going to prison, we're not getting anywhere, it's a waste of time." 344 00:25:38,760 --> 00:25:42,160 Here was someone whose whole life was on the brink of collapsing. 345 00:25:42,240 --> 00:25:45,080 And, I remember thinking, well actually I agree with you. 346 00:25:45,360 --> 00:25:47,400 I actually think we are going to lose. 347 00:25:47,480 --> 00:25:51,160 I didn't say that, but it was difficult for me to pretend otherwise. 348 00:25:57,360 --> 00:26:00,080 [Jodie Kidd] When I heard about Tulisa, 349 00:26:00,160 --> 00:26:04,040 the pain, that I knew that she would be going through, 350 00:26:04,880 --> 00:26:09,280 {\an8}the frustration, the betrayal, all of those things 351 00:26:09,360 --> 00:26:12,320 {\an8}definitely kind of came back up again, 352 00:26:12,400 --> 00:26:18,120 of just another person that's, that's a victim of this man. 353 00:26:25,560 --> 00:26:29,440 When I saw the article for the first time, 354 00:26:29,520 --> 00:26:33,280 it was like total, kind of panic 355 00:26:33,360 --> 00:26:36,480 that I could have been so stupid. 356 00:26:36,560 --> 00:26:38,560 That I fell into a trap. 357 00:26:38,920 --> 00:26:43,680 You know, of course, there is a point where I made that phone call, 358 00:26:43,760 --> 00:26:47,680 but I know what they did, and I know how they led me into these conversations. 359 00:26:47,760 --> 00:26:49,960 I know how they manipulated things. 360 00:26:50,040 --> 00:26:52,640 You know, I know the depths of where they went. 361 00:27:01,800 --> 00:27:06,840 About 2007 I was a successful model 362 00:27:07,320 --> 00:27:09,720 and I was 26-27 years old. 363 00:27:10,400 --> 00:27:13,920 And my brother Jack, he was a professional polo player 364 00:27:17,000 --> 00:27:18,440 and I remember him saying 365 00:27:18,520 --> 00:27:21,760 "I've been approached by this very very wealthy Sheikh 366 00:27:21,880 --> 00:27:23,640 that lived in Dubai." 367 00:27:24,600 --> 00:27:29,080 They had months and months of meetings with Jack. 368 00:27:31,280 --> 00:27:34,360 Jack then says "Look he wants to put on this event, 369 00:27:35,560 --> 00:27:40,280 "and he wants to do a polo and a fashion event, 370 00:27:40,360 --> 00:27:43,960 "and he would really love you to come on and to be an advisor 371 00:27:44,040 --> 00:27:46,640 "on the fashion front, maybe do a fashion show, 372 00:27:46,720 --> 00:27:49,080 "get some of your friends along and designers." 373 00:27:49,640 --> 00:27:52,240 And he's like "please do it' and I said "fine." 374 00:27:53,560 --> 00:27:55,840 So, I went up to London, 375 00:27:57,280 --> 00:28:01,120 got dropped off on Park Lane, outside of this apartment building. 376 00:28:02,560 --> 00:28:06,760 We were greeted by the Sheikh's right-hand man, 377 00:28:07,440 --> 00:28:11,080 you know, he'll be the one that will be organising everything. 378 00:28:13,240 --> 00:28:18,800 And then, the Sheikh walked in and, you know, looks very regal. 379 00:28:18,880 --> 00:28:21,480 And then they said "Right, we'll have some food." 380 00:28:21,560 --> 00:28:24,840 So, through the meal he is talking about that, 381 00:28:24,920 --> 00:28:28,120 you know, they're going to be putting millions into this event, 382 00:28:28,200 --> 00:28:32,720 and let's talk about dates, so it's really positive, kind of, 383 00:28:32,800 --> 00:28:35,640 really fun, like, oh my goodness this is gonna be great. 384 00:28:40,160 --> 00:28:43,840 And another glass of wine comes, and we start chatting, 385 00:28:43,920 --> 00:28:46,320 and it starts becoming a much more relaxed chat. 386 00:28:46,720 --> 00:28:51,680 His right hand man starts going into, the Sheikh, "He loves to party, 387 00:28:51,760 --> 00:28:54,520 "Do you guys know anything about drugs?" 388 00:28:54,600 --> 00:28:58,600 Which I thought was a bit weird, but you don't ask too many questions, 389 00:28:58,680 --> 00:29:01,320 especially if you're from a different country, 390 00:29:01,400 --> 00:29:03,920 they have different ways, different manners, 391 00:29:04,000 --> 00:29:06,880 so you know all those little kind of moments 392 00:29:06,960 --> 00:29:11,240 when you go "that's a bit odd" you think it got lost in translation along the way. 393 00:29:12,160 --> 00:29:16,840 And they started asking about getting them drugs. 394 00:29:19,400 --> 00:29:24,080 So I was like, oh God. You know this guy is about to change, certainly Jack's life, 395 00:29:24,160 --> 00:29:26,520 but you know, create a nice new business, 396 00:29:26,600 --> 00:29:28,360 we're all going to make some money. 397 00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:32,560 I just felt incredible pressure. 398 00:29:34,320 --> 00:29:37,680 We were trying to rack our brains for someone who knew someone 399 00:29:37,760 --> 00:29:39,280 that knew somebody. 400 00:29:39,360 --> 00:29:42,800 And so I made a phone call. 401 00:29:42,880 --> 00:29:44,600 That's all I did. 402 00:29:44,680 --> 00:29:47,560 But it was the biggest mistake of my life. 403 00:29:54,760 --> 00:29:59,640 The saddest thing is, you know it destroyed our family. 404 00:29:59,720 --> 00:30:04,440 I still haven't got a relationship with my brother because of it. 405 00:30:04,520 --> 00:30:06,680 Because for me, it's been too painful. 406 00:30:06,760 --> 00:30:11,200 I have anger, my trust went completely out the window. 407 00:30:11,280 --> 00:30:13,400 I didn't trust anyone. 408 00:30:13,480 --> 00:30:18,040 So it's had huge, huge negative effects. 409 00:30:22,040 --> 00:30:26,680 I had the most awful phone calls with the heads of these huge companies 410 00:30:26,760 --> 00:30:30,800 that I was the face for, going, "We've got to rip up the contract." 411 00:30:31,640 --> 00:30:34,480 So, that was a very painful moment, 412 00:30:34,560 --> 00:30:39,640 and just seeing kind of your whole, kind of career, just disappear. 413 00:30:41,480 --> 00:30:42,520 Sorry... 414 00:30:43,720 --> 00:30:45,240 Terrible. 415 00:30:48,000 --> 00:30:49,360 [exhales deeply] 416 00:30:49,960 --> 00:30:55,600 But you know, you'd worked so hard to build these relationships 417 00:30:55,680 --> 00:30:58,880 and these careers, my career, 418 00:30:59,680 --> 00:31:05,280 just for, just for a stupid moment 419 00:31:06,840 --> 00:31:12,760 that you were completely kind of groomed and manipulated to make. 420 00:31:15,880 --> 00:31:19,320 It took years and years and years and years 421 00:31:19,400 --> 00:31:22,200 to recover my career. 422 00:31:23,080 --> 00:31:26,400 Emotionally, as you can see, it still hasn't. 423 00:31:26,480 --> 00:31:31,000 But all of those years of tears and pain 424 00:31:31,080 --> 00:31:34,760 and anger because of this man. 425 00:31:39,840 --> 00:31:42,480 {\an8}If you are going to be a celebrity in the public eye, 426 00:31:42,560 --> 00:31:45,480 {\an8}the public have a right to expect certain morals from you, 427 00:31:45,560 --> 00:31:47,680 a certain standard, certain codes from you. 428 00:31:47,760 --> 00:31:50,200 We don't ruin their lives, they ruin their own lives. 429 00:31:50,280 --> 00:31:52,600 I get that repeatedly, "You've destroyed my life." 430 00:31:52,680 --> 00:31:54,480 I tell people, look I've not destroyed your life 431 00:31:54,520 --> 00:31:55,360 You've destroyed your own life. 432 00:31:55,440 --> 00:31:56,840 You made these choices. 433 00:31:58,120 --> 00:32:01,400 [Paul Samrai] He was very denigrating of celebs. 434 00:32:01,480 --> 00:32:05,440 He didn't feel a lot of them deserved to be where they were, in the public eye. 435 00:32:07,240 --> 00:32:11,280 The bigger they are the harder they fall, that was his sort of belief 436 00:32:11,360 --> 00:32:13,200 when he was tackling these stories. 437 00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:17,280 Let's go for the biggest that we can get and there you see, 438 00:32:17,840 --> 00:32:22,520 royalty, big celebs, politicians, 439 00:32:22,600 --> 00:32:25,240 you know, all fair game to him. 440 00:32:25,320 --> 00:32:26,800 He revelled in that. 441 00:32:28,400 --> 00:32:32,200 {\an8}I'm a journalist, that's what we do, we publish stories, we sell newspapers, 442 00:32:32,280 --> 00:32:33,520 {\an8}that's what we do, 443 00:32:35,160 --> 00:32:38,720 I'm not a police officer, I'm not a social worker, I'm a journalist. 444 00:32:48,880 --> 00:32:51,640 [sniffing] So... 445 00:32:56,200 --> 00:32:57,960 here I am again. 446 00:33:01,920 --> 00:33:04,840 I actually just don't even know what to say anymore. 447 00:33:07,000 --> 00:33:09,000 I'm filming this because 448 00:33:11,360 --> 00:33:16,400 I'm so sick of people not knowing what is really going on. 449 00:33:18,320 --> 00:33:21,160 I really just want it all to end. 450 00:33:21,800 --> 00:33:26,320 I don't want to be this person anymore, I don't want to be famous anymore 451 00:33:31,520 --> 00:33:33,560 [tense music] 452 00:33:46,520 --> 00:33:49,240 [Jeremy Dein] Focusing on Mahmood's entry into court, 453 00:33:49,320 --> 00:33:52,320 normally a witness will come in through the public entrance, 454 00:33:52,400 --> 00:33:54,880 whereas Mahmood came in through the judge's door, 455 00:33:57,600 --> 00:34:01,720 where he was behind a screen on the basis that he was at risk 456 00:34:01,800 --> 00:34:05,720 because of the public interest work that he was doing. 457 00:34:05,800 --> 00:34:09,840 And that meant that he had a status that no other witness ever had. 458 00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:16,000 And it just consolidated this feeling that he was something special. 459 00:34:18,440 --> 00:34:21,360 I knew that I was sort of going into battle with someone 460 00:34:21,440 --> 00:34:25,120 who was case-hardened, you know, had no fear, 461 00:34:25,160 --> 00:34:27,880 had no restraints, 462 00:34:28,520 --> 00:34:34,960 was capable of actually saying anything about her or me at any time. 463 00:34:36,760 --> 00:34:40,640 His behaviour towards me was arrogant, combative and dismissive, 464 00:34:40,760 --> 00:34:43,880 like saying your ears are so big you should be able to hear me, 465 00:34:43,960 --> 00:34:45,360 or something like that. 466 00:34:47,080 --> 00:34:50,280 It was definitely peppered with references to Tulisa, 467 00:34:50,360 --> 00:34:54,920 along the lines of, "Look, what you're asking me did I say this, did I say that? 468 00:34:55,000 --> 00:34:57,160 "Why does that matter? She's a cocaine dealer 469 00:34:57,280 --> 00:35:01,200 that's what you should be worried about." That was his style of giving evidence. 470 00:35:02,600 --> 00:35:04,800 But what Mazher Mahmood didn't know 471 00:35:04,880 --> 00:35:08,200 is that we had come across a bombshell 472 00:35:09,000 --> 00:35:11,840 and we were waiting to hit him with it. 473 00:35:23,640 --> 00:35:25,320 I was astonished, 474 00:35:26,160 --> 00:35:28,560 on the day before the cross-examination, 475 00:35:28,640 --> 00:35:31,640 Mahmood's driver, Alan Smith contacted us, 476 00:35:31,760 --> 00:35:34,080 and he said, I want to speak to you. 477 00:35:34,760 --> 00:35:37,920 He told us that Mahmood had told him to change his statement, 478 00:35:38,000 --> 00:35:39,640 and that there'd been emails. 479 00:35:43,640 --> 00:35:47,160 I knew we had hit the jackpot. 480 00:35:52,160 --> 00:35:54,560 I had decided to leave the whole topic 481 00:35:54,640 --> 00:35:57,840 of Alan Smith's statement until the very end. 482 00:36:01,000 --> 00:36:02,920 Then I asked Mahmood 483 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:06,120 whether he'd spoken to Alan Smith about his statement, 484 00:36:06,160 --> 00:36:09,960 to which Mahmood responded something like, "I might have done, 485 00:36:10,040 --> 00:36:11,640 what's it got to do with you?" 486 00:36:11,680 --> 00:36:15,920 Which is an astonishingly inappropriate and disrespectful answer 487 00:36:16,000 --> 00:36:17,480 for a witness to give. 488 00:36:17,560 --> 00:36:21,520 I'd asked Mahmood the same thing at the legal arguments hearing 489 00:36:21,600 --> 00:36:23,640 and Mahmood had said no. 490 00:36:25,040 --> 00:36:29,120 The judge instantaneously intervened 491 00:36:29,160 --> 00:36:33,320 and effectively said to Mahmood, "You lied to me on the legal arguments hearing, 492 00:36:33,400 --> 00:36:35,680 "you told me that you hadn't spoken to him, 493 00:36:35,800 --> 00:36:38,640 "now you're saying you might have done, tell the truth!" 494 00:36:43,840 --> 00:36:46,640 From that moment onwards, Mahmood was done for. 495 00:36:47,880 --> 00:36:51,080 In those few seconds, he was wiped out. 496 00:36:53,360 --> 00:36:58,080 The judge then turned to the prosecutor and said, "I'm throwing this out." 497 00:36:59,400 --> 00:37:01,440 Mahmood, he disintegrated. 498 00:37:01,520 --> 00:37:06,400 This rude, aggressive, dismissive, confrontational, 499 00:37:06,480 --> 00:37:09,640 you know, all-powerful individual, was just reduced 500 00:37:09,680 --> 00:37:14,080 to a quivering wreck and you could see that he was saying to himself, 501 00:37:14,160 --> 00:37:15,200 "It's over." 502 00:37:19,320 --> 00:37:21,280 And, you know, Tulisa was ecstatic. 503 00:37:25,320 --> 00:37:27,840 She had genuinely thought it was lost 504 00:37:27,920 --> 00:37:30,440 and she couldn't believe it. 505 00:37:30,520 --> 00:37:31,800 [paparazzi] Tulisa! 506 00:37:40,880 --> 00:37:45,160 This whole case was a horrific and disgusting entrapment 507 00:37:45,280 --> 00:37:46,880 by Mazher Mahmood. 508 00:37:46,960 --> 00:37:50,160 We have now succeeded in exposing the real culprit, 509 00:37:50,200 --> 00:37:53,480 and most importantly, the real liar. 510 00:37:53,960 --> 00:37:57,840 As someone who has had my life ruined for the past year, 511 00:37:57,920 --> 00:38:01,280 I strongly believe that this type of entrapment 512 00:38:01,360 --> 00:38:03,880 should not be allowed to happen to anyone. 513 00:38:04,760 --> 00:38:07,920 [Emma Morgan] I remember being at home and putting the news on, 514 00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:10,760 seeing Tulisa come outside of court. 515 00:38:10,840 --> 00:38:14,520 I remember seeing how pleased she was that the truth was out. 516 00:38:15,200 --> 00:38:18,160 [reporter] Tulisa walked out of court with her name cleared. 517 00:38:18,280 --> 00:38:21,480 Her priority now to rebuild a battered career. 518 00:38:22,280 --> 00:38:25,920 I was really, really, immensely proud of what she did 519 00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:28,800 and she basically spoke for all of us. 520 00:38:31,480 --> 00:38:34,280 I was so, so happy for her, 521 00:38:34,360 --> 00:38:38,160 but a little part of me did think, wish I could have had that. 522 00:38:41,160 --> 00:38:42,400 Oh my God. 523 00:38:42,600 --> 00:38:43,600 How do you feel? 524 00:38:44,200 --> 00:38:45,640 I'm so happy. 525 00:38:46,960 --> 00:38:48,640 Oh my God, 526 00:38:49,640 --> 00:38:51,160 oh my God. 527 00:38:52,360 --> 00:38:55,480 I can't actually believe it's over. I can't believe it's over. 528 00:38:56,200 --> 00:39:01,000 It was incredibly emotional because, as often happens in criminal proceedings, 529 00:39:01,080 --> 00:39:04,920 you know, you're thrown together with people you don't know and you suddenly, 530 00:39:05,000 --> 00:39:09,080 you share this experience which once upon a time was irrelevant 531 00:39:09,160 --> 00:39:13,800 to your life, and now is the whole, you know, basis of your life, 532 00:39:13,880 --> 00:39:17,040 so it was very emotional, I felt really pleased for her. 533 00:39:20,560 --> 00:39:24,040 But I was also, you know, incredibly relieved 534 00:39:24,120 --> 00:39:25,840 that it hadn't gone wrong. 535 00:39:32,440 --> 00:39:36,080 [reporter] The Sun on Sunday said they are disappointed with this outcome 536 00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:39,000 but do believe the original investigation 537 00:39:39,080 --> 00:39:42,640 was conducted within the bounds of the law and the industry's code. 538 00:39:45,080 --> 00:39:47,640 [reporter] The judge ruled there were strong grounds 539 00:39:47,680 --> 00:39:50,200 that the undercover reporter from the Sun on Sunday 540 00:39:50,320 --> 00:39:52,680 had lied and manipulated evidence. 541 00:39:53,160 --> 00:39:56,640 The paper has now suspended the man known as The Fake Sheikh. 542 00:39:59,040 --> 00:40:02,960 It wasn't long after that that he was charged, which was amazing. 543 00:40:03,040 --> 00:40:08,640 It was about time, you know, he faced some consequences for his actions. 544 00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:20,040 [reporter] The trial of Mazher Mahmood, the journalist known as the Fake Sheikh, 545 00:40:20,120 --> 00:40:21,880 has opened at the Old Bailey. 546 00:40:21,960 --> 00:40:24,440 He and his former driver, Alan Smith are charged 547 00:40:24,520 --> 00:40:26,400 with perverting the course of justice 548 00:40:26,480 --> 00:40:30,080 in relation to the trial of the singer, Tulisa Contostavlos. 549 00:40:33,640 --> 00:40:36,040 [Neil Wallis] I was very sad 550 00:40:36,120 --> 00:40:42,960 that Maz found himself in the situation he did and ended up on trial. 551 00:40:43,640 --> 00:40:46,960 [reporter] Has there been any reaction from Mazher Mahmood, Danny? 552 00:40:47,040 --> 00:40:50,040 [Danny] We have actually had a statement from him, delivered through his lawyers, 553 00:40:50,120 --> 00:40:52,200 in which he says he is deeply disappointed 554 00:40:52,320 --> 00:40:54,680 with the Crown Prosecution Services' decision. 555 00:40:54,800 --> 00:40:58,800 He denies the offence and will vigorously contest it in court. 556 00:41:08,680 --> 00:41:11,520 I went to the Old Bailey to watch. 557 00:41:13,360 --> 00:41:16,160 I remember him arriving to court. 558 00:41:17,000 --> 00:41:20,040 A couple of big blokes on either side of him. 559 00:41:26,880 --> 00:41:30,520 With his little navy blue anorak, and his hood down over his head. 560 00:41:31,160 --> 00:41:33,600 [reporters shouting questions] 561 00:41:37,120 --> 00:41:40,600 You know, people shouting at him, and he was getting ushered in, 562 00:41:40,640 --> 00:41:42,200 and I thought, yeah great 563 00:41:42,920 --> 00:41:44,760 because he clearly didn't like that. 564 00:41:45,080 --> 00:41:47,120 And I thought, now you know how it feels, 565 00:41:47,160 --> 00:41:48,640 Tulisa had the same thing 566 00:41:48,680 --> 00:41:50,320 when she was dragged into court. 567 00:41:53,280 --> 00:41:55,920 [Paul Connew] When I watched Mazher going into court, 568 00:41:56,000 --> 00:42:00,480 I just felt this was a man whose whole image 569 00:42:00,560 --> 00:42:02,360 was collapsing around him. 570 00:42:03,320 --> 00:42:05,200 The wheel had turned full circle. 571 00:42:09,840 --> 00:42:14,200 [Emma Morgan] When I saw Mazher in court, at the Old Bailey, 572 00:42:15,400 --> 00:42:19,160 he looked a little bit beaten, his shoulders were a bit hunched, 573 00:42:19,280 --> 00:42:20,480 his head was down. 574 00:42:21,880 --> 00:42:24,280 But I still got the feeling 575 00:42:24,360 --> 00:42:29,480 that it was just a cold, emotionless human, standing there. 576 00:42:32,160 --> 00:42:36,000 [Jeremy Dein] Mahmood didn't plead guilty. He tried to evade responsibility. 577 00:42:36,080 --> 00:42:37,680 So, no remorse. 578 00:42:39,960 --> 00:42:43,560 But what does in my view, speak very loudly, 579 00:42:43,640 --> 00:42:45,760 is that he never opened his mouth. 580 00:42:49,040 --> 00:42:53,320 Having run around, seeking to entrap people, 581 00:42:57,200 --> 00:43:01,080 when it came to explaining his own criminal acts, 582 00:43:01,160 --> 00:43:05,360 he had nothing to say, I mean, it's quite a state of affairs, isn't it? 583 00:43:06,920 --> 00:43:08,000 Incredible. 584 00:43:08,400 --> 00:43:10,520 {\an8}Now some breaking news, we've got a verdict 585 00:43:10,600 --> 00:43:12,880 {\an8}in the trial of the so-called Fake Sheikh. 586 00:43:13,000 --> 00:43:15,760 {\an8}Mazher Mahmood, accused of tampering with evidence 587 00:43:15,840 --> 00:43:19,320 {\an8}in the collapsed drugs trial of the pop star, Tulisa Contostavlos. 588 00:43:19,400 --> 00:43:21,840 {\an8}Let's go to Richard Lister at the Old Bailey. 589 00:43:21,920 --> 00:43:23,760 {\an8}What is the verdict, Richard? 590 00:43:25,320 --> 00:43:28,560 {\an8}The verdict, Joanna, is that both Mazher Mahmood 591 00:43:28,640 --> 00:43:31,800 {\an8}the so-called fake sheikh and his former driver, Alan Smith, 592 00:43:31,880 --> 00:43:35,640 {\an8}have both been found guilty of conspiring to pervert the course of justice. 593 00:43:35,760 --> 00:43:38,160 Yes! We've nailed the bastard. 594 00:43:39,120 --> 00:43:42,240 [journalist] Mr Mahmood, what would you like to say to Tulisa? 595 00:43:42,320 --> 00:43:46,160 Why did you tamper the evidence? Would you like to apologise for Tulisa? 596 00:43:46,240 --> 00:43:48,440 Are you sorry? What do you say to that? 597 00:43:50,720 --> 00:43:53,280 [Emma Morgan] When the guilty verdict came in, 598 00:43:53,360 --> 00:43:56,680 I did feel a real sense of relief. 599 00:43:56,760 --> 00:43:59,800 [journalist] Did you lie to get a front-page headline? 600 00:43:59,880 --> 00:44:02,680 What do you say to that? Mr Mahmood what's your reaction? 601 00:44:04,440 --> 00:44:07,080 [Emma Morgan] I didn't quite realise until that point 602 00:44:07,160 --> 00:44:09,520 how much that would actually mean to me. 603 00:44:09,600 --> 00:44:13,840 Him getting that guilty, I almost felt like I'd been vindicated. 604 00:44:24,680 --> 00:44:28,000 [reporter] Mazher Mahmood, the man better known as The Fake Sheikh 605 00:44:28,080 --> 00:44:31,000 is beginning a fifteen-month jail sentence tonight. 606 00:44:37,240 --> 00:44:41,960 {\an8}The way people turned against him for me was probably the hardest thing. 607 00:44:43,920 --> 00:44:47,280 [reporter] Mahmood has now been sacked by his employer, News UK, 608 00:44:47,360 --> 00:44:48,840 owned by Rupert Murdoch. 609 00:44:49,960 --> 00:44:53,960 Everyone who built him up to be who he was 610 00:44:55,240 --> 00:44:56,440 let him fall. 611 00:45:00,160 --> 00:45:03,440 For him, having to lose the status, 612 00:45:04,200 --> 00:45:05,640 the reputation, 613 00:45:06,560 --> 00:45:08,720 must have been very, very difficult. 614 00:45:12,360 --> 00:45:14,360 In an instant, 615 00:45:15,360 --> 00:45:17,600 you know, it was gone. 616 00:45:20,720 --> 00:45:25,680 [Paul Samrai] He would hate for that to be what he's remembered for most. 617 00:45:25,760 --> 00:45:28,360 Is going to prison. 618 00:45:28,440 --> 00:45:30,880 That's the killer, the absolute killer for him 619 00:45:30,960 --> 00:45:34,840 because it wipes away Journalist of the Year, 620 00:45:34,920 --> 00:45:38,120 Scoop of the Year you know, it wipes away all of those awards. 621 00:45:38,200 --> 00:45:40,400 And it's a shame 622 00:45:40,480 --> 00:45:44,120 because there was good stuff that he did. 623 00:45:44,200 --> 00:45:47,560 So much top-notch journalism 624 00:45:48,800 --> 00:45:50,320 is forgotten 625 00:45:51,080 --> 00:45:53,680 because of what happened at the end of his career. 626 00:45:56,480 --> 00:46:01,320 I wondered, if he'd been more closely supervised 627 00:46:01,400 --> 00:46:03,080 all the way through his career, 628 00:46:03,520 --> 00:46:05,080 whether it would have happened? 629 00:46:08,400 --> 00:46:10,440 Maybe Maz was failed to some extent. 630 00:46:18,600 --> 00:46:23,160 Mazher Mahmood, for me, during his 30-year career, 631 00:46:23,840 --> 00:46:26,000 masqueraded as a good guy, 632 00:46:27,360 --> 00:46:34,360 when in fact he was just an evil, evil, life-wrecker, career-wrecker. 633 00:46:36,960 --> 00:46:40,600 He just didn't care. He would do whatever he had to do 634 00:46:40,680 --> 00:46:43,600 to get the story, and that's not journalism. 635 00:46:46,600 --> 00:46:49,600 [Paul Samrai] He used to go out doing a story 636 00:46:51,240 --> 00:46:53,520 intending it to be the front page. 637 00:46:56,640 --> 00:46:59,840 The end justifies the means. 638 00:46:59,920 --> 00:47:01,640 And that should be his motto. 639 00:47:02,640 --> 00:47:06,080 Even if it means destroying, or attempting to destroy someone's life, 640 00:47:06,160 --> 00:47:07,200 like Tulisa. 641 00:47:07,280 --> 00:47:10,320 He has no sense of guilt, no conscience, 642 00:47:10,960 --> 00:47:12,080 no morality. 643 00:47:27,280 --> 00:47:30,120 [Paul Samrai] When he was released from prison, 644 00:47:30,200 --> 00:47:31,680 he disappeared. 645 00:47:35,120 --> 00:47:39,400 There's enormous interest to find out where he is and what he's doing. 646 00:47:39,960 --> 00:47:41,120 And to expose him. 647 00:47:44,080 --> 00:47:46,520 But nobody knows where he is. 648 00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:52,040 He's clever. 649 00:47:52,840 --> 00:47:55,040 He's clever. He would survive. 650 00:47:59,640 --> 00:48:03,680 [Paul Samrai] There was some rumour that he was freelancing under another name. 651 00:48:04,920 --> 00:48:06,560 Working at another newspaper. 652 00:48:07,920 --> 00:48:09,360 But nobody really knows. 653 00:48:13,640 --> 00:48:15,880 Again, clouded in secrecy. 654 00:48:18,920 --> 00:48:23,440 And that, probably, is where he feels most comfortable. 655 00:48:33,760 --> 00:48:36,800 [Emily Maitlis] Are you very fond of your Fake Sheikh robes? 656 00:48:36,880 --> 00:48:39,880 [Mazher Mahmood] I am yeah, I've had a lot of fun with it. 657 00:48:41,040 --> 00:48:44,840 And all the trappings of the Sheikh, it's such a polished performance. 658 00:48:44,920 --> 00:48:46,200 You get away with it. 659 00:48:47,160 --> 00:48:49,240 You use that phrase, we get away with it. 660 00:48:49,320 --> 00:48:53,080 Do you ever feel a little bit uncomfortable in your own skin 661 00:48:53,160 --> 00:48:55,600 - that this is the way you operate? - Not at all. 662 00:48:55,680 --> 00:48:58,320 I'm proud of what I do, I wouldn't do it otherwise. 663 00:48:59,240 --> 00:49:01,600 [Emily Maitlis] Mazher Mahmood, thanks very much indeed. 664 00:49:01,680 --> 00:49:02,800 [Mazher Mahmood] Pleasure. 665 00:49:03,160 --> 00:49:05,800 [end credit music]