Bob Bird is the former editor of the Scottish edition of the defunct News of the World tabloid.[1]

He is best known for the widespread media coverage over his role in two trials involving former Scottish MSP Tommy Sheridan: the 2006 Sheridan v News Group Newspapers defamation case and the 2010 HM Advocate v Sheridan and Sheridan perjury case.

Sheridan v News Group Newspapers

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In the original trial in 2006, Sheridan sued News International, publishers of the Sunday newspaper the News of the World, for defamation, after it published stories making allegations that the married MSP had been indulging extramarital affairs. During the trial, Bob Bird, as editor of the newspaper, testified that he had authorised the payment of £14,000 to two women in return for their story.[2] Sheridan won the case, and was awarded £200,000 in damages.[3] The News of the World launched an immediate appeal against the verdict.[4]

HM Advocate v Sheridan and Sheridan

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The Scottish News of the World subsequently claimed to have 'irrefutable proof' that Sheridan had lied on the stand during his libel case; Bob Bird claimed that he had paid personally obtained the information from an informant, having had to strip to his underpants in the process to reassure his source that he was not wearing a wire.[5][6] Bird paid £200,000 for the secret video footage, which his newspaper claimed showed Sheridan admitting to his extramarital affairs.[7] The allegations eventually led to a police investigation and a court case, with Sheridan standing trial for perjury in 2010. During this trial, Bob Bird denied allegations from Sheridan that Bird had authorised the use of illegal phone taps and bugs to obtain information on the MSP.[8] Sheridan was found guilty of perjury and was subsequently jailed for three years.[9]

News of the World phone hacking affair

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Bob Bird's testimony in the second trial came under renewed focus the following year, during the investigation into the News of the World phone hacking affair.[10] Bird had testified during the trial that he had not authorised the use of telephone taps against Sheridan,[11] and that he had no dealing with Glen Mulcaire, the private investigator jailed for his role in the phone hacking affair. Bird had also claimed under affirmation that NOTW company emails requested by Sheridan's defence team as part of their discovery motion (which could have shown evidence of Bird's knowledge and authorisation of the phone hacking) had been lost during a transfer to Mumbai.[12]

However, in 2011, News International admitted that the emails had not gone missing as Bird had claimed,[13] after an independent computer archiving firm announced it had provided evidence to the police over an attempt by Bird to destroy the email archive while they were working with it.[14] The Crown Office subsequently requested a formal investigation from the Strathclyde Police into the witness testimony given by Bird and others at the perjury trial,[15] amid claims from Sheridan's legal team that Bird's testimony was unsafe and that Sheridan would not have been jailed if information regarding the phone hacking and missing emails had been disclosed.[16][17]

Personal life

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Bird was married to BBC Scotland newsreader Jackie Bird. They have two children.

References

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  1. ^ NoW hacking row: Tommy Sheridan trial evidence reviewed – BBC News, 7 July 2011
  2. ^ Scot News of the World ed takes stand in Sheridan libel trial – Press Gazette, 4 August 2006
  3. ^ Sheridan victory in court battle – BBC News, 4 August 2006
  4. ^ Tabloid launches Sheridan appeal – BBC News, 11 August 2006
  5. ^ Semi-naked editor feared Tommy Sheridan was trying to film him, trial told – The Scotsman, 13 November 2010
  6. ^ The cloak and dagger bid to trap Sheridan – The Herald, 13 November 2010
  7. ^ Newspaper editor 'stripped to see Tommy Sheridan tape' – BBC News, 12 November 2010
  8. ^ News of the World denies using 'dark arts' against Sheridan – The Daily Telegraph 12 November 2010
  9. ^ Sheridan jailed for three years for perjury – BBC News, 26 January 2011
  10. ^ NoW hacking row: Scottish police to probe claims – BBC News, 8 July 2011
  11. ^ NoW editor denies 'illegal culture of phone-tapping' – BBC News, 15 November 2010
  12. ^ Phone hacking: information commissioner ends NoW inquiry – The Guardian, 17 June 2011
  13. ^ Phone hacking: News of the World locates 'lost' archive of emails: Millions of emails from 2005 and 2006 are likely to include those by Andy Coulson and three former editors implicated in affair – The Guardian, 28 March 2011
  14. ^ Another Guardian Scoop: Destruction of Evidence at News Corp – Columbia Journalism Review, 8 July 2011
  15. ^ News of the World: Crown Office asks police to investigate Sheridan witness evidence – The Scotsman, 8 July 2011
  16. ^ News of the World scandal: Cops to quiz PM's pal over Tommy Sheridan case – The Daily Record, 8 July 2011
  17. ^ Tommy Sheridan 'might not have been jailed' if e-mails were seen at perjury trial – The Scotsman, 5 July 2011
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