Zoom-in Winter 2016 ZOOM•IN MAGAZINE | WINTER ISSUE | Page 6

WINNERS & LOSERS Gawker and its founder Nick Denton into bankruptcy. The privacy claim has now been settled, with Hogan accepting $31m. A jury had awarded him $140m, an award which Gawker had said it would appeal, but this settlement brings an end to the matter without the need for further legal hearings. Mr Denton called this end to the case ‘a hard peace’. CRIME: Retired police officer convicted of historical sex offences SEX TAPE CLAIM SETTLED: HULK HOGAN might subsequently inform HMRC about other such schemes. There are specific rules on confidentiality and disclosure of information that apply to HMRC, set out in the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005. However, the court emphasised that the normal rules of breach of confidence also apply and the provisions in the Act are based on that law. Material relating to their tax affairs was clearly confidential to Ingenious Media and Mr McKenna. To interpret the provisions of the 2005 Act so widely as to allow the disclosure of information relating to an individual’s tax affairs would significantly undermine HMRC’s duty of confidentiality. The fact that the briefing was ‘off the record’ made no difference: the disclosure was no less 6 | zoom-in Winter 2016 impermissible because the HMRC official thought his comments would not be reported. PRIVACY (US): Hulk Hogan sex tape case finally ends  Gordon Anglesea, who 22 years ago won £375,000 in libel damages over allegations that he was paedophile, has been convicted of historic sex offences against two teenage boys. Anglesea had denied the allegations for 25 years but was convicted by a jury of four counts of indecent assault. Allegations about Anglesea and his connection to Bryn Estyn children’s home in Wrexham emerged in 1991, and over the next couple of years were reported in the press. In 1994 he sued The Independent on Sunday, The Observer, Private Eye and HTV Wales for libel, winning £375,000. Private Eye paid £80,000 of that total. Its editor Ian Hislop welcomed Anglesea’s conviction with ‘grim satisfaction’. Talking about the libel case, he said: “I can’t help thinking of the witnesses who came forward to assist our case at the time, one of whom later committed suicide, telling his wife that he never got over ‘not being believed’.” Hislop said Private Eye would not be seeking to reclaim the £80,000 damages: ‘Others have paid a far higher price.’ The prosecution of Anglesea followed the launch of Operation Pallial, which looked into allegations of historical abuse in North Wales in the wake of the revelations about Jimmy Savile. Ian Hislop welcomed Anglesea’s conviction with ‘grim satisfaction’  We have reported in previous issues on the legal actions brought by former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan against the website Gawker. The action related to a sex tape of Hulk Hogan with his friend’s wife, published on the Gawker website. The lawsuit ultimately forced