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Conrad Black

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The Real Rupert Murdoch

Posted: 10/21/11 04:10 PM ET

On Oct. 14, the Wall Street Journal, in reporting on the main sentence in the Galleon insider information case, ran a series of five photographs of what were described as "corporate criminals" with their sentences attached, from Bernard Madoff (150 years), down even unto me at six-and-a-half years. On July 18, 2010, the same newspaper ran an extensive lead editorial, headlined "Conrad Black's Revenge," in which it recorded that the four surviving counts against me (of an original 17) had been unanimously vacated by the Supreme Court, the principle prosecuting statute (the much abused concept of Honest Services), had been struck down and rewritten, and the Journal graciously apologized to me for having underestimated the merits of my defense. The high court excoriated the panel of the Seventh Circuit of the Circuit Court of Appeal from which I petitioned for, among other transgressions, the "infirmity of invented law." My cameo appearance in the Journal's rogues' gallery on Friday pretended that the original sentence had never been assailed or reduced.

In the perverse American manner, the Supreme Court remanded the vacated counts back to the appellate court to assess the gravity of its own errors. This unrigorous and self-interested process produced a spurious but not unexpected resurrection of one fraud count and a finding of obstruction of justice. The fraud count involved a payment to me of $285,000. That it was undisputed in the evidence had been approved by the executive committee and board of directors of the company, and the obstruction was simply nonsense, and was not pursued in the local jurisdiction (Canada) as a violation of a document retention order, and it had no monetary significance. It was accurately described by a former deputy solicitor general of the United States at the Seventh Circuit, as "in 45 years of practice the feeblest case of obstruction of justice I have seen."

It was this nonsense, maliciously retrieved to plaster a fig-leaf of plausibility on a misconceived and failed prosecution (that originally sought my imprisonment for life and fines and restitution of $140 million), on the destruction of which the Journal had so generously congratulated me 15 months before, that was invoked to put me in the company of Mr. Madoff and the others.

I have written elsewhere of my protracted legal travails and the remaining entrails of them will be dealt with satisfactorily in the appropriate courts, (largely, fortunately, out of the U.S.). What is noteworthy in this dishonest donkey kick from the Wall Street Journal is what it tells us about the controlling shareholder of that newspaper, the now, to return a frequently proffered favor he served on me, thoroughly disgraced and in his own admission, "humbled," Rupert Murdoch.

As I have often written before, he is probably the greatest media-owner in history, and his achievements in becoming the tabloid leader in London, in cracking the egregious Luddite print unions there, in breaking the triopoly of American television networks, promoting vertical integration with television outlets and film production, and his pioneering breakthroughs in satellite television worldwide, are Napoleonic in boldness of concept and skill of execution. And no one has been more vocal or consistent than I in saluting them.

I competed with Murdoch, successful and quite cordially, in Britain for 15 years when we had the Telegraph newspapers, and for a time in Australia. Our relations and those of our wives were always quite convivial. I never joined the chorus of those who objected to his newspaper cover-price cutting in London; as a capitalist I thought he had every right to cut prices if he wished. And I publicly supported him when he almost went bankrupt 20 years ago, denouncing his critics as motivated by envy.

I was naturally disappointed when, as my own legal problems arose eight years ago, his vast media organization swung into vitriolic defamatory mode, endlessly accusing me of crimes years before any were alleged. When revelations of his own sleazy behavior came to light in the hacking scandals in England, it also came out, confirming what I had heard from my own sources, and which I would have known from my knowledge of how his company is run, that Murdoch appears to have personally intervened to make reporting on my problems nastier (despite having assured me in writing that he would try to prevent excesses). My Madoffization last week almost certainly has the same exalted source.

In earlier times, whenever there had been anything even slightly unfavorable about him in any of our publications, he had called me to object, or had his British managing director call my co-chief executive at the Telegraph. Even as he was stoking up the media lynch mob against me, he told his latest biographer, Michael Wolff, as he told others, of his high regard for me as a publisher, as if his febrile libels and fabrications were the coincidental, spontaneous antics of autonomous underlings.

Now Muroch's company has been stripped naked as the lawless hypocritical organization it has long been; its employees think nothing of trolling for the private conversations of the British royal family, bribing the police, meddling in criminal investigations, tampering with the cell phone of a kidnap victim, and engaging in wholesale industrial espionage.

For decades, Murdoch has smeared, lied, double-crossed his political benefactors, including Jimmy Carter, Margaret Thatcher, John Major, a long sequence of Australian leaders, and the democratic forces of Hong Kong.

When the extent of his skullduggery finally oozed out, sluggish and filthy, including the details of the British government's dotage on him, this summer, Murdoch's old possum routine didn't play as convincingly as it had in its many previous auditions, when he purported to be contrite over the shortcomings of errant employees. Bumbling into a parliamentary hearing in London, supported on each arm like a centenarian semi-cadaver, mumbling about humility, trying to represent News Corporation's board as independent when it is public corporate America's most docile board of directors and is composed entirely of hacks, retainers, and ex-employees; scrambling and whimpering and paying millions to victims of his outrages; putting his name on a Journal op-ed piece about education; it's all of a piece and none of it resonates anymore. In bygone days, he somehow carried off sprawling in a black costume on a bed in a glossy magazine and ruminating about being an "ambassador to Joe Six Pack," a champion of the little guy, and a spiritual person contemplating the consolations of Catholicism. At its most imaginative, it was a passably imaginative imposture.

My admiration for his boldness and acumen and our previous 25 years of more than civil relations make it unpleasant, despite his unspeakable assault on me, to have to conclude that he is, in my personal belief, a psychopath. I think behind his nondescript personality lurks a repressed, destructive malice. His is, and has been proved to be, in some measure, a criminal organization. This, apart from weaknesses of leadership, was always the greatest vulnerability of post-Reagan America's conservatism: its reliance on a man who would put anyone over the side and hoist any colours when the wind changed. Now that the great defamer is a tottering, cowardly supplicant and a prime candidate for criminal prosecution on at least two continents, no one should count on his continued support for more than 24 hours at a time.

For my part, I am already suing his company in Canada for the most artlessly libelous book since The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, by the defamer Tom Bower. In the extreme winter of his days, Rupert Murdoch's failing hands have dropped the mask; he is a malignant force and it would be a good thing for the world to be done with him.

 
 
 
On Oct. 14, the Wall Street Journal, in reporting on the main sentence in the Galleon insider information case, ran a series of five photographs of what were described as "corporate criminals" with th...
On Oct. 14, the Wall Street Journal, in reporting on the main sentence in the Galleon insider information case, ran a series of five photographs of what were described as "corporate criminals" with th...
 
 
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09:27 PM on 10/25/2011
Don't hold back, Conrad.

Tell us what you really think of Rupert.
12:43 AM on 10/25/2011
Lord whatever. Please stick with teaching the other inmates French. You controlled your editors and debased journalism. Murdock is just another version of you. The difference between you is he is on the outside looking in and you are on the inside looking out. And please - no more big, large, pedantic, pom,pous words. Just take your punishment and keep quiet. When you stole that exam you showed your private school what you were and you haven't changed. Its sad. You had it all and now you are a jailbird.
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Add In Canadia
Egotism is a weakness
09:32 PM on 10/24/2011
Say what you want about Conrad Black, he did his best to play within the rules of the game. His trial and current stay in the US "justice" system was and is nothing more than a witch hunt. After it was all said an done the US justice system had to stick some feeble charge on Conrad Black to save face from spending so much money trying to convict a rich man of something, anything. What was his great crime?

Compare this to Murdoch's empire which has bought out politicians and policemen; responsible for remarkable breeches of ethics and morality. Compare this to the Koch brothers and their destruction of the environment, unsafe working procedures, and being directly responsible for loss of life. Compare this to the executives of Wall Street who have gambled away the pensions of the American people.

In the financial world, Conrad black has been found guilty of jaywalking; everyone else? They're getting away with murder. Anyway you slice it, Black stands on the higher ground when compared to all the people with 'clean' criminal records. That there's so much vile towards Conrad Black only serves to outline one thing: The red herring worked. People wanted a rich man scapegoat, and they found one in Black, effectively distracting from the atrocities being committed in front of everyone's faces.
03:58 PM on 10/24/2011
Know a man by his works. Witness Fox Spews.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
peter sfikas
Yia sou
01:34 PM on 10/24/2011
Conrad, it,s time to slay the ego, and liberate yourself. Start forgiving yourself, and your enemies and, discover the good life. Repent my friend, ask for forgiveness, and change your ways. Then, truly, the good life awaits you. Use your formidable abilities to change the world, for the better. Lock your radar at the light, at the end of the tunnel, and go for it. I'll be cheering you on !
02:32 AM on 10/24/2011
I am hoping Rupert Murdock goes down in flames. He has set the tone for FOX News, the personality of a company/business is determined by the "owner" and Murdock's behavior regarding the phone tapping fiasco in the UK, is testament to the dishonest, twisted reporting at FOX News. FOX News is responsible for creating a massive fissure in the American psyche.
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Nellbaby
10:23 PM on 10/23/2011
Thank God for social media. The internet is our salvation from Rupert and the likes of him.
We can search and find out the truth for ourselves.
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08:35 PM on 10/23/2011
A criminal convicted of fraud and still serving his sentence, should not be given a front page spot on Huffington Post.
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07:43 PM on 10/23/2011
Ok, but what do you really feel about him?
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helgathewitch
aREALhockeymom
07:24 PM on 10/23/2011
If Murdoch were still on your side you would still be silent to his ruthlessness. You now have a big job to do. In my eyes you need to right your wrongs-the wrongs being the fact that you stuck up for him for over 20 years and allowed him to ruin countless people.
Time for you to go full force and make sure this guy doesn't continue his ruination.
03:23 PM on 10/27/2011
Yep. Black is a latecomer here. A responsible person doesn't cheerlead until his own number comes up.
06:32 PM on 10/23/2011
Murdoch and Black are chalk and cheese. The Digger is a streetfighter. He's interested in news, but loves the deal more. And he's obsessed with manipulating events. He uses his media to control. Black to influence because he fancies himself an intellectual. Murdoch prizes loyalty but is oddly devoid of a moral compass. His journalists have done some odious things in the spurious pursuit of the public-interest on his watch. Black is a thinker, a bully, loves the sound of his own voice and his hero is Napoleon. Bonaparte not Solo. Both men treat their corporations like personal baubles. Of the two Murdoch is the more dangerous but also by far the more sucessful. He revolutionised newspaper production by breaking the print unions. His investment in satellite TV has been visionary. It's transformed our homes. His terrier-like opposition of The Establishment admirable but, ultimately, a smokescreen for his darker ambitions. He's been rumbled. He should now go before he is hounded out. Black on the other hand should try and see the difference between fair comment and sour grapes.
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Leper
Giving the finger to intolerance
02:40 PM on 10/23/2011
Ouch!
01:48 PM on 10/23/2011
What, no mention of Murdoch's relationship with Ted Shackley or the Nugan Hand Bank?
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07:44 PM on 10/23/2011
What is a hand bank?
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unionave
Old Codger
11:21 AM on 10/23/2011
"He that controls the media controls the mindset of the people" . Even the Greek Empire politicians knew that the media was a very effective way to control the mindset of many .

President Wilson , knowing that Europe had gone from one conflict to the next , did not want to get involved in the WWI conflict of the early 20th century but the media controllers did , so they denigrated Wilson and promoted heroism among the public . Wilson eventually signed a declaration of War and America suffered over 300K casualties .

For those that remember Iraq #1 ; CNN was determined to get an invasion going . I thought Wolf was going to croak GHWB for dragging his feet before the invasion . There were some American casualties , mostly from friendly fire or self inflicted , in something that could have bee settled through conversation .

The media knows that they can get millions to dive in to very dangerous situations that cause hundreds of thousands of casualties and they also know they can get millions to vote for someone that is going to wreck their lives and their children's lives for generations .

Billions are paid to the media by entities that seek to promote what they have to offer . Even causes that are detrimental to the public welfare .
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nofriendofrepublicans
Mother friendly.
05:01 PM on 10/23/2011
And you can't get elected President without hundreds of millions of dollars to buy air time. What a racket.
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
12:34 AM on 10/23/2011
The British warned the if Murdouch were to gain control of a Major Media Outlet he would destory to USA .
When Murdoush bought the Fox Studio he did it Illegally because he was not a U.S. Citizen.
Newt Getrich hand carried Murdouch's Citizenship Application thru the system in 1 day. Newt broke the law because he was working for the People who elected him and quit that day missing Votes on Military Spending and Forgien Aid !
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09:38 PM on 10/23/2011
The British were right after all.