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January 22, 2014updated 23 Jan 2014 5:45pm

Hacking trial: Police searched baby’s Moses basket during dawn raid on Rebekah’s home

By Press Association

A police team who searched Rebekah Brooks’ country home during a dawn raid rummaged through her infant baby’s Moses basket, a court heard today.

Police arrived at the Oxfordshire barn conversion at 4.30am on 13 March, 2012 and searched the baby’s basket.

Defending Brooks, Jonathan Laidlaw, QC, questioned the timing because of the presence of her baby, who had been born prematurely, and her husband's 81-year-old mother.

Detective Inspector Steve McCabe, a senior investigating officer, said he was "acutely aware" being a father himself, but it had been necessary to carry out the search "without fear or favour".

Laidlaw asked: "You would have expected the baby's Moses basket to be searched?"

The witness replied: "Yes. I would like to qualify that. We are conducting searches, we have no fear or favour on whose premises we search. It is a very delicate matter to search the Moses basket but I'm sure the officers would have had good reason to do so."

McCabe added: "The purpose of these searches were the events that had unfolded on the 17 and 18 of July which was an attempt to conceal and hide material from the police."

In July 2011, police had searched the former News International chief executive's office following her resignation, and upon her arrest two days later, her homes in London and Oxfordshire.

But by March 2012, officers suspected some evidence was missing and they were investigating Brooks, her husband Charlie Brooks, Rebekah Brooks' personal assistant Cheryl Carter and NI head of security Mark Hanna for perverting the course of justice.

The day before the Brooks were arrested in March 2012, police carried out a series of co-ordinated searches on the homes of their suspects.

McCabe defended the need for a search warrant in spite of an offer to review three of Rebekah Brooks’ notebooks and a 1999 diary which had been retrieved and were being held by her solicitor.

He said: "We were only given access to what the defendant allowed us to. That was the situation in July (2011) when we believed there was co-operation but actually that was not the case."

"The purpose of our earlier searches were frustrated because material had been hidden or destroyed."

Rebekah Brooks, 44, and Charlie Brooks, 50, both of Churchill, Oxfordshire; Cheryl Carter, 49, of Mildmay Road, Chelmsford, Essex; and Mark Hanna, 50, of Glynswood Road, Buckingham, Buckinghamshire, deny conspiring to pervert the course of justice.

All seven defendants deny the charges against them.

 

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