CCTV shows News of the World staff hiding evidence from police

CCTV footage broadcast in the  Old Bailey yesterday showed News of the World staff allegedly hiding potentially damaging evidence before police arrived at Mr and Mrs Brooks’ flat in London.

The Scotsman reports:

Mr Brooks was captured on CCTV taking a padded envelope and a laptop into an underground car park. He disappears behind a column and comes back into view empty-handed less than a minute later.

Hanna later arrived at the car park in a black Range Rover. He picked up the laptop and bag and left in a blue car driven by another security worker.

Police searched the flat later the same afternoon and seven police officers accompanied by Mrs Brooks’ solicitor are seen on CCTV leaving with large boxes at 5:04pm. Meanwhile, police also searched the couple’s Oxford address, the court heard.

Later that evening, Hanna texted security guard Daryl Jorsling: “Del, have a plan. Can you call please, Mark.”

An hour later, Mr Jorsling arrived at the car park, removed a black bag from the boot and moved towards the bin area, returning empty handed.

A man is then seen collecting pizza boxes and Mr Jorsling leaves in a black Golf.

Mr Jorsling then contacted his colleague Daniel Johnson. Referring to the 1968 film Where Eagles Dare, he texts: “Calling Danny Boy — pizza delivered and the chicken is in the pot.”

Johnson replied: “Ha, f****** amateurs. We should have done a DLB [dead letter box] or brush contact on the riverside. Log the hours as pizza delivery.’’

Mrs Brooks left the police station and is seen in the footage arriving in the car park at 12:30am on 18 July, met by her husband.

Later that morning a cleaner collecting large bins in the car park found “various pieces of property”, the jury heard.

That afternoon, Mr Brooks, his driver Paul Edwards and Mr Jorsling were shown going back to the car park and appearing to search the bin area before heading off to the building’s office empty-handed.

That evening, police were handed a brown briefcase and black laptop bag which had been found behind the bins, the court was told.

Mr Brooks, 50, and Mrs Brooks, 45, of Churchill, Oxfordshire, and Hanna, 50, of Buckingham, deny conspiracy to pervert the course of justice between 5 and 19 July, 2011.

The court heard the incident of the missing bag at Chelsea Harbour was dubbed “Pizzagate” by security staff.

Witness William Geddes was managing director of the security firm that led the 24-hour “Blackhawk” operation around Mrs Brooks.

On 18 July, the day after her arrest, it came to Mr Geddes’s attention that property, then described as belonging to Charles Brooks which was delivered by a security guard to the Chelsea Harbour flat, had gone missing.