Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron said Friday that James Murdoch has "questions to answer in Parliament," a day after former top executives of News of the World accused the News Corp. executive of giving "mistaken" evidence.
The claim by the editor of the News of the World at the time it folded on July 10, Colin Myler, and the paper's former head of legal affairs, Tom Crone, related to what Murdoch told a parliamentary committee about a settlement to Gordon Taylor, chief executive of the Professional Footballers Association.
Crone and Myler said they had told Murdoch of an e-mail regarded as central to the question of whether more than one reporter at the paper was involved in illegal activity.
But Murdoch, the son of media mogul Rupert Murdoch, offered contradictory information to the committee, as he, his father and former News Corp. executive Rebekah Brooks were quizzed over a phone-hacking scandal that has shaken public confidence in Britain's media, police and political establishment.
Asked about James Murdoch's suitability to "clean up" News International, Cameron said: "Clearly James Murdoch has got questions to answer in Parliament and I am sure that he will do that, and clearly News International has some big issues to deal with and a mess to clear up."
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