Reuters/London

A former tabloid reporter told a London court yesterday that Rupert Murdoch’s British newspaper arm, News International (NI), had been involved in a conspiracy to cover up phone-hacking and that he had lied about his own role to toe “the company line”.

Dan Evans said he had hacked into the voicemails of dozens of celebrities during his time at Murdoch’s News of the World, and had lied about it both to police and in a civil legal case as part of a widespread company cover-up.

However, the lawyer for Andy Coulson, the paper’s former editor and Prime Minister David Cameron’s ex-media chief, suggested Evans was only making the allegations about a conspiracy as part of a deal with police to avoid prosecution. Coulson is on trial accused of conspiring to intercept voicemails and authorising illegal payments to public officials. He has denied any knowledge of hacking and says he could not be expected to know the source of every story in his paper.

“As far as I was concerned, it (phone-hacking) was so widely known at the paper and covered up so extensively, there was a widespread conspiracy within the organisation,” Evans told London’s Old Bailey Court.

Evans was arrested in August 2011, a month after Murdoch closed the News of the World amid public anger at revelations of phone-hacking which prompted Cameron to order a broad public inquiry into press ethics.

He has admitted illegally listening in to the voicemails of celebrities, including James Bond actor Daniel Craig, in an effort to find material for stories. He told the court on Tuesday he had stopped hacking after the arrest of the paper’s royal editor Clive Goodman in 2006 but had resumed three years later when he tried to access the voicemail of interior designer Kelly Hoppen.