Rebekah Brooks: British editor who became front page news
Rebekah Brooks, who was cleared of all charges on Tuesday after the landmark phone-hacking trial on Tuesday, combined magnetic personal charm with ruthless ambition to become one of the most powerful women in Britain. Key dates in Britain's phone-hacking scandal
After Murdoch announced the closure of the News of the World in 2011, he was asked by journalists what his first priority was.
Gesturing at Brooks, by then chief executive of his British newspaper group News International, he said: "This one."
Brooks, 45, and her husband socialised with Murdoch's daughter Elisabeth as part of a rural elite known as the Chipping Norton set, which also included Cameron.
Before her marriage to Brooks, she also had an affair with her colleague and co-defendant Andy Coulson, who went on to become Cameron's communications chief.
Her first husband was former "Eastenders" soap actor Ross Kemp, whom she married in 2002. Brooks admitted it was a stormy relationship, and they divorced in 2009, by which time she had already met her new husband-to-be.
Cameron was not the only prime minister whom she befriended - former premier Tony Blair also advised her days before she was arrested to "tough up" and take sleeping pills, it emerged at her trial.
But Brooks's excellent connections could not prevent her arrest, days after the News of the World was shut down amid a scandal over claims its private investigators hacked the phones of victims of London's 7/7 terror attacks and Milly Dowler, a murdered 13-year-old girl.
During her trial, she denied charges of conspiring to hack phones; conspiring to commit misconduct in public office and perverting the course of justice.
Now she faces an uncertain future after months in the dock.
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