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UK newspaper watchdog: New info may prompt investigation into WSJ’s European circulation

A worker poses for photographs by holding a copy of Wednesday's Wall Street Journal newspaper above a stand with stacks of other newspapers inside a newsagents at Victoria train station in London, late Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. The Guardian newspaper reported Wednesday that it had seen emails and documents showing that The Wall Street Journal funneled money through third parties to a company that was buying up copies of the Journal and boosting its European circulation. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham).
A worker poses for photographs by holding a copy of Wednesday's Wall Street Journal newspaper above a stand with stacks of other newspapers inside a newsagents at Victoria train station in London, late Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. The Guardian newspaper reported Wednesday that it had seen emails and documents showing that The Wall Street Journal funneled money through third parties to a company that was buying up copies of the Journal and boosting its European circulation. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham).

LONDON – Britain’s newspaper watchdog says that new information may prompt an investigation into The Wall Street Journal’s European circulation figures.

The Audit Bureau of Circulation’s statement follows a report in the Guardian that the Journal was funneling money through third parties to one of its subscribers, effectively buying its own papers to inflate its circulation figures.

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Wall Street Journal publisher Dow Jones pointed out that the plan had been approved by the audit bureau, but in a statement released Thursday the circulation watchdog said that “there now appears to be additional new information which may give grounds for further investigation.”

The Wall Street Journal Europe’s publisher, Andrew Langhoff, has already resigned over the paper’s links to the company involved.

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