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The BBC today revealed that it did not confront the star at the centre of the sex pictures scandal until almost two months after they first received a complaint about him from the teenager’s family.
Speaking publicly for the first time, Director General Tim Davie also admitted he has still not spoken to the household name at all despite the scandal gripping the corporation.
It comes as he this afternoon admitted the scandal had been ‘clearly damaging’ to the corporation’s reputation. ‘The BBC is often a mix of quite painful and difficult affairs and storms,’ he said before adding: ‘These are clearly damaging to the BBC it, is not a good situation.’
In a major update on the case, Mr Davie also said he had ‘paused’ their internal investigation while the police consider if any crimes have been committed after a meeting with Scotland Yard yesterday.
The Corporation has also released a timeline of events that reveals that a member of the young person’s family turned up at a BBC building, believed to be Broadcasting House, on May 18 ‘to make a complaint about the behaviour of a BBC presenter’.
It appears complaint-handling staff may have only made two attempts to contact the relative by phone or email afterwards – and made no attempts at all after June 6 despite the severity of the allegations.
Despite the seniority of the presenter, it was only when The Sun went to the BBC’s press office last Thursday with allegations the household name had allegedly paid £35,000 to the youth for lewd pictures, that bosses actually interviewed the presenter at the heart of the scandal. Mr Davie was told that day but was not at that meeting and has still not spoken to the big name broadcaster.
The BBC, led by director-general Tim Davie (left), met the Met Police yesterday, led by Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley (right), yesterday. Today Mr Davie spoke for the first time and admitted he has not spoken to the star. The BBC has been asked to pause its investigation into allegations a BBC presenter paid a teenager for explicit images ‘while the police scope future work’
The teen at the centre of the BBC sex pics scandal has denied anything inappropriate or unlawful took place between themselves and an unnamed presenter. Pictured: A file image of BBC Broadcasting House in London
The Director General appeared to admit this morning that mistakes had been made in the way the complaint was initially handled, including an apparent failure to get hold of the parents in the case. He himself was not told for seven weeks. He said: ‘There will be lessons to be learned and how processes could be improved. Immediately. I have asked that we assess how some complaints or red flags up the organisation’.
And in a fresh interview this afternoon, with Sarah Montague on BBC Radio 4, Mr Davie appeared to double-down on reforming the scandal-plagued broadcaster’s complaints process, saying the Beeb was looking at how concerns are ‘red-flagged’. ‘I want that looked at immediately,’ he said after admitting ‘you always have lessons that you learn from these situations’.
The parents of the drug addict teenager have repeatedly accused the BBC of lying about what they knew and failing to confront the unnamed star, who remains suspended and off air.
Speaking at the launch of the BBC’s annual report he said: ‘As you know. Yesterday, the BBC corporate investigations team had a meeting with the police in relation to the information provided to the BBC by The Sun newspaper on Thursday.
As a result of this. The BBC has been asked to pause its own investigations into the allegations while they scope future work. We will pass any material that we have to them.
‘We know that questions have been asked about how this case was initially managed, and the timeline of events. So today we have published an update that sets out key dates and further detail.
‘The BBC has processes and protocols for receiving information and managing allegations when they are first made. We always take these matters seriously and seek to manage them with care.
‘The events of recent days have shown how complex and challenging these kinds of cases can be and how vital it is for they’re handled with the utmost diligence. That’s why it’s important that we ensure these processes are robust and working appropriately.
‘Of course, there will be lessons to be learned and how processes could be improved. Immediately. I have asked that we assess how some complaints or red flags up the organisation.
‘Furthermore, we will take time to properly review the current specific protocols and procedures to ensure they remain sufficient based on anything we learned from this case. This work will be led by our Chief Operating Officer Leigh Tavaziva that who will report to the BBC board’.
When asked about the difference between the complaint on May 19 and the complaint made in The Sun story, Tim Davie said: ‘The process is that we did receive a call as you can see in the timeline on May 19 that was taken by Audience Services Team who then make a summary of the call and put it to our highly experienced Corporate Investigations team.
‘On the basis of the information they had at that point, it did not include an allegation of criminality, but none the less was very serious and they wanted to follow it up, and you can see the attempts to follow it up on the timeline.
‘It was serious but the key was their assessment was it did not include an allegation of criminality.
‘When The Sun made new allegations on July 6 they were different to the matters considered by BBC Corporate Investigations and those new allegations clearly related to potential criminal activity, criminality, that in a nutshell is the difference.’
The family insist they have spoken out to save their vulnerable loved-one, who they claim first met the broadcaster aged 17 and used the cash to buy crack cocaine.
The young person at the centre of the controversy said last night, through a lawyer, that nothing inappropriate or unlawful happened with the unnamed presenter.
But according to The Sun, the parents insist they have bank statements and screenshots to back them up.
Meanwhile MPs threatened to name the star involved in the House of Commons. A poll found that one in six people know who the scandal hit household name is.
The teenager’s mum said: ‘It is sad but we stand by our account and we hope they get the help they need. We did this to help – and the presenter has got into their head. How did they afford a lawyer? We are so sad.’ The stepfather added: ‘Without the money, my partner’s child would have no drugs,’ adding that he had spoken to the BBC for an hour in May.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has described allegations that a BBC presenter paid for sexual images from a teenager as ‘shocking’ and ‘concerning’.
He told reporters on the plane to the Nato summit in Lithuania: ‘They were shocking, concerning allegations, of course they were.
‘The Culture Secretary spoke to the director general, I think it was on Sunday.
‘And he has reassured that the process they are undertaking is vigorous and will be swift, so we’ve had those reassurances.
‘And I think that is the right thing to do because, given the concerning nature of the allegations, it is right that they are investigated swiftly and rigorously.
‘And it is important we now let that carry on.’
Asked if he had been told who the BBC presenter in question was, Mr Sunak replied: ‘No.
‘But I’ve been reassured that the process will be conducted vigorously and swiftly.’
Politicians have suggested they could intervene and name the broadcaster who has been engulfed in the scandal, but as of yet has still not been publicly identified by the corporation.
It comes after a slew of celebrities were forced to make statements denying it was them as speculation and rumours spread like wildfire on social media following initial reports that the presenter had paid the teenager £35,000 for the photos.
The young person has claimed through a lawyer that the allegations are ‘rubbish’ and nothing inappropriate or unlawful has taken place.
However, their mother and step-father say they have a damning dossier of evidence including bank transactions, screenshots of messages between the pair and even held a one-hour briefing with the Beeb.
The parents claim the money their child received from the BBC star funded a spiralling crack cocaine addiction and say they spoke to the representatives from the corporation hours after the presenter tried to meet the teen at a train station.
The BBC has suspended the star and taken them off air while an investigation takes place, but has refused to name them so far.
BBC director-general Tim Davie (pictured) is under increasing pressure to reveal the name of the presenter suspended over the allegations
MPs have been talking about using parliamentary privilege to put an end to the speculation by identifying the BBC star in the Commons, the Mail can reveal.
A former Cabinet minister said: ‘There is a discussion going on about whether to name this individual.
‘Parliamentary privilege has been used before to identify people who have tried to use injunctions to keep their names out of the Press.
‘The circumstances here are slightly different, but the issues are the same – do we have free speech in this country, or do we just accept a creeping privacy law made by judges, which parliament has never approved?’
Privacy laws have kept broadcasters and newspapers from naming the presenter involved, although a snap poll found that one in six Britons quizzed by reporters can already identify the correct household name.
The Daily Telegraph reported that the BBC star has hired specialist privacy and media lawyers at Harbottle & Lewis – the same firm used by the Royal Family – in a bid to keep his reputation and his job.
Last night the scandal took a dramatic twist as the young person at the heart of the row and their parents disputed each other’s accounts.
After days of silence the teenager rebutted the accusations, insisting through their lawyer that nothing inappropriate or unlawful had taken place, calling them ‘rubbish’.
In a letter reported by BBC News At Six, the young person said via a lawyer: ‘For the avoidance of doubt, nothing inappropriate or unlawful has taken place between our client and the BBC personality and the allegations reported in The Sun newspaper are ‘rubbish’.’
The waters were muddied further when their parents spoke out only hours later to confirm they stood by their claims, adding they felt the presenter involved had ‘got into their [child’s] head’.
Speaking to The Sun, the mother said: ‘It is sad but we stand by our account and we hope they get the help they need.
‘We did this to help – and the presenter has got into their head. How did they afford a lawyer?
‘We are so sad.’
The step-father added: ‘We are disappointed they made a statement. It’s not true.’
The step-father also claimed they family had complained to the BBC hours after the corporation’s star presenter had attempted to meet with the teen at a railway station.
The corporation earlier said it had been investigating a complaint since May, and that new claims of a ‘different nature’ were brought to it on Thursday.
But the step-father disputed this, telling the Sun that the corporation was ‘not telling the truth’.
‘I told them the youngster was 20 and it had been going on for three years.’
He added: ‘I told the BBC I had gone to the police in desperation but they couldn’t do anything as they said it wasn’t illegal. They knew all of this.’
He also said the money did not stop, adding: ‘I don’t even think they spoke to him.’
The BBC say they did call the family in June, but nobody picked up.
He added that he only wanted the BBC to stop so the teen would stop getting drugs.
He said: ‘Without the money, my partner’s child would have no drugs.’
As well as being in touch with the police, the BBC is carrying out its own enquiries and talking to the young person’s family.
A spokesman for the Sun said: ‘We have reported a story about two very concerned parents who made a complaint to the BBC about the behaviour of a presenter and the welfare of their child.
‘Their complaint was not acted upon by the BBC.
‘We have seen evidence that supports their concerns. It’s now for the BBC to properly investigate.’
The unnamed broadcaster was finally suspended by the BBC almost two months after a complaint was first made by the alleged victim’s family.
The mystery star is accused of paying tens of thousands of pounds to the alleged victim. The payments are said to have begun when the teenager was 17, which they then used to fund an addiction to crack cocaine.
On Monday Scotland Yard detectives held an online meeting with the corporation’s bosses instead of going to Broadcasting House in person.
The Metropolitan Police said it is undertaking further enquiries – but added there is currently no investigation while they ‘establish whether there is evidence of a criminal offence being committed’.
A spokesman said: ‘Detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command met with representatives from the BBC. The meeting took place virtually.
‘They are assessing the information discussed at the meeting and further enquiries are taking place to establish whether there is evidence of a criminal offence being committed. There is no investigation at this time’.
The corporation’s production staff – both on TV and radio – are leaving space in their schedules in case he names himself, it has been claimed.
One senior BBC News journalist told MailOnline: ‘We are all really really worried about this mess. Obviously everyone knows who the presenter is’, but added: ‘The presenter in question is very in with the management. We are all so sick and tired that these people are protecting their friend at the expense of the integrity of the BBC.’
It came as the broadcaster at the heart of the scandal allegedly phoned the youngster after he was exposed last week. He reportedly demanded ‘what have you done?’ in the call and also asked his alleged victim to ring their mother to persuade her to ‘stop the investigation’.
‘The BBC say it can only come from him and has put him under massive pressure to speak. He is lawyered up to the max. A lot of BBC execs are blaming him for the chaos at the weekend because he was keeping his head down and refusing to be identified,’ another source said.
Another BBC star told MailOnline today how there are discussions of an ‘uprising’ among staff, both in front and behind the camera. The insider said many are fed up of being at the centre of a ‘farce’ where one of their colleagues is absent but none of the bosses can say who it is.
A BBC News worker also said that all the bosses were in managing the scandal over the weekend – but journalists were ‘left in the dark’ about what was happening and left to ‘report on ourselves’.
‘As ever, the bosses are keeping us all in the dark about their plans but we’re all very worried about where this ends up, and what we’ve been exposed to’, the source said.
‘We’ve had young runners, apprentices and vulnerable guests and contributors around this man – and now we don’t know who has been exposed to what, and who else is being protected.
‘The presenter in question is very in with the management. They were all in this weekend, but very audibly moaning about missing out on time with their kids, watching the cricket, which made us all feel pretty awful as we’re the ones who have no idea what’s happening.
‘They all sat in a conference room getting lunch, dinner and ice creams delivered all day while the rest of us had to report on ourselves.’
There has been some disbelief that the ‘well-known’ star has remained on air given the claims were first put to the BBC in May. Since the story broke on Thursday night, one insider at the Beeb told The Sun: ‘The BBC has started to receive calls from the public about the behaviour of the person at the centre of the investigation.’
Household names including Gary Lineker, Jeremy Vine and Rylan Clark have felt compelled to publicly rule themselves out after social media users wrongly speculated they were the star in question. Others have been forced to tweet statements insisting they are on holiday – not suspended – as critics called on the BBC to name the man at the centre of the scandal.
One BBC presenter told The Times : ‘On the face of it, this looks horrendous — both for the individual and the institution.’ Another said: ‘Whatever the truth of it is, none of us trust managers to investigate properly. Colleagues are saying managers have been too slow in dealing with this despite it perhaps being a criminal matter.
He is now off air having been accused of handing over tens of thousands of pounds across three years, which helped to fund the ‘spiralling’ crack-cocaine addiction of the youngster, now aged 20.
The individual’s mother has claimed she decided to approach the BBC after discovering the alleged payments and ‘begged’ bosses to make the star ‘stop sending cash’. She also told of how she saw a photo of the man stripped down to his boxer shorts for a video call ‘leaning forward, getting ready for my child to perform for him’.
The allegations, if proved, could constitute several criminal offences. The payments are said to have begun when the teenager was 17. This is over the age of sexual consent.
But making, distributing, possessing or showing an indecent image of anyone under the age of 18 is a criminal offence under the Protection of Children Act 1978, even if the image was created with the consent of the young person, or the young person was asked to send a sexual image of themselves.
It carries a maximum sentence of ten years. Nazir Afzal, the former chief prosecutor who led the case against the Rochdale grooming gangs, said the allegations could also be considered an offence under the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
Causing or inciting sexual exploitation of a child carries a maximum sentence of 14 years’ imprisonment.
Mr Afzal told The Sunday Times he was ‘surprised that this person was not suspended once they became aware of the gravity of the allegation’. ‘They should have advised the police that this is a matter that they should be investigating, and that should have been done weeks ago.’
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