BBC staff ‘uncomfortable’ at seeing suspended presenter on screen despite misconduct complaint
BBC staff have expressed concern that the star presenter accused of paying a teen for explicit photographs had been allowed to continue broadcasting while under investigation.
A Beeb staffer told i that rumours of a complaint about the âpersonal or professional conductâ of a senior broadcaster began to surface within the Corporationâs Broadcasting House headquarters at the end of last month.
The BBC last night announced that it had suspended an unnamed male broadcaster over allegations that he had paid a teenager for sexually explicit photographs during an alleged liaison which began when the youngster was 17.
The BBC worker said no details of the complaint had been disclosed to staff but some colleagues were âuncomfortableâ when the individual continued to perform presenting duties. The staffer said there had been some âfrustrationâ at what appeared to be the slow pace of any investigation but it was felt the Corporationâs internal procedures had to be allowed to take their due course.
The Sun newspaper, which first reported the allegations against the now suspended presenter, said the mother of the alleged victim had been shocked to continue seeing the broadcaster on screen in the month after her initial complaint was made to the BBC on May 19. The mother said that her child had also allegedly received a further payment of ÂŁ1,000 via Paypal from the presenter as recently as last month and suggested the pattern of behaviour suggested the BBC had not at that stage spoken to the broadcaster concerned.
Under BBC guidelines, the Corporation can move to âimmediately suspendâ a staff member when allegations of serious misconduct are levelled but it must be done within procedures laid out for investigating complaints. The Sun reported that the BBCâs corporate investigations team, led by a former police detective, is leading its internal inquiry.
Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, meanwhile raised concern that the suspended presenter had remained in their job while an investigation was under way.
She told the Sky News Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme: âWhen serious allegations are made like this, I donât think itâs right that those people stay in those jobs whilst those very serious accusations go on.â
She added: âThe BBC, but also other broadcasters, do need to get a grip because we seem to lurch from one scandal to another and more needs to be done.â
The BBC declined to comment on the complaint that it had allowed the now-suspended broadcaster to continue presenting duties after receiving the allegations in May.