The BBC’s Broadcasting House in London, England, on July 10, 2023.

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LONDON — The BBC’s Huw Edwards has been named by his wife as the TV anchor accused of paying a teenager more than £35,000 (around $45,430) in exchange for sexually explicit photos.

According to a report in The Sun newspaper last week, citing the alleged victim’s mother, the payments are alleged to have started when their child was 17 — they are now 20.

After five crisis-ridden days for the British broadcaster, the wife of the previously unnamed TV anchor released a statement to the PA news agency.

“In light of the recent reporting regarding the ‘BBC Presenter’ I am making this statement on behalf of my husband Huw Edwards, after what have been five extremely difficult days for our family,” Vicky Flind said.

“I am doing this primarily out of concern for his mental well-being and to protect our children … Huw is suffering from serious mental health issues. As is well documented, he has been treated for severe depression in recent years.”

She added that her husband Edwards had “suffered another serious episode and is now receiving in-patient hospital care.”

“Once well enough to do so, he intends to respond to the stories that have been published,” Flind added.

The story developed earlier this week, when the BBC reported that a lawyer for the young person had contacted it to say that the allegations made by the latter’s mother were “rubbish” and that “nothing inappropriate or unlawful” had happened.

If the allegation were true, an offence may have been committed. That’s because while the age of consent in England and Wales is 16, the law relating to indecent images classes under-18s as children.

In a follow-up story to its original reporting, The Sun’s wording changed to: “It is understood contact between the two started when the youngster was 17 years old.”

On Wednesday afternoon, just before Edwards was named by his wife, London’s Metropolitan Police reportedly concluded there was “no information to indicate that a criminal offence has been committed.”

In a statement sent to CNBC on Thursday, a spokesperson for The Sun said it would “cooperate with the BBC’s internal investigation process” and that it had “no plans to publish further allegations.”

“We must also re-emphasise that The Sun at no point in our original story alleged criminality and also took the decision neither to name Mr Edwards nor the young person involved in the allegations,” they went on to say.

“Suggestions about possible criminality were first made at a later date by other media outlets, including the BBC.”

BBC newsreader Huw Edwards

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The spokesperson said the paper had, from the outset, “reported a story about two very concerned and frustrated parents who made a complaint to the BBC about the behaviour of a presenter and payments from him that fuelled the drug habit of a young person.”

“We reported that the parents had already been to the police who said that they couldn’t help. The parents then made a complaint to the BBC which was not acted upon. It is now for the BBC to properly investigate.”

Timeline of major developments

The BBC directed CNBC to a timeline of events on its website when contacted for comment.

In response to the complainant getting in touch with BBC Audience Services on May 19, the BBC says its Corporate Investigations Team made an assessment “that on the basis of the information provided it did not include an allegation of criminality, but nonetheless merited further investigation.”

The BBC said it tried to contact the complainant in May and June, but did not receive a response.

The Sun then approached the broadcaster on July 6. According to the BBC, the paper’s claims “contained new allegations” and it was on this day that the TV anchor was made aware of them.

The BBC made contact with the complainant and police on July 7, with confirmation of the anchor’s suspension coming on July 9.

Speculation and the law

The reports had led to intense speculation on social media about who the anchor was, with a number of high-profile BBC stars publicly distancing themselves from the allegations as a result.

Alongside the gravity of the allegations being made, there are also potentially serious consequences when it comes to laws on defamation and privacy.

“Individuals who post allegations about any person, including the BBC presenters whose names have been associated with these allegations, do face personal liability for those posts,” Matthew Gill, a senior associate and media disputes lawyer at London-based law firm Howard Kennedy, told CNBC.

“And if those posts were to cause BBC presenters reputational damage and the allegations were found to be untrue — either in relation to the presenter at the center of this, or others who have no connection to it — the person who tweets those tweets, or posts those posts on social media … could face legal action,” he added.

They may also, Gill explained, “be ordered to pay significant damages and costs.”

“Now, the reality is that an individual is unlikely to face legal proceedings if they tweet the name of a celebrity once online in relation to these allegations,” he said. This was because, “frankly, so many people have posted these types of allegations online over the past few days.”

“However, the celebrities who are not associated with … these allegations but have been linked to it online might consider bringing proceedings, for example, against the first people to have mentioned their name online,” Gill said.

They could also take action “against people who have decided to establish a campaign of trying to link the wrong presenters to these allegations.”



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