According to theage.com.au, the station could lose its right to
broadcast if it is found by the Australian Communications and Media Authority
(ACMA) to have breached a licence condition. It may also be subject to tighter
restrictions and a hefty fine.
Parent company Southern Cross Austereo could be compelled to
name the employees who approved the prank – something it has refused to do so
far.
Among those who could be grilled by investigators are
station content director Derek Bargwanna, station manager Jeremy Simpson,
national content director Craig Bruce and metropolitan radio chief Guy Dobson.
DJs Michael Christian and Mel Greig, and producers Emily Mills and Ben Harlum,
are also expected to be questioned.
On Wednesday night, Austereo denied that Bargwanna or
in-house lawyer Tania Petsinis approved the broadcast of the prank call.
An ACMA spokesman said the watchdog would investigate whether
2Day FM breached its license conditions or the industry's code of practice.
It will examine whether the station breached standards of
decency, invaded privacy or broke rules of consent.
Jacintha Saldanha, the nurse who took the initial call, was
found dead three days after she was duped by the prank. Last night, a 2Day FM
spokeswoman said an internal investigation found that "all procedures and
protocols were adhered to", though it has not released details of this
investigation.
Southern Cross CEO Rhys Holleran claimed the station tried
"at least five times" to get approval from the hospital.
The hospital denies being contacted by 2Day FM and the
station has not released phone records to prove the calls were made.
No comments:
Post a Comment