Belfast Telegraph

BBC apologises for showing footage from online court hearing without permission

- By Brian Farmer

THE BBC has apologised after broadcasti­ng a snippet of footage of an online High Court hearing without permission.

A barrister representi­ng the BBC yesterday offered an apology after two senior judges began contempt of court proceeding­s.

Trevor Burke QC said an internal BBC investigat­ion had begun.

He estimated about 450,000 people had seen the footage, broadcast on the BBC’S South East Today, in mid-november.

The footage showed part of a hearing, staged in November, relating to oil drilling near Gatwick. Environmen­tal campaigner Sarah Finch had challenged

Surrey County Council’s decision to allow a well six miles from her home in Redhill, Surrey, to be extended. She is waiting for a judge’s ruling.

Two judges yesterday began considerin­g whether the BBC was in contempt at a separate High Court hearing in London.

Lady Justice Andrews and Mr Justice Warby oversaw a preliminar­y hearing and made no rulings. They are due to oversee a further hearing in the near future.

Legislatio­n which is nearly 100 years old bans the taking of photograph­s in court hearings.

The 1925 Criminal Justice Act says “no person” shall “take or attempt to take in any court any photograph, or with a view to publicatio­n make or attempt to make in any court any portrait or sketch, of any person”.

Senior judges have ruled that the taking of photograph­s, or film, in court can also be a contempt of court.

Trials are currently regularly being conducted online because of coronaviru­s, and legislatio­n recently introduced also makes taking screenshot­s or broadcasti­ng footage an offence.

The 2020 Coronaviru­s Act says: “It is an offence for a person to make, or attempt to make (a) an unauthoris­ed recording, or (b) an unauthoris­ed transmissi­on, of an image or sound which is being broadcast.”

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