Sir Cliff under fire over huge legal bills
BBC: BBC bosses have criticised Sir Cliff Richard over the lawyers’ bills he has run up after taking High Court action about reports naming him as a suspected sex offender.
Bosses say a trial is unlikely to be staged this year but figures show the singer has already run up legal costs of more than £800,000.
BBC BOSSES have criticised Sir Cliff Richard over the lawyers’ bills he has run up after complaining about reports naming him as a suspected sex offender and taking High Court action.
Bosses say a trial is unlikely to be staged this year but figures show the singer has already run up legal costs of more than £800,000.
A barrister leading the BBC’s legal team outlined concerns at a preliminary High Court hearing in London yesterday.
Gavin Millar QC told a judge, in a written submission, that costs incurred were “grossly unreasonable” and “on any view ... disproportionate”. The BBC could be ordered to pick up Sir Cliff ’s lawyers’ bills if he wins the battle.
Mr Justice Mann is overseeing the latest in a series of preliminary hearings in London.
Sir Cliff was not at the hearing, which is due to end today. His lawyers have provided explanations for bills.
The singer has taken legal action against the BBC, and South Yorkshire Police over coverage of a raid at his apartment in Sunningdale, Berkshire, in August 2014.
His lawyers say he suffered “profound and long-lasting” damage.
BBC editors have said they will “defend ourselves vigorously’’.
A spokeswoman said the BBC had reported Sir Cliff’s “full denial of the allegations at every stage’’.
South Yorkshire Police have apologised “wholeheartedly for the additional anxiety caused’’ by the force’s “initial handling of the media interest” in its investigation into the singer.
Lawyers say in late 2013 a man made an allegation to the Metropolitan Police that he had been sexually assaulted by Sir Cliff at Sheffield United’s Bramall Lane football stadium when a child in 1985.
Metropolitan Police officers passed the allegation to South Yorkshire Police in July 2014.
Sir Cliff denied the allegation “as soon as it was brought to his attention”, and in June 2016 prosecutors announced that he would face no charges.
He has alleged that the BBC made an agreement with South Yorkshire Police. And he says South Yorkshire Police contravened guidance on “relationships with the media”.
The BBC’s intensive coverage of the raid, which prompted widescale criticism, was the result of a deal South Yorkshire Police did with BBC reporter Dan Johnson after he approached the force’s communications director Carrie Goodwin on July 14 with information about an investigation into the singer.
The force has consistently stated the reporter said his information came from Operation Yewtree while the Met Police has maintained it can find no evidence the leak came from within its ranks.
A review published in 2015 by Andy Trotter, formerly the Association of Chief Police Officers’ lead on media, concluded the force should not have agreed to provide details of the search in return for a pledge from the BBC not to potentially compromise the inquiry by running a story in the meantime.
A spokesman for Sir Cliff said outside court following yesterday’s hearing: “Sir Cliff Richard incurred these costs and expenses over more than a two-year period, we say as a direct result of the actions of South Yorkshire Police and the BBC.”
He added: “Ultimately it will be down to a judge to decide whether or not he should recover such costs and expenses in full or in part, or at all.”
He incurred these costs and expenses over more than two years. A spokesman for Sir Cliff Richard, speaking outside court.