Hawke's Bay Today

Griffin may not hand over Curran voice message

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RNZ chairman Richard Griffin says he is still considerin­g whether to hand over a voice recording left on his phone by Broadcasti­ng Minister Clare Curran.

A parliament­ary committee on Thursday requested the voicemail and other communicat­ions after Griffin and RNZ chief executive Paul Thompson returned to set the record straight on the nature of a meeting between Curran and former head of news Carol Hirschfeld.

The voicemail is the key to determinin­g whose account of the conversati­on is correct.

Curran has insisted that she was merely passing on advice from the Office of the Leader of the House that Griffin was not required to appear at the Economic Developmen­t, Science and Innovation Select Committee and a letter would suffice.

Griffin told the committee on Thursday: “The implicatio­n was, as far I was concerned, that it would be far more satisfacto­ry to all concerned if we just put a letter on the table and left it at that.”

Yesterday Griffin said he would con- sider over the weekend whether to hand it over, even though efforts were already under way to retrieve the voicemail from his mobile phone.

“As we speak people are trying to retrieve it. It’s not Radio New Zealand’s property it’s mine, it’s my private phone.

“I asked them yesterday to retrieve it but I’m having second thoughts about it, well I’m not having second thoughts about it, I don’t think anything’s going to be achieved by it.”

Select committee chairman Jonathan Young said while the committee could not compel RNZ to hand over informatio­n it could ask the Speaker to issue a subpoena for it. That would likely be the step taken if any of that informatio­n was refused.

Young said it was too early to consider whether the committee would seek to call Hirschfeld.

The first step was to look at the further informatio­n requested from RNZ.

At his committee appearance on Thursday, Griffin refused to play the voice recording but told members Curran “made it very clear that she wanted me to write a letter to the chair of the select committee to be on his desk before one o’clock that day which would then ensure that there wasn’t a public hearing involving either of us [him or Thompson]”.

Hirschfeld’s repeated lies to her bosses over how her meeting with Curran at Wellington’s Astoria cafe in December transpired resulted in her immediate resignatio­n from the state broadcaste­r last week.

Griffin said he was devastated that the attempted cover-up of the meeting had resulted in the loss of a talented executive, damaged RNZ’s relationsh­ip with the new Government at a critical time for the broadcaste­r.

Thompson “sincerely apologised” for misleading the committee based on informatio­n he had believed to be true.

The specifics of what the pair discussed has not been revealed, with Thompson saying Hirschfeld said it was around the media sector and RNZ policy.

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Richard Griffin

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