BBC pedophilia scandal: MPs want to reveal their identity
In British media news, a man who was the face of the BBC, one of the world’s leading public institutions, was claimed to have engaged in “inappropriate sexual behaviour” with a 17-year-old boy at the time of the murder. incident.
However, at the center of the event The teenager said nothing inappropriate or illegal had happened with the anonymous male presenter and that the allegations were “nonsense” in a letter from his lawyers to the BBC.
However, the teenager’s mother also accuses the anonymous BBC presenter of paying the 20-year-old more than £35,000 for obscene images.
The alleged buyer’s mother claims she used the money to finance her son’s cocaine addiction and accuses the host of “destroying her son’s life.”
Parents who say the BBC’s top star paid their children to pose for lewd photos say they have bank statements and screenshots to back up their claims.
Lawmakers who supported them also suggested they might name the publisher, whose name has not yet been made public.
The BBC has suspended and removed the star pending investigation, but has so far refused to name names.
The Daily Telegraph reports that the BBC star has hired expert privacy and media lawyers at Harbottle & Lewis, also favored by the royal family, to protect his reputation and get his job back.
HOW DID IT GET TO THIS POINT?
The woman, whose name has not been released, said she saw the half-naked BBC employee one day when her son called her phone, expecting her son to “act”. The angry mother said the man also paid £35,000 for the inappropriate photos. While the police investigation into the incident is expected to begin, the punishment for what the man did was reported to be 14 years in prison.
The woman, who did not reveal her name, said: “I caught a name that everyone knows while making a video call with my son. She was in her underwear and she was waiting for my son to perform for her,” she said. The woman also claimed that her son was 17 years old at the time. It was said that everyone knew the man, who was reported to have received a salary of 6 figures in sterling a year for the reactions, and that he was fired while the investigation continued.
While the identity of the man expected to be questioned by police was not released, many BBC commentators and broadcasters attempted to clear themselves by making statements on social media. Broadcasters and presenters including Rylan Clark, Jeremy Vine and Gary Lineker said they had nothing to do with the incident.