In December, the Press Association wrongly identified a man convicted of child porn offences.
While the guilty Martyn Smith had worked at the BBC, he is not the same Martyn Smith as the producer of Dragon's Den - but it was this Smith that the PA named as the one involved.
The PA's error was compounded when one media outlet after another mindlessly repeated the mistake - a clear example of churnalism.
Last Thursday, it was announced that Smith had received £50,000 in damages from PA, £10,000 from the Mirror and £5,000 each from the Telegraph and Times.
Although others - such as the Daily Mail website, Brighton Argus, Huddersfield Daily Examiner, The Scotsman and Belfast Telegraph - repeated the same error, they haven't yet paid anything to Mr Smith.
It's not quite clear why that should be - given the seriousness of the crime, every newspaper who wrongly identified him should be putting their hands in their pocket to pay him the damages he deserves.
Sunday, 7 February 2010
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Not sure about this one. If the other papers just republished the PA story then the blame really lies with the PA (hence the large damages for them).
ReplyDeleteI assume that the Mirror, Telegraph and Times expanded on the story a bit more and did a hatchet job which is why they paid specific damages.