New Zealand Police (Operation Tam) and Television New Zealand Ltd - 1998-068, 1998-069
Members
- S R Maling (Chair)
- J Withers
- L M Loates
- R McLeod
Dated
Complainant
- New Zealand Police (Operation Tam)
Number
1998-068–069
Programme
TV One NewsBroadcaster
Television New Zealand LtdChannel/Station
TVNZ 1
Summary
A news item broadcast on TV One on 11 February 1998 at 6.00pm included
photographs and the names of four people who had been at the Furneaux jetty when
two young people went missing in the Marlborough Sounds. The photographs had
been released by the Police in conjunction with an investigation.
The Police complained to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(c) of the
Broadcasting Act 1989 that naming the people breached their privacy, because there
was a specific request in the accompanying press release that they not be identified by
name. The Police also complained to Television New Zealand Ltd, the broadcaster,
that by being named, the four people had not been treated justly and fairly. The
Police requested both a public and a private apology.
TVNZ did not consider that because the four people were named that they were
treated unfairly, it wrote. Dealing with the privacy aspect of the complaint, TVNZ
considered that by consenting to have their photographs published, the four people
had implicitly consented to having their privacy invaded. Further, TVNZ argued that
the matter was in the public interest, and that this was a defence to the claim to
privacy.
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's response on the standards matters, the Police referred the
complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the
Broadcasting Act 1989.
For the reasons given below, the Authority declines to uphold the complaints.
Decision
The members of the Authority have viewed the item complained about and have read
the correspondence (summarised in the Appendix). On this occasion, the Authority
determines the complaints without a formal hearing.
In an effort to jog the memory of witnesses, the Police involved in Operation TAM
released photographs of four young people who were at the jetty when two friends
vanished in the Marlborough Sounds early on New Year's Day. TVNZ's One
Network News on 11 February 1998 at 6.00pm contained an item which showed the
photographs and named the four people.
Detective Inspector Rob Pope, on behalf of the Police and Operation TAM,
complained to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(c) of the
Broadcasting Act that naming the four people, contrary to a specific request that they
not be named, contravened their privacy. To the broadcaster, the Police complained
that it was unfair to name the four, and requested both a public and private apology.
The Police emphasised that they had made an agreement with the four people that
their photographs would be released only on the understanding that they would not be
named, and that Detective Inspector Pope had given them an undertaking to that
effect. Furthermore, the Police noted, all other media had respected the request that
the four people not be named.
The Police referred to a letter received from TVNZ's reporter in which she apologised
for failing to get permission before broadcasting the names. She advised the Police
that it was the news department in Auckland which had made the final decision to run
with the item which named the witnesses.
In its response, TVNZ dealt first with the letter of apology which the Police had
received from the reporter. It advised that had the reporter passed on certain
information, the item which was screened might have been different. However, it
stressed, the reporter's failure to follow established procedures was not necessarily
the same thing as breaching statutory programme standards.
Furthermore, TVNZ added, the press release which accompanied the photographs did
no more than request that the media respect the four people's privacy. The wording
of the press release, TVNZ argued, allowed for editorial discretion as to how the
information was to be used. It did not, TVNZ continued, amount to a denial of access
to the pictures if the names were published.
The Standards Complaint
When the standards complaint was referred to the Authority, the Police maintained
that the request not to release certain details about the four witnesses was
unequivocal, and amounted to an instruction. In its report to the Authority, TVNZ
disputed that interpretation of the media release, pointing out that it merely asked that
the media respect the witnesses' privacy. In their final comment to the Authority, the
Police reported that at the Press Conference where the media release was issued,
numerous media had been present and all, with the exception of TVNZ, had
understood and abided by the request not to publish the witnesses' names.
TVNZ considered the complaint under standards G4 and G15, nominated by the
Police. Standard G4 requires broadcasters:
G4 To deal justly and fairly with any person taking part or referred to in
any programme.
The other standard reads:
G15 The standards of integrity and reliability of news sources should bekept under constant review.
As far as standard G4 was concerned, TVNZ did not accept that any one of the four
people was treated unfairly by being named in the item. It advised that it intended to
subsume the standard G4 complaint under privacy, considered below.
With respect to the complaint that standard G15 was breached, TVNZ advised that it
did not consider the standard to be relevant. It pointed out that in this case the news
source was the Police, and that it was confident of the reliability and integrity of that
source. TVNZ added that it was also grateful for the level of cooperation and
assistance it had received in covering the story of the missing friends.
In considering the complaint under standard G4, the Authority's task is to determine
whether, in the circumstances, it was fair to the four people to be named by TVNZ.
It understands that the Police were conducting a very difficult investigation into the
disappearance of the two young people and, as part of the inquiry, had distributed
photographs of four others who were at the jetty prior to the disappearance of their
two friends. Because of the high public interest in the case, and the fact that one or
more of the four people had been named and appeared in the media previously, the
Authority considers that the Police were being somewhat unrealistic in requesting that
their identities not be revealed when the photographs were published. It considers
that individuals who unwittingly become involved in a major criminal investigation
inevitably forfeit some privacy rights and, in this case, since one or more of them had
already been identified in the context of the inquiry, the Authority does not consider it
was possible for the Police to assure them that they would retain their anonymity.
Further, once the photographs were released into the public arena, the Police could no
longer retain control over how the pictures would be used or whether the four would
be identified by name. An image in itself enables identification, the Authority
considers, which in this case was possible with independent verification.
The Authority is aware that the reporter later acknowledged that she should not have
released the names; that anonymity was a specific request when the Police released
the pictures. It also understands newsgathering imperatives which would drive her to
reveal them, particularly as she already knew the names, and had sought and been
granted permission to reveal the name of one of the four. In the Authority's view, her
professional behaviour was a matter for the broadcaster and its relationship with the
Police, and did not constitute a breach of broadcasting standards so much as possibly
one of ethical standards.
The Authority acknowledges a difficulty here in that Police can issue no more than a
request to reporters in relation to disclosures such as this, and are not empowered to
issue instructions, or to disclose information under constraints which can be effective
other than by mutual agreement.
Next, the Authority turns to the complaint under standard G15. The Police did not
respond to TVNZ's claim that the standard was irrelevant. The Authority interprets
this aspect of the Police complaint as relating to the responsibility of the reporter,
who was the source of information to the newsroom, and to the newsroom
imperatives which dictated the course of the news production process. However, in
the Authority's view, the standard is confined to the integrity or reliability of the
source of the news. Here, it was the Police who were the source of the news, and
there is no dispute about their integrity or reliability. Accordingly, the Authority
concurs with TVNZ that the standard was not relevant. It notes that the matters
raised under this head are dealt with above in the discussion of unfairness.
The Privacy Complaint
The Police complained that the Authority's privacy principle (v) was breached by the
broadcast. That principle reads:
(v) The protection of privacy includes the protection against the disclosure
by the broadcaster, without consent, of the name and/or address and/or
telephone number of an identifiable person. This principle does not
apply to details which are public information, or to news and current
affairs reporting, and is subject to the "public interest" defence in
principle (vi).
Principle (vi) referred to there reads:
(vi) Discussing the matter in the "public interest", defined as of legitimate
concern or interest to the public, is a defence to an individual's claim
for privacy.
The Police emphasised that in asking the four people to participate in the photo
identification, they had given them an undertaking that their privacy would be
respected. It added that their names and faces were not generally public property, and
the four people did not wish them to be in the public arena.
TVNZ responded that privacy principle (v) specifically excluded details which were
public information. It argued that the four had been identified individually in the
media coverage of the case, and that their names were a matter of public record and,
especially in the Blenheim area, their identities were well known. TVNZ also argued
that by consenting to appear in the photographs, they had implicitly consented to
their privacy being breached. It cited principle (vii) which states:
(vii) An individual who consents to the invasion of his or her privacy,
cannot later succeed in a claim for a breach of privacy.
With respect to principle (vi), TVNZ submitted that it was clearly dealing with a
matter of public concern. It therefore concluded that there was no breach of the
Authority's privacy principles.
In the Advisory Opinion in which the Authority recorded the privacy principles it
intended to apply when determining privacy complaints, it acknowledged that the
principles enunciated might require amplification or elaboration as different factual
situations were encountered. It also emphasised that the specific facts of each
complaint were especially important when privacy was an issue.
In the Authority's view, none of the principles enumerated were intended to deal with
a situation such as this, where consent was given to the release of a visual image, but
not to being named. As noted above, it is of the view that when the names were
already in the public arena in the context of the inquiry, it was unrealistic for the
Police to expect that anonymity could be maintained when the photographs were
released.
Although the four young people may have been reluctant media performers, they were
unwittingly bound up in the inquiry by virtue of their being at Furneaux Lodge on the
night their two friends went missing. The information contained in the photographs
alone was sufficient to identify them positively to those who knew them, and the
Authority considers that the young people must have been well aware that there was
a potential for their identities to become widely known. The Authority therefore
concludes that privacy principle (vii) applies because the four had implicitly
consented to an invasion of their privacy by agreeing to the use of their photographs.
Furthermore, the exemption for news and current affairs reporting under principle (v)
is also applicable.
The Authority concludes that there was no breach of privacy.
For the reasons set forth above, the Authority declines to uphold the
complaints.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Sam Maling
Chairperson
25 June 1998
Appendix
The Police's Complaint to Television New Zealand Ltd and the Broadcasting
Standards Authority – 20 February 1998
The Police (Operation TAM) complained about an item on One Network News
broadcast on TV One at 6.00pm on 11 February 1998. The item related to the
missing persons inquiry into the disappearance of Ben Smart and Olivia Hope. Earlier
that day, Operation TAM had issued a press release along with photographs of four
witnesses known to be at the Furneaux jetty shortly before Ben and Olivia went
missing. It was released in an attempt to jog the memory of anyone else who may
have been there.
The Police noted that the four witnesses agreed to have their photographs released, on
the understanding that their names would not be published. It pointed out that the
press release specifically asked that their privacy be respected.
All news media respected the request, except for TVNZ, the Police continued. When
their photographs were shown in TVNZ's news item, the four people were named.
The Police advised that the reporter had, in a letter to Detective Inspector Pope,
personally apologised and had admitted that she failed to get approval to broadcast
the names. The Police considered that the item breached standards G4 and G15 of the
Television Code of Broadcasting Practice and privacy principle (v) of the Privacy
Code.
With respect to the privacy aspect of the complaint, the inquiry head wrote:
In asking these four people to take part we gave them an undertaking that their
privacy would be respected. I am extremely disappointed that your news
team chose to flagrantly abuse their and our request for this privacy. Their
names and faces were not generally public property, certainly not in this
context, nor did they wish them to be in the public arena.
As part of this process of complaint I ask that both public and privateapologies be made.
The Police also suggested that a personal letter of apology to each of the four people
be made.
The Police attached a copy of the press release issued with the photographs and a
copy of the reporter's letter of apology.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint – 12 March 1998
TVNZ advised that it considered the complaint under the standards G4 and G15 as
nominated by the Police. Before addressing those matters, TVNZ explained the
context in which the Police had received a copy of a letter from the reporter in which
she had apologised for her actions and had advised that she had been taken off the
assignment. It wrote:
We acknowledge that, had the reporter passed on certain information, the
content of the item screened on One Network News may have been different.
The subsequent inquiry into the procedures followed by the reporter is an
internal matter for TVNZ and was handled that way.
It is important to stress however that a reporter's failure to follow establishedprocedures is not necessarily the same thing as breaching statutory programme
standards.
TVNZ contended that the wording of the press release allowed for editorial discretion
in how the information was to be handled. Although the Police had apparently given
the four people an undertaking that their privacy would be protected, the press release
contained no more than a request that the news media respect their privacy. In
TVNZ's view, it did not amount to a denial of access to the pictures if names were to
be published.
TVNZ did not accept that any of the four people was treated unfairly for being named
in the item. It subsumed the issues raised under standard G4 into the matters of
privacy which it dealt with subsequently.
Referring to standard G15, TVNZ considered that in this instance the standard was
irrelevant. It noted that the news source was the Police and it was confident of the
reliability and integrity of that source.
It then turned to the matter of privacy. TVNZ contended that privacy principle (v)
could not be considered in isolation, and that privacy principles (vi) and (vii) also
needed to be considered.
With reference to principle (v), it noted that the principle specifically excluded details
which were public information. TVNZ argued that the four had been identified
individually in media coverage of the case. Their names were a matter of public
record, and further, in the Blenheim area, their identities were well known.
TVNZ also argued that by consenting to appear in photographs released by the
Police, the four people at least implicitly consented to their privacy being invaded
(principle (vii).
TVNZ advised that it did not understand what was meant by the Police argument that
the faces of the four were not generally "public property" and certainly not in that
context. It submitted that their identities were already in the public domain, and that
the privacy door could not be open and shut at random.
As far as principle (vi) was concerned, TVNZ maintained that clearly it was dealing
with a matter of legitimate concern to the public. It concluded that the broadcast did
not breach any broadcasting standards or the privacy principles.
TVNZ acknowledged that from an editorial/procedural point of view the item had its
problems, but did not accept that the item was in breach of the Codes of Broadcasting
Practice.
The Police's Referral to the Authority – 25 March 1998
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's response, the Police referred the standards complaint to the
Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
The Police advised that they considered the instructions not to release personal details
about the four witnesses as unequivocal, and this was breached by TVNZ.
Notwithstanding the apology from the reporter, the Police considered it important to
draw TVNZ's and the witnesses' attention to the fact that blatant breaches of the
Code were not acceptable under any circumstances.
The Police noted that the apology was from an individual reporter, and not from the
organisation, which had to take responsibility for the actions of its staff. The letter
concluded:
In any inquiry it is important to stress that public interest issues, which
clearly encompass the rights of individuals, must have some counterbalance
with the competing interests of the media.
TVNZ's Response to the Authority – 6 April 1998
TVNZ first disputed Mr Pope's assertion that the request not to release personal
details of the four witnesses was "unequivocal" and an "instruction". It argued that it
was neither of those things, and pointed to the relevant passage in the media release
where it was written: "he asked that people and the media respect their privacy."
TVNZ added:
To ask is to request; it does not amount to an unequivocal order.
TVNZ also pointed out that it was customary when releasing media material to place
restrictions on its use in bold type at the top. Had this been intended to be a rigid
instruction, it suggested that Mr Pope should have chosen a stronger word than asked
and should have given the matter more prominence in the media release.
Secondly, as far as the apology from the reporter was concerned, TVNZ drew
attention to its 12 March letter in which it acknowledged that had the editorial staff
been in possession of all the information, the item screened may have had a different
shape and content. TVNZ continued:
However, the reporter's letter and my acknowledgment are not the same thing
as admitting a breach of the statutory standards. In examining this complaint
we carefully tested it against standards G4, G15 and privacy principle (v) and
were unable to conclude that the standards had been infringed.
The Police's Final Comment – 20 April 1998
The Police, through Detective Inspector Pope, maintained that at no stage of the
complaint had TVNZ demonstrated any spirit of compliance. Mr Pope pointed out
that at the Press Conference when the media release was issued, numerous media,
including television, print and radio, were present. All, except for TVNZ, understood
implicitly and explicitly the request made by the Police not to publish the witnesses'
names. Mr Pope wrote:
The request made by the Police was made in an environment of co-
operativeness and apart from TVNZ all media complied without question.
The unusual nature of releasing witness photographs and the reasons for such
a move were carefully explained to all present, and it appears that the public
interest issues was lost on no-one except TVNZ.
To illustrate its point further, the Police noted that TV3's reporter was asked by the
newsreader to identify the four witnesses by name, but in spite of persistent
questioning, declined to do so, stating that the media had been specifically asked by
the Police not to name them. The Police continued with:
...the further point that immediately following the Press Conference, the
TVNZ reporter, [...], was overheard by Police staff commenting to her
Programme Department on cellphone words to the effect that "Police don't
want the names of the witnesses published, I know their names, is there any
way we can get around this." Regardless of whatever connotation is placed on
that reporter's behaviour I personally find it as a flagrant breach of trust and
totally counter to any acceptable broadcasting standard.
I think it is naive and dismissive of [TVNZ] to suggest that editorial staff werenot in possession of more facts than what is indicated in [its] correspondence.
In a postscript, Mr Pope added:
At the time after the TV 1 broadcast I am aware of at least 2 reporters who
expressed their abhorrence of such a release of information. One, the Chief
Reporter at the Marlborough Express was sufficiently concerned that an
independent complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority was being
contemplated.
The general sentiment of the gathered reporters was that TVNZ went "overthe top". A number are quite happy to be spoken to if necessary, perhaps as
an independent internal perspective.
Further Correspondence
Having received a copy of the Police's final comment, TVNZ advised that it wished to
comment further.
First it expressed surprise that a senior police officer should make a number of
allegations which were hearsay and prejudicial, and with limited probative value. It
considered it irrelevant what the reporter said on the cellphone, how TV3 reported the
story, and what the Chief Reporter of the Marlborough Express had to say.
It submitted that the sole issue to be determined was whether the actual broadcast of
the names of the four people breached their privacy. It wrote:
There cannot, we suggest, be any breach of privacy when the photographs of
the four immediately identify them (whether or not their names are used). The
four obviously agreed with the police that the photographs could be put in the
public domain and this would include broadcast on One Network News. That
in itself is an implicit (at very least) consent to disclosure of other particulars
such as names.
Secondly, TVNZ noted that Mr Pope now acknowledged that it was a "request" not
to publish the names, and not a firm directive. It considered it not surprising that a
busy reporter would regard them more in the nature of a preference. In other words, it
argued, the discretion was left with each reporter as to whether and how in the context
of that particular media's reporting of the news conference, the names would be used.
TVNZ regarded it as significant that the Media Release did not say that the four
witnesses had allowed the photographs to be released only on an understanding or
undertaking. It considered that in order to avoid any possible uncertainty or
misunderstanding, the police should have made it clear that the an undertaking had
been given that the four names would not be released.
TVNZ continued:
Given that the photographs of the four people were released it must be at least
equivocal whether any privacy issues in fact arise. A photograph of a
particular person is equally distinguishing of a person as a name.
TVNZ argued further that as the police were aware of the intense media interest in the
disappearance of the two young people, it was up to them to lay down the ground
rules, rather than release the photographs on a basis that was left to the subjective
interpretation of any reporter.
The fact that Mr Pope may find it a "flagrant breach of trust and totally counter to
any acceptable broadcasting standard", was TVNZ argued, not directly relevant to the
matter at issue.
TVNZ concluded that by broadcasting the names of people immediately identifiable
from their photographs, their privacy was not invaded.
Further Correspondence
In a letter dated 29 April, the Police emphasised that its stance had already been put
in earlier correspondence.
Mr Pope wrote:
I have no wish to argue with TVNZ their vacillating standards of interpretation
of what is or is not the issue in point. It appears to me that the obligation of
responsible reporting should be fostered within an environment of co-
operation and sensitivity towards the particular circumstances of every
inquiry. Put bluntly I have no time for the pedantic adherence or reliance by
[TVNZ] on issues of apparently perceived technicality, to defend the position
of TVNZ.
Mr Pope advised that no further representation would be made