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Taj Jackson is talking about Martin Bashir, the TV journalist who cast damaging aspersions about his uncle Michael Jackson s private life in a controversial documentary in 2003. He s choosing his words very carefully, but nevertheless his opinion of the man is incontrovertible. I don t want to be misquoted here, he warns politely, because Martin Bashir is probably the type who will sue me. But I ve always said that he s like the dirty cop of journalism, where he s this cop who goes around planting evidence and changing stories and who has put people in jail – quote unquote. He might not have been the one who actually killed my uncle, but he did put him into an emotional jail that eventually ended up killing him.
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The headlines are all too familiar. The BBC has been exposed as having deeply unsatisfactory internal processes for investigating problems. Rival media organisations gloat over the inadequacies. Loyal BBC employees squirm with embarrassment. We have seen it all before.
The issue this time is the notorious interview with Princess Diana 25 years ago, conducted by Martin Bashir, a junior reporter on the BBC’s flagship weekly current affairs programme, Panorama. The interview attracted 23 million viewers. But a retired Supreme Court judge, Lord Dyson, has just issued a devastating verdict on how the interview was secured – indirectly, by deceit and trickery – and on how the internal inquiry into that deceit, once it was exposed, was handled – in a “woefully ineffective” fashion. Dyson came close to accusing the BBC of orchestrating a cover-up of Bashir’s misdeeds.