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BBC producer is first to be sacked over fake phone-ins

Ciar Byrne,Arts,Media Correspondent
Wednesday 19 September 2007 19:00 EDT
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A radio producer is the first person to be fired over the faked phone-ins scandal which has rocked the BBC. Leona McCambridge was sacked for gross misconduct after an internal inquiry into claims that production staff on Liz Kershaw's show on BBC 6Music regularly posed as competition winners.

Ms McCambridge, a Sony Award winner, was dismissed on Tuesday by the BBC 6Music and Radio 2 controller, Lesley Douglas. She plans to appeal against the decision and is being represented by her union, Bectu, which described her as a "sacrificial lamb".

The Liz Kershaw show was investigated after pre-recorded programmes in 2005 and 2006 were presented as if they were live. In an incident reported to the BBC – after its director general, Mark Thompson, asked whistle-blowers to come forward – a competition was announced which appeared to feature listeners phoning in, one of whom would win a prize on air. In fact, there were no prizes and the callers were either 6Music staff or their friends.

The sacking of Ms McCambridge follows a BBC-wide inquiry into alleged fakery on its TV and radio shows. Richard Marson, a former Blue Peter editor, is understood to have been suspended after another instance of alleged viewer deception during his stewardship, relating to the naming of the show's cat.

It is understood that the name chosen for Socks, the cat which joined the show in 2006, was not the one which came top in an online poll. The BBC refused to comment on either case.

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