Frankenfurter
Team Captain
just reading the Australian webpage and found the following article, not sure if they have made an error or whether this is all good. Thoughts?
AAP | August 29, 2007
THE Seven Network could be charged by police for broadcasting the private medical records of two AFL Hawthorn players, Victoria Police Commissioner Christine Nixon said today.
Ms Nixon slammed Seven for airing the medical records of the two players, which it bought from a man and a woman who claimed to have found them in a gutter, branding it "appalling" and a "disgrace".
Police, after searching the Docklands headquarters of Seven, have since charged the pair aged in their 30s with "theft by finding".
She told Southern Cross Broadcasting today that Seven may face charges.
"There is a possibility (of charges)," she said.
"As we go through this investigation, we obviously executed a search warrant on Channel Seven to gain the material, and so we will consider their role in it."
Ms Nixon said it was a great concern the medical reports were aired.
"I think it is appalling," she said.
"First of all I don't think they should have been bought and second, they should not have been aired.
"It is an invasion of privacy - one of the worst cases."
"It's a disgrace."
She also said information police had received three months ago about a player from the same club trafficking drugs was neither credible nor reliable.
"It was looked at and we determined that the information was not credible or reliable and so we did not pursue that investigation any further," she said.
Seven news chief Steve Carey has no regrets about running the story that has rocked the AFL but admits it could have been handled better.
"You'd think long and hard about how to present the documents and how you would go about the acquisition of them," he told ABC Radio.
"But do I regret, or have any problems with raising the topic in the way we did and the manner in which it was presented? No, I don't."
AFL players have started a boycott of Seven at media conference refusing to answer questions from the network's reporters.
The club and players cannot be named in Victoria for legal reasons following a Victorian Supreme Court injunction.
AAP | August 29, 2007
THE Seven Network could be charged by police for broadcasting the private medical records of two AFL Hawthorn players, Victoria Police Commissioner Christine Nixon said today.
Ms Nixon slammed Seven for airing the medical records of the two players, which it bought from a man and a woman who claimed to have found them in a gutter, branding it "appalling" and a "disgrace".
Police, after searching the Docklands headquarters of Seven, have since charged the pair aged in their 30s with "theft by finding".
She told Southern Cross Broadcasting today that Seven may face charges.
"There is a possibility (of charges)," she said.
"As we go through this investigation, we obviously executed a search warrant on Channel Seven to gain the material, and so we will consider their role in it."
Ms Nixon said it was a great concern the medical reports were aired.
"I think it is appalling," she said.
"First of all I don't think they should have been bought and second, they should not have been aired.
"It is an invasion of privacy - one of the worst cases."
"It's a disgrace."
She also said information police had received three months ago about a player from the same club trafficking drugs was neither credible nor reliable.
"It was looked at and we determined that the information was not credible or reliable and so we did not pursue that investigation any further," she said.
Seven news chief Steve Carey has no regrets about running the story that has rocked the AFL but admits it could have been handled better.
"You'd think long and hard about how to present the documents and how you would go about the acquisition of them," he told ABC Radio.
"But do I regret, or have any problems with raising the topic in the way we did and the manner in which it was presented? No, I don't."
AFL players have started a boycott of Seven at media conference refusing to answer questions from the network's reporters.
The club and players cannot be named in Victoria for legal reasons following a Victorian Supreme Court injunction.