NZME Radio has been ordered to pay a fine and compensation totalling $8000 for breaching broadcasting standards.
The Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) has ruled hosts on the Hauraki Breakfast Show seriously breached standards when they intentionally broadcast live on air a caller who had asked to make a complaint off air.
The BSA has ordered NZME Radio to pay $4000 in privacy compensation to Deborah Stokes, $4000 in costs to the Crown and to broadcast a statement summarising the Authority's findings.
Stokes, the mother of New Zealand-born English cricketer Ben Stokes, called the station to complain about comments made by the hosts regarding her son, and to defend him. When she asked to speak to someone off air, host Matt Heath assured Stokes she was off air. The conversation was actually being broadcast live.
Stokes complained to NZME Radio that the broadcast was unfair and breached her privacy. NZME Radio upheld her complaint. The BSA found NZME Radio did not take sufficient action to adequately rectify the harm caused.
