The BBC has admitted it knew Huw Edwards had been arrested over making indecent images of children five months before he left the corporation on “medical advice” in April 2024.
Delivering its first statement on the matter days after Edwards was charged, and coming on the day he pled guilty at Westminster Magistrates Court, the BBC said it was “made aware in confidence that he had been arrested on suspicion of serious offences and released on bail whilst the police continued their investigation.” This was in November.
“At the time, no charges had been brought against Mr Edwards and the BBC had also been made aware of significant risk to his health,” said the statement.
The BBC said it would have “acted immediately to dismiss him” had he been charged at any point between when he was arrested in November and when he left in April 2024.
Last week’s annual report showed Edwards earned his biggest pay packet for five years, during a year in which he was arrested midway through and barely worked for the BBC following allegations that emerged in The Sun. The BBC today quoted the police confirming that those Sun allegations were “not connected” to those that Edwards pled guilty to earlier today.
The BBC was responding a few hours after Edwards pled guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children.
He will return to Westminster Magistrates Court on September 16, where he will face sentencing and could go to prison. His guilty pleas today took many in the court by surprise, having assumed that he would only speak to confirm his name and address.
His fall from grace has been spectacular. He was one of the faces of BBC News for decades, helmed election coverage and announced the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
He stopped appearing on the BBC when allegations surfaced in The Sun last summer and exited the corporation in April 2024 on “medical advice” after “40 years of service,” the corporation said, coming just prior to him taking home his biggest pay packet in five years. It has of course now emerged that he was arrested five months prior to his leaving the BBC.
Top BBC presenter takes swipe at Edwards
Meanwhile, one of the BBC’s top presenters took a swipe seemingly at Edwards for using his poor mental health as a mitigating factor for any potential sentencing.
Nicky Campbell posted around an hour ago: “And if mental health was mitigation for every custodial crime the prisons wouldn’t be at bursting point. They’d be half full.”
He was posting after the court was adjourned earlier when Edwards’ lawyer successfully petitioned to have a pre-sentencing report filed to the judge, which will include a report on Edwards’ mental health. The former newsreader has spent some of the past year in a hospital and Edwards’ lawyer was keen to stress the state of his mental health over the past year.
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