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Former BBC Wales producer denies possessing indecent images of children
A former BBC Wales producer has denied six counts of possessing or making indecent photographs of children, after images were found on four devices that belonged to him.
Dylan Dawes, 50, told police he had "no knowledge" of the images, but said the devices had previously "been left for extended periods" of time at his workplace.
The jury at Cardiff Crown Court were told that more than 6,200 images had been found or recovered, including 192 Category A images.
Dawes, from Cardiff, said he had looked at "adult" pornography in the past, but denied having a sexual interest in children.
Opening the prosecution case, barrister Harry Baker told the jury that the defendant began working at the BBC in 2001.
Ex-BBC producer denies possessing indecent images of children
A former BBC Wales producer has denied six counts of possessing or making indecent photographs of children, after images were found on four devices that belonged to him.
Dylan Dawes, 50, told police he had "no knowledge" of the images, but said the devices had previously "been left for extended periods" of time at his workplace.
The jury at Cardiff Crown Court were told that more than 6,200 images had been found or recovered, including 192 Category A images.
Dawes, from Cardiff, said he had looked at "adult" pornography in the past, but denied having a sexual interest in children.
Opening the prosecution case, barrister Harry Baker told the jury that the defendant began working at the BBC in 2001.
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BBC accused of bias after quietly removing anonymous quote begging Iran to be 'nuked to death'
Social media users are criticising BBC of biased and inconsistent reporting of the war on Iran, after a viral post on X drew attention to what critics say are double standards in the broadcaster’s narratives and editorial decisions.
The latest viral post on X exposed what critics call blatant manipulation in Iran war reporting. The post, which has racked up over 13,000 likes and 350,000 views in hours, spotlighted BBC Senior Reporter Ghoncheh Habibiazad’s article that initially quoted an anonymous “Iranian” begging for Iran to be left without electricity and water before being “levelled” and “nuked to death.”
The quote was silently removed after being flagged on social media, with no formal correction issued by the BBC.
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