The scandal surrounding the 60 Minutes botched ‘child abduction’ fiasco will reportedly not stop Channel Nine from paying for news stories.
The network’s news director, Darren Wick, said money was not the problem just days after an internal review into 60 Minutes decision to pay a ‘child recovery’ organisation to snatch Sally Faulkner’s children from her husband in Beirut was released.
‘I think the key issue was our understanding of the laws and consequences if things went wrong. We weren’t prepared,’ Mr Wick said, according to the Sunday Telegraph.
Channel Nine News Director Darren Wick (pictured) says the network will continue to pay for stories in the wake of the 60 Minutes Beirut fiasco
He added that he does not think paying for a story, as the program has been accused of doing in this instance, ‘compromises journalism’.
Mr Wick also took aim at Hugh Riminton after the former newsreader slammed 60 Minutes for making senior producer Stephen Rice a ‘scapegoat’ for the scandal.
‘Hugh … doesn’t know what he’s talking about,’ Mr Wick said, according to the newspaper.
It comes after Riminton, a presenter with Ten Eyewitness News, tweeted his criticism on Friday after it was announced Mr Rice was the only person to lose his job over the botched story.
Darren Wick also took aim at Hugh Riminton (pictured) after the former newsreader slammed 60 Minutes for making senior producer Stephen Rice a ‘scapegoat’ for the scandal
Mr Riminton took to Twitter on Friday after in was announced Mr Rice would sacked over the program’s disastrous story involving Sally Faulkner
The veteran newsreader’s comments come after Mr Rice was sacked on Friday following an internal review by the Nine Network
‘The 60 Minutes soundman gets a formal warning, but senior show executives get off scot free for child abduction fiasco. Bizarre,’ he said.
Mr Riminton added ‘no-one at Channel Nine has deeper credentials in serious journalism’ than the sacked producer.
Mr Rice was sacked on Friday following an internal review by the Nine Network.
Tara Brown was arrested alongside senior producer Stephen Rice, cameraman Ben Williamson and sound recordist David Ballment. The 60 Minutes crew is pictured with Nine news boss Darren Wick (second right) after their release from jail last month. Mr Rice (second from left) has been sacked after 32 years with Nine
High-profile 60 Minutes reporter Tara Brown is bundled into a police car in Beirut on April 18
Ex-60 Minutes boss Gerald Stone, former A Current Affair chief David Hurley and Rachel Launders undertook the investigation, and passed their report onto the Nine Entertainment board on Monday.
‘Regrettably this has been the gravest misadventure in the program’s history,’ said Mr Stone in a statement on Friday.
Nine announced Mr Rice, the producer of the Sally Faulkner story and veteran of 32 years with the network, would leave ‘the company effective immediately’.
Stephen Rice (right) pictured with Tara Brown on their return to Australia on April 21 after being released from jail in Beirut after facing kidnapping charges over the botched child ‘recovery’ operation. Mr Rice has been sacked, according to a statement by the Nine Network
‘Other staff involved in the planning and execution of this story have received formal warnings.’
‘The manner in which we produced Sally Faulkner’s story exposed our crew to serious risks, and exposed 60 Minutes and Nine to significant reputational damage,’ said Nine CEO Hugh Marks.
‘We got too close to the story and suffered damaging consequences.’
Former 60 Minutes executive producer and now head of Nine sport, Tom Malone (left), who commissioned the story. New EP Kirsty Thomson (right) was chief of staff when the Lebanon story was approved
The actual review panel did not recommend to the board that any staff member should be singled out for dismissal among 13 recommendations.
‘It’s clear from our findings that inexcusable errors were made,’ added Mr Stone.
Among the recommended actions was ‘that management censure, in the strongest terms, those most directly involved in the events’.
Nine Network’s review of the failed ‘recovery’ of Brisbane mother Sally Faulkner’s (pictured) two children has been completed and made public on Friday
The budget for 60 Minutes has reportedly been cut after the report on Sally Faulkner’s broken family incurred huge costs, including compensation to Faulkner’s estranged husband Ali Elamin (pictured centre) with children Lahela (right) and Noah (left)
‘The staff of 60 Minutes has been thoroughly traumatised by the circumstances which confronted four of the team in Beirut, and by the steady barrage of hostile comment,’ the report stated.
The recommendations were considered by board members, including non-executive chairman Peter Costello, Nine CEO Hugh Marks and former CEO David Gyngell.
Mr Rice, 58, was a writer on the Sydney Morning Herald before joining Channel Nine’s Willesee program in 1984 and later became executive producer of A Current Affair.
In 1994 he became executive producer of Sunday and 12 years ago joined 60 Minutes. He has won Walkley Awards for journalism.
The 60 minutes crisis is believed to have cost the network over $1 million and saw the crew detained in a Beirut prison for two weeks.
Nine insiders previously revealed the budget for 60 Minutes has been cut after the report on Sally Faulkner’s broken family incurred huge costs, including compensation to Faulkner’s estranged husband Ali Elamin.
Veteran reporter Tara Brown pictured with producer Stephen Rice on arrival in Sydney on April 21 – she has returned to work at Channel Nine’s Willoughby studios while Mr Rice has been sacked from the Nine Network after 32 years
The board has responded to an internal review over the 60 minutes crisis in Lebanon last month which cost the network over $1 million and saw the news crew detained in a Beirut prison for two weeks
Staff at the program also admitted to ‘some soul searching’ since the botched story and conceded mistakes had been made in the abduction.
The botched child recovery operation in Lebanon left four 60 Minutes employees facing kidnapping charges.
Former executive producer Tom Malone, who is now head of sport, commissioned the story and Kirsty Thomson, who was chief of staff when it was approved, is now EP of the program.