Australian radio station to lose license over Royal hoax call

Australian radio station to lose license over Royal hoax call
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Australian Radio Station To Lose License Over Royal Hoax Call. An Australian High Court ruling on Wednesday opened the door for a radio station at the centre of a royal hoax call controversy to face penalties including losing its license.

Sydney: An Australian High Court ruling on Wednesday opened the door for a radio station at the centre of a royal hoax call controversy to face penalties including losing its license.

Sydney station 2Day FM endured a global backlash after Indian-born nurse Jacintha Saldanha had committed suicide on December 7, 2012, after transferring a prank call by two DJs to staff caring for Prince William’s wife Kate who was suffering from severe morning sickness.

Mel Greig and co-host Michael Christian had posed as Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles on the phone to the London hospital and were able to get details of Kate’s condition on air.

Saldanha left a note blaming Greig and Christian for her death. Both DJs apologised for their actions and the station’s owner Southern Cross Austereo later donated $450,000 to the nurse’s family to “help them in the future”.

Media watchdog the Australian Communications and Media Authority previously ruled that the station had breached surveillance laws by broadcasting the call without the consent of the other party.

It prompted Southern Cross Austereo to take action against the ACMA in the Federal Court which found the authority did not have the power to determine matters of law.

But that was overturned by the High Court this week, paving the way for a possible penalty against the station, which could include suspending or cancelling its license.

“This decision is welcomed by the ACMA,” said the watchdog's chairman Chris Chapman.

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