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FCC Opens Probe Into BBC Over Edited Trump Speech, Seeks Any U.S. Airings

The inquiry focuses on possible U.S. broadcasts of the spliced Panorama clip through public-media partners.

Overview

  • FCC chair Brendan Carr sent letters to the BBC, PBS and NPR asking whether the Panorama segment with a spliced Jan. 6 speech was provided or aired in the United States, requesting transcripts and video of any broadcasts.
  • The documentary stitched together portions of President Trump’s remarks spoken 54 minutes apart, depicting a sentence he did not say, according to Carr’s letter and the BBC’s acknowledgment of an editing error.
  • The BBC has apologized, pulled the episode and said it will not rebroadcast it, while asserting there is no basis for a U.S. defamation claim and that the program was restricted to UK iPlayer.
  • Director-general Tim Davie and news chief Deborah Turness resigned in the fallout, and BBC chair Samir Shah has told staff the corporation will contest any lawsuit.
  • President Trump has threatened to sue for $1–5 billion but has not filed a case; UK regulator Ofcom is examining the issue and Parliament’s media committee plans to question BBC leadership next week as legal experts note jurisdictional obstacles.