Your 1st place for FoI News
RSS icon Email icon Home icon
  • My love-match with “Mr E”

    Posted on October 31st, 2011 admin 1 comment

    Is that Matthew Davis on the line?

    Every year I send an FoI request to the BBC to see how many free tickets the Corporation gets for Wimbledon.

    Over the years the request has been modified to discriminate between tickets for No.1 and Centre Court and most recently who had received the tickets.

    This year after a little bit of misunderstanding with the lovely people in the BBC’s FoI office I was eventually handed the names of the people who got the prize tickets, those for the men’s final on centre court.

    Imagine my surprise when I see on the letter that one pair went to F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone. I knew I had a story and as you can see below it made a nice show in the Sun.

    But then things took a turn for the worse when my phone rang on the morning the story was published. The conversation went a bit like this.

    Caller: Is that Matthew Davis?

    Me: Yes.

    Caller: Mr Ecclestone here.

    Me (in high voice): What Mr Bernie Ecclestone?

    Caller: Yes, that’s me. Listen, I don’t like people who write lies about me. I didn’t get any freebie tickets for Wimbledon. Why would I have to accept freebies?

    As you can imagine at this point I was getting a little concerned. Images of my bankruptcy, being forced to live in the street with my children foraging in dustbins flashed before my eyes.

    I told him that I hadn’t made it up but had been provided with the information by the BBC, and seeing as it was a FoI response I was happy to forward it on to him. You can see a copy here Beeb’s FoI reply.

    Later that day I got another personal call from Mr Ecclesstone, where he admitted being reminded by one of his staff that he did accept a pair of tickets from the BBC, but handed them on to the President of Valencia.

    It all ended quite amicably and I had quite a nice chat with ‘Mr E’.

    As a part-time media law lecturer one of the things that has always appealed to me about FoI is how the answer should always act as a justification against any potential legal problems, as long as your interpretation of it is correct. Hence the need to make your question as crystal clear as possible.