The BBC's swift sacking of Scott Mills signals a serious reckoning with conduct that can't be ignored, as a police investigation into allegations of serious sexual offences against a teenage boy is not a minor footnote. Coming after the Huw Edwards scandal, the BBC had no choice but to act decisively. Dragging this out would've been another institutional failure the public simply wouldn't forgive.
The BBC panicked and recklessly ended a 25-year career at lightning speed over a police case that was dropped seven years ago for lack of evidence. The corporation's uncharacteristic haste reeks of an institution spooked by bad press rather than one acting on principle. Paying someone £360,000 a year and then sacking him without explanation isn't accountability — it's reputation management dressed up as justice.
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