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BBC apologises for misleading article – after facts are corrected, the ‘scandal’ disappears

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FOR six years a narrative has persisted online: “Herald newspaper editor owes £70,000”, “defies court orders”, “treats staff appallingly”. On 4 December 2025, the BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit finally ruled that the central allegation underpinning that narrative — that the editor personally owed £70,000 in unpaid debts — was inaccurate and breached the corporation’s standards of due accuracy.

Tom Sinclair with his apology letter from the BBC

The BBC has now apologised, amended the headline, and corrected the article.

And with that correction, the supposed “scandal” disappears.

What remains is not a tale of a serial debtor or a rogue employer but something far more mundane: a young entrepreneur who ran printing companies with his late father before 2011, closed or sold them in the ordinary way, and later launched a fast-growing but cash-tight local newspaper group in 2013 that hit a crunch point in 2019, paid everyone in the end, and was ultimately stabilised with outside investment.

When placed in proper chronological and factual context, there is simply no misconduct story left to tell.

The BBC article that refused to die

The original BBC Wales article (March 2019) appeared under the headline:

“Herald newspaper editor Tom Sinclair has £70,000 debts.”

It stated that Sinclair, who “runs The Herald in west Wales”, had “defied court orders to repay more than £70,000 to creditors”.

The phrasing implied:

  • that the debt was personal,
  • that the liabilities were recent,
  • and that they were connected to the Herald newspapers.

None of this was true.

Fraser Steel, Head of the BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit, wrote on 4 December 2025:

“…the wording of the headline and the first line of the report… could allow a reader to form the impression that the debt was your personal liability… Accordingly, the article failed to meet the BBC’s standards of due accuracy in that respect.”

The BBC apologised and amended the headline to:

“Herald newspaper editor Tom Sinclair’s group has £70,000 debts.”

Even this corrected headline encourages a casual reader — or an AI system scraping for summary — to assume that the Herald group itself owed £70,000 in unsatisfied judgments in 2019.

It did not.

Where the £70,000 figure really came from — and why it had nothing to do with the Herald

The number traces back to a June 2017 blog post by freelance journalist Gareth Davies. Davies aggregated almost £120,000 of historic County Court Judgments from a variety of dissolved companies — nearly all of them pre-2013 printing or magazine ventures that were long closed before the Pembrokeshire Herald even existed.

Key points:

  • The largest sums (£76,973 + £13,667) related to Megaprinter companies, wound down or sold years earlier, some jointly with the editor’s late father (same name).
  • Pembrokeshire’s Best Ltd (£15,000+) never traded properly; its co-director dissolved it without opening a bank account.
  • A scattering of very small CCJs related to companies that never commenced operations (“for all I know a parking ticket,” Sinclair wrote in 2017).

On 6 June 2017, Davies sent Sinclair a detailed list of the judgments. Sinclair replied the same day, explaining each company, stating clearly:

“I do not personally owe anyone any money,”

and noting that none of the listed CCJs related to the Herald newspapers.

Davies published his piece the following day, presenting the old dissolved-company CCJs as evidence of a pattern of evasion by the man now running a new newspaper group. Many industry observers noted the timing: the post appeared the very week the Ceredigion Herald was launching on the Cambrian News patch.

Two years later, in the middle of the Herald’s genuine 2019 cash-flow difficulties, BBC Wales revived the Davies narrative almost wholesale. No fresh verification appears to have been undertaken. The same £70,000+ figure resurfaced, this time expressed as if it were recent, active, and relevant to Herald operations.

Strip out the misattributed pre-2013 printing-company CCJs and what debt was outstanding in 2019?

A few thousand pounds in short-term wage arrears caused by a cash-flow crunch — all later paid in full.

That is all.

In journalistic terms: a non-story. Cash-flow wobbles happen to small newspapers every year; almost none of them make national headlines.

The real 2019 Herald crisis — and how it ended

Early 2019 was undeniably difficult:

  • over-expansion without sufficient working capital;
  • delayed wages (weeks, not months);
  • one operating company wound up in February 2019;
  • legitimate frustrations among staff and freelancers.

But by late 2019:

  • a six-figure investment from Rigographic España stabilised the business;
  • every staff member and freelancer was paid in full;
  • The Pembrokeshire Herald returned to weekly print;
  • sister titles moved to a digital-first model;
  • by 2025 the Herald network reached 34 million Facebook views per quarter and over 4 million annual pageviews.

In other words: a messy but fairly typical small-business near-death experience, followed by recovery and growth.

When the timeline is restored, nothing about this amounts to a scandal.

Why the corrected article still distorts the record in 2025

Even after the amendment and apology, the BBC article remains online and highly ranked. Most readers — and most AI summarisation tools — skim only the headline.

They see:

“…group has £70,000 debts”

and conclude that the Herald newspapers owed £70,000 in 2019.

They did not.

That is why Sinclair has asked the BBC for one final, modest addition: an editorial note clarifying that the historic CCJs referenced were unrelated to the Herald group, pre-dated it by years, and concerned companies that had ceased trading long before.

Once that simple clarification is added, the entire “debt scandal” narrative collapses.

There is nothing left except a local editor who made business mistakes, learned from them, paid everyone, and kept a community newspaper alive during an era when hundreds of titles have closed.

The wider lesson

This saga is a case study in how a misleading impression published by a trusted outlet can outlive the facts for years — amplified by search engines and by AI systems that prioritise authority over nuance.

It also demonstrates why accuracy standards matter: once the companies are correctly identified, the timeline is respected, and personal/corporate liability is properly distinguished, the lurid “£70,000 scandal” dissolves into something entirely ordinary.

The BBC has now acknowledged its error and apologised. With the full 2017 email exchange and the ECU decision published today on Herald.Wales, the record is finally straight.

  • There never was a £70,000 personal debt.
  • There never was a £70,000 Herald debt.
  • There never was a scandal.

Just a local newspaper that refused to die — and an editor who refused to let the record stay wrong.

 

Crime

Two arrested after high-value shoplifting incident in Kilgetty

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TWO men have been arrested on suspicion of shoplifting following a rapid police response to a reported high-value theft at a supermarket in Kilgetty.

Dyfed-Powys Police said officers were called to the Co-op store at around 3.35pm on Wednesday (Jan 28), after a report that a large quantity of alcohol and other items had been stolen.

Using information provided by the caller, Roads Policing Unit officers worked closely with control room staff to identify a vehicle believed to be involved. Several patrol cars were deployed, and the vehicle was located a short time later travelling east.

Police said the safety of all those involved was treated as a priority, with specialist Tactical Pursuit and Containment (TPAC) advice obtained while officers maintained constant observation of the vehicle.

The car was brought to a safe stop on a back road approaching Hendy, involving three Roads Policing Unit vehicles. No injuries or damage were reported.

Following roadside checks, two men — aged 67 and 46 — were arrested on suspicion of theft from a shop.

Both remain in police custody while enquiries continue.

Police said the swift response helped prevent further offending and demonstrated the effectiveness of specialist roads policing officers acting on real-time intelligence.

 

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Climate

Breaking down barriers between finance and industry in offshore renewables sector

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EARLIER this week, Marine Energy Wales brought together senior representatives from national and devolved finance institutions with developers, ports and supply-chain companies operating across Wales’ offshore renewable energy sector for a dedicated finance roundtable in Pembroke Dock. Attendance was limited to premium MEW members to allow for frank, focused discussion.

The session was intentionally designed to be different.

Rather than relying on formal presentations or sales pitches, the roundtable created a facilitated, closed-door space for open dialogue. Finance organisations were able to explain clearly how they operate, what types of projects they can support, and where constraints still exist. Industry participants, in turn, set out the real-world challenges they are facing across tidal energy, floating offshore wind, port infrastructure and supply-chain development.

What emerged was more than information sharing—it was a clearer, shared understanding of how decisions are made on both sides.

From siloed conversations to shared problem-solving

A consistent theme from the discussion was that significant public and institutional finance is now available to support clean energy projects. However, navigating that landscape remains complex, particularly for early-stage developments, smaller supply-chain businesses and emerging technologies.

By bringing the right people into the room at the same time, the roundtable helped to:

  • demystify how different finance bodies assess risk, scale and project readiness
  • highlight where policy ambition, market signals and investment criteria are not yet aligned
  • identify opportunities where better sequencing and coordination of funding could unlock progress
  • establish direct relationships that will support follow-up conversations beyond the room

The discussion also surfaced where gaps remain. In particular, the need for clearer market signals and more tailored support for tidal stream and other early-stage marine technologies was repeatedly raised. These are challenges that are difficult to address in isolation, but far more productive to tackle collectively.

The value of convening

For Marine Energy Wales, the roundtable reinforced the importance of our role as a neutral convener for the sector.

Members consistently tell us that access to finance is one of the most significant barriers to progress—not only in terms of capital availability, but in understanding how to engage effectively with funders. At the same time, finance organisations are keen to deepen their understanding of project development timelines, technology risk and the scale of Welsh supply-chain ambition.

Creating space for those conversations is where real value is added.

This is not about Marine Energy Wales brokering individual deals. It is about building shared understanding, reducing friction, and helping to align finance, policy and industry around credible pathways to delivery.

What comes next

This roundtable was not a one-off.

Marine Energy Wales is committed to continuing this work, developing structured and trusted forums where finance, industry and government can engage early, openly and constructively. As Wales moves from ambition to delivery in offshore wind and tidal energy, these relationships and conversations will be critical to ensuring projects are investable, deliverable and anchored in Welsh economic benefit.

We will continue to work with our members and partners to identify priority issues, convene the right voices, and help turn opportunity into tangible outcomes on the ground.

 

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Business

Eight-year prison sentence after vehicle stop uncovers drugs worth over £150,000

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A ROUTINE vehicle stop by roads policing officers has led to an eight-year prison sentence after more than £150,000 worth of illegal drugs were discovered in a car in Pembrokeshire.

On Friday, January 2, officers from the Roads Policing Unit stopped a grey Seat Ateca on Hoyland Road, Pembroke. The vehicle was being driven by 43-year-old Dean Evans.

During the stop, Evans told officers they would find “stuff” in the car. He and the vehicle were subsequently searched under the Misuse of Drugs Act.

A search of the boot uncovered a cardboard box containing a one-kilogram block of cocaine and ten half-kilogram packages of herbal cannabis. The street value of the drugs was estimated to be well in excess of £150,000.

Evans was arrested at the scene on suspicion of possession with intent to supply controlled drugs. He was later charged with possession with intent to supply Class A and Class B drugs.

The 43-year-old pleaded guilty at Swansea Magistrates’ Court on Saturday, January 3.

On Thursday, January 28, Evans was sentenced at Cardiff Crown Court to eight years’ imprisonment for possession with intent to supply cocaine and cannabis.

DC Jones, from Dyfed-Powys Police’s Serious Organised Crime Unit, said: “Tackling the supply of illegal drugs is a priority for Dyfed-Powys Police, and the misery that illegal drugs bring to local communities will not be tolerated.

“We welcome the sentence passed to Dean Evans, given the large quantity of harmful drugs he was caught trafficking into Pembrokeshire.

“This sentence should serve as a stark warning to anyone tempted to become involved in the illegal drugs trade in Dyfed and Powys.”

 

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