• Publish Your article
  • Editorial Policy
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Saturday, May 2, 2026
No Result
View All Result
UK Herald
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Sports
    England rugby stadium Twickenham given new name after more than 100 years in shock new deal

    England rugby stadium Twickenham given new name after more than 100 years in shock new deal

    Peter Morgan dead at 65: Former Wales and Lions rugby star who became a politician passes away as club pays tribute

    Peter Morgan dead at 65: Former Wales and Lions rugby star who became a politician passes away as club pays tribute

    Horse racing tips: Unexposed Group 1 contender can stun the big guns at 14-1

    Horse racing tips: Unexposed Group 1 contender can stun the big guns at 14-1

    Woman ‘raped seven times by two French rugby stars who left her riddled with bite marks & with horror injuries’

    Woman ‘raped seven times by two French rugby stars who left her riddled with bite marks & with horror injuries’

    Horse racing tips: Gary Moore’s charge can gain revenge after falling last time out

    Horse racing tips: Gary Moore’s charge can gain revenge after falling last time out

    Ian Buckett dead at 56: Former Wales rugby star who was ‘admired and feared equally’ dies as tributes pour in

    Ian Buckett dead at 56: Former Wales rugby star who was ‘admired and feared equally’ dies as tributes pour in

    Horse racing tips: Bash the bookies with these longshots including 9-1 fancy

    Horse racing tips: Bash the bookies with these longshots including 9-1 fancy

    Shayne Philpott dead at 58 – New Zealand All Blacks rugby legend dies after suffering ‘medical event’

    Shayne Philpott dead at 58 – New Zealand All Blacks rugby legend dies after suffering ‘medical event’

    Horse racing tips: This 7-1 chance appears to have been laid out for race he won last year

    Horse racing tips: This 7-1 chance appears to have been laid out for race he won last year

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Cable car with 98% incline has dazzling views of Europe’s ‘real-life Jurassic Park’

    Cable car with 98% incline has dazzling views of Europe’s ‘real-life Jurassic Park’

    The ‘Venice-like’ village in Wales designed to look Mediterranean has just turned 100

    The ‘Venice-like’ village in Wales designed to look Mediterranean has just turned 100

    Forget the Maldives and Mauritius — Africa’s smallest country is better every time

    Forget the Maldives and Mauritius — Africa’s smallest country is better every time

    People say Amsterdam is best in spring — I couldn’t disagree more

    People say Amsterdam is best in spring — I couldn’t disagree more

    New strict rule on hand luggage item will affect 580,000 Brits from next week

    New strict rule on hand luggage item will affect 580,000 Brits from next week

    The Japan train mistake that instantly shows locals you’re a ‘rookie’ tourist

    The Japan train mistake that instantly shows locals you’re a ‘rookie’ tourist

    I took ‘Europe’s most beautiful train’ to where Star Wars was filmed

    I took ‘Europe’s most beautiful train’ to where Star Wars was filmed

    Hiking over hangovers: Why Gen Z is opting for a different kind of holiday

    Hiking over hangovers: Why Gen Z is opting for a different kind of holiday

    The £935 sex cruise with a 24/7 ‘playroom’ — and one strict rule

    The £935 sex cruise with a 24/7 ‘playroom’ — and one strict rule

    Passengers braced for chaos as Spanish ground handlers set to walk out over Easter

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Crypto
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Sports
  • More
    • Press Release
UK Herald
No Result
View All Result

Telegraph declines to tell regulator how fake banker story got published

by Justin Marsh
March 3, 2026
0
0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterReddit

[ad_1]

Telegraph school fees article

The Telegraph has refused to tell press regulator IPSO how an article about a made-up banker supposedly impacted by school fee increases came to be published.

The article, headlined “We earn £345k, but soaring private school fees mean we can’t go on five holidays”, was published and quickly withdrawn in June last year.

Despite speculation that the article had been written using AI, Press Gazette confirmed it had been written by a real journalist and was based on a phone interview set up by a PR working for financial planning firm Saltus whose school fees research was referenced in the story.

The journalist appears to have been deceived by the man on the phone who gave a fake name.

Freelance journalist Ian Fraser raised concerns about the piece and the fact he could find no trace of bankers named Al and Alexandra Moy, the subjects of the piece, anywhere else online.

He also noted the pictures of a family used in the article were stock images taken in 2012 and 2014.

Fraser raised a complaint with IPSO which has now been upheld on accuracy grounds.

The Telegraph declined to provide an account to IPSO of how the article came to be published, citing confidentiality obligations. The publication said it did not need to provide further information for the investigation given it had already published an apology.

IPSO said: “Publications are expected to demonstrate what steps they have taken not to publish inaccurate information – this shows compliance with the Editors’ Code, and a commitment to high editorial standards.” The regulator said there had been a “serious failure” to take care over the story.

Telegraph ‘lost confidence’ in story over image concerns

The Telegraph said it had become clear soon after publication that there was an issue with the images, according to the IPSO ruling.

The Telegraph carried out an internal investigation after which “the team lost confidence in the article as a whole and immediately removed it from online”.

It blamed the issues on a failure to make pre-publication checks.

In response to Fraser, The Telegraph said: “We have established that contrary to the impression given, the images shown were stock photographs and not pictures of the family the subject [sic] of the article. We have also not been able to independently verify the details published.

“We are aware of speculation that the story was created using Artificial Intelligence; this is not the case. We apologise to you and have publicly apologised to all our readers for having published an article that did not meet the standards we and you expect from The Telegraph. We have reviewed our procedures to seek to avoid such an error ever happening again.”

IPSO said: “This was an unusual case where a publication had undertaken internal inquiries in response to complaints and concluded that it could not verify any of the details of a published article.

“This called into question the accuracy of the entire article, which had been presented as an illustrative example of the real-world impact of a controversial government policy.”

The Telegraph said it advised the journalists involved in the article’s publication that “significant mistakes” had been made.

It said in-person sessions were held with members of the relevant section “to reinforce not only what had gone wrong but the lessons that had to be learned and a reminder of best practice in respect of case studies”.

This best practice was also shared with other sections of the newsroom that produce case study-led stories.

Fraser had also queried the reporting that the family had dropped a gardener who increased his costs from £230 a year to £245, suggesting that it was implausible they would have “baulked” at paying an extra £15.

The Telegraph said this had come about through a sub-editing error and did not match what the man told the journalist on the phone.

This meant IPSO said the article was “inaccurate on at least two points: the gardener’s pay, which the publication had attributed to a subediting error, and the presentation of stock images as images of the family featured in the story”.

IPSO said The Telegraph’s original apology was “appropriate given the extent of the publication’s inability to stand by the story” but ordered an adjudication to be published on the Telegraph homepage because it had not sufficiently set out the extent of the inaccuracies.

The post Telegraph declines to tell regulator how fake banker story got published appeared first on Press Gazette.

[ad_2]

Source link

Related Posts

Winning design unveiled for first UK journalists’ memorial

Winning design unveiled for first UK journalists’ memorial

by Justin Marsh
April 23, 2026
0

Foreign office minister Chris Elmore said free societies rely on courageous journalism as he unveiled the winning design for the UK’s first national memorial for journalists killed doing their jobs. End of...

News diary 20-26 April: US-Iran ceasefire expires, tube strikes, London Marathon

News diary 20-26 April: US-Iran ceasefire expires, tube strikes, London Marathon

by Justin Marsh
April 18, 2026
0

Prime Minister Keir Starmer is under renewed pressure over his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US, following the revelation that he failed a security vetting. The top civil...

Banker Crispin Odey drops £79m Financial Times libel case

Banker Crispin Odey drops £79m Financial Times libel case

by Justin Marsh
April 13, 2026
0

Former City banker Crispin Odey has dropped his £79m libel case against the Financial Times. The move comes almost two years after he filed the claim and three years after the FT...

Le Monde CEO urges publishers to sign AI partnerships to stay competitive

Le Monde CEO urges publishers to sign AI partnerships to stay competitive

by Justin Marsh
April 8, 2026
0

Publishers should be signing AI licensing deals to ensure “strong competition” in journalism, according to Le Monde chief executive Louis Dreyfus. The French daily newspaper and website has seen a “significant amount...

Wired pulls plug on UK print edition as it focuses on global subscriber growth

Wired pulls plug on UK print edition as it focuses on global subscriber growth

by Justin Marsh
April 3, 2026
0

Wired will not put out a print magazine in the UK in 2026 as it focuses on global digital subscriber growth. Seven editorial staff left Wired’s London office at the end of...

News diary 30 March – 5 April: Tim Davie exits BBC, Apple turns 50, Easter Sunday

by Justin Marsh
March 29, 2026
0

The week ahead marks 50 years of Apple, with the multinational tech company having become one of the world’s leading producers of phones, software and consumer technology in its half-century of existence....

Next Post
7 of the UK’s prettiest towns and villages to while away an afternoon in

7 of the UK’s prettiest towns and villages to while away an afternoon in

Popular News

Britain must draw a firm line on Cyprus sovereignty

Britain must draw a firm line on Cyprus sovereignty

April 24, 2026
HMRC fights ruling to cut VAT on public EV chargers

HMRC fights ruling to cut VAT on public EV chargers

April 24, 2026
Cable car with 98% incline has dazzling views of Europe’s ‘real-life Jurassic Park’

Cable car with 98% incline has dazzling views of Europe’s ‘real-life Jurassic Park’

April 24, 2026
Winning design unveiled for first UK journalists’ memorial

Winning design unveiled for first UK journalists’ memorial

April 23, 2026
Mandelson process ‘beggars belief’: Keir Starmer’s statement to parliament in full

Mandelson process ‘beggars belief’: Keir Starmer’s statement to parliament in full

April 22, 2026
First look at Hyundai's new Ioniq 3 electric hatchback

First look at Hyundai's new Ioniq 3 electric hatchback

April 21, 2026
The ‘Venice-like’ village in Wales designed to look Mediterranean has just turned 100

The ‘Venice-like’ village in Wales designed to look Mediterranean has just turned 100

April 21, 2026
UK Herald

All Rights Reserved © UK HERALD - The Voice of UK

Important Links

  • Publish Your article
  • Editorial Policy
  • Contact
  • Advertise

...

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • UK News
  • Business
  • Science
  • National
  • Entertainment
  • Gaming
  • Sports
  • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Health
  • Food

All Rights Reserved © UK HERALD - The Voice of UK