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Home » BBC » Adrian Mallett's full complaint Full details of the BBC complaint from Adrian MallettAfter watching the BBC Conspiracy Files program called '9/11 Ten Years On' Adrian Mallett, a member of the 9/11 truth movement, decided to complain to the BBC. The program distorted or avoided the facts in order to cast members of the 9/11 Truth Movement in the worst possible light. The BBC then broadcast a further program called '9/11: Conspiracy Road Trip' which can only be described as blatant propaganda in support of the official story. It was full of truly ridiculous 'demonstrated' and 'experimental' evidence heavily stacked to make a group of carefully selected young people, not fooled by the official story, look callous and delusional. The program was so bad that even people who had no idea of any of the problems with the official story thought it was daft. The BBC is governed by it own charter in which it states it is dedicated to the principles of accuracy and impartiality. Both programs mentioned above, and especially the Road Trip propaganda, ignored the BBC charter. If you care to read through the complaint correspondence that follows you will see that the BBC charter is nothing more than a paper exercise and the BBC itself has no interest in ensuring its producers comply with the rules. Index of complaint correspondence
29/05/2012 - Email from Lucy Tristam of the BBC Trust UnitDear Mr Mallett Further to my email of 10 May, I am writing to explain that, following receipt of a number of appeals regarding “Conspiracy Files: 9/11 Ten Years On”, the Trust’s Editorial Standards Committee approved consolidation of the appeals offline on 11 May 2012. We will be writing you again to provide you with our decision on the admissibility of these appeals, and your complaint regarding “9/11 Conspiracy Road Trip”, within the next 10 working days. Yours sincerely
Lucy Tristram
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