In December 1988, Jones was arrested in a public lavatory block in
London's West End. He was initially charged with two counts of outraging public decency by behaving in an indecent manner under the
Westminster by-laws. Jones pleaded not guilty and was granted unconditional
bail. The charges were eventually dropped and costs were awarded to Jones.
For a time until 1990, Jones had been writing for
The Sun-Herald but it announced that Jones’ column would no longer appear following a petition by staff calling for his removal as a contributor. This followed Jones' publication of a column predicting an oil crisis, in which a large amount of material had been taken from
Frederick Forsyth's novel 'The Negotiator' without attribution or indication that their source was a work of fiction. Following his dismissal, Jones was hired by the Sun-Herald's rival paper, the
Sunday Telegraph.
Later that year, Jones in his role with 2UE was ordered by a court to pay more than $55,000 damages for
defaming David Parker, a former councillor of the
NRMA, the NSW Motorists’ organisation; 2UE was also ordered to pay $80,000. Parker claimed he was defamed during the NRMA election campaign in October 1986.
July 1991 had Jones commenting during a conspiracy to
murder trial, of
Tom Domican and two others; about the key crown witness, a self-confessed heroin smuggler, Jones said, “Why is he the witness and not the defendant?”
Contempt is not proved; what Jones did is said to be "dangerous".
1992 brought several events:
* Jones was rebuked by the NSW
Independent Commission Against Corruption for making attacks on Dr Terry Metherell during evidence in an inquiry relating to Metherell’s appointment to a government job.
*
Media Watch showed how on-air comments made by Jones about the Rio summit and the
Green movement aligned with those made by
B.A. Santamaria in
The Australian. Santamaria later said Jones had contacted his office for permission to quote from the article.
* Jones and 2UE were found guilty of contempt of court after the criminal trial of ex-policeman John Killen was aborted following an interview with a former Drug Enforcement Squad officer.
1993 was another year of controversy:
* In January, Jones described the choice of
Mandawuy Yunupingu (an
Australian Aborigine) as
Australian of the Year as an "insult" and said he’d been granted the award simply because he was black.
* In March, Jones and 2UE were prosecuted by the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions for
contempt of court and fined $77,000, of which Jones’ share was $2,000, after Jones caused the trial of a policeman to be aborted: The policeman was facing a charge of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice on the same day as Jones conducted an interview with the Police Association and dealt with allegations that police had suffered at the hands of false accusations.
* In June, leading
Australian Aborigine Charles Perkins and Jones clashed in a live TV and radio debate. Jones said Australians are "getting no say when [Aboriginal people] say this is [their] nation; it's not, it's Australia’s nation"... "[Average Australians] are being asked to pay taxes to fund people who are seeking title to productive land to which they’ve made no contribution to its productivity". Perkins called Jones racist and a redneck and comments "You’ve sat on your white bum at 2UE in Sydney all your life so you wouldn’t know what goes on out there".
1994 also had its moments:
* In April, after only 13 weeks and 64 episodes, the
Network Ten program
Alan Jones Live was pulled due to low audiences and criticism. It was intended to be similar in purpose and content to
Larry King Live.
* In July,
Media Watch highlighted Jones’ on-air promotion of
Optus.
* In November:
** Separately, Don Mackay, president of the NRMA sued Jones and 2UE alleging Jones made a number of false imputations against him.
** Further, Jones had a public spat with his fellow 2UE broadcaster John Laws. In an interview with Laws, then Prime Minister
Paul Keating said of Jones "You know, he’s got a good-rating program, even though it’s basically, you know, most of the stuff is middle-of-the-road fascism". Keating had refused Jones' requests to appear on his program all year.
In the late 1990s, Jones suffered more public humiliation when unedited studio recordings of pre-recorded material he had taped at 2UE were leaked to the ABC radio station
Triple J. Although the tapes were admittedly highly selective and were no doubt chosen to show Jones in the worst possible light, these recordings -- similar to the infamous leaked tapes of U.S. radio personality
Casey Kasem -- have since become something of a cult item with Jones' critics, especially since they present Jones as egotistical, ill-tempered and fond of using bad language.