I'm glad you did.
I also remember not long ago when the East Midlands BBC reporter stated that Amaral had used the f-word against the mccanns, which he hadn't of course, and many McCain supporters were clamouring for his blood, merely because they had kept to a conclusion.
Lucky he wasn't making a statement in Portuguese at a sleepy UK police station, then. ;)
Personally, I made no assumptions about that. I was waiting to find an un-bleeped version to listen for myself, which I never did find. However, I can understand that it was bleeped out due to what it would have sounded like to an average English-speaker: if you hear a strong F, followed by a strong K, pronounced by someone who may have reason to be in a bad mood and you don't have time to double-check with a native speaker, yet have to roll... the safest thing is to bleep it out.
And then, of course, the fact of having decided to take no chances and to bleep it out became a story in itself.