The Intelligence Advantage

Welcome to The Intelligence Advantage podcast. 

In this episode, host Gary Miller sits down with veteran journalist Chris Blackhurst to explore the highs and lows of investigative journalism. From daring undercover operations to the relentless pursuit of truth, Chris shares firsthand accounts of breaking major stories like the BBC Director General’s tax scandal and government misuse of public funds. The pair discuss how curiosity, intuition, and sometimes luck play pivotal roles in uncovering secrets that shape public discourse.

Listeners get an insider’s view of British secrecy versus American openness, with Chris shedding light on the challenges journalists face when prying open society’s closely guarded vaults. The episode dives into notorious investigations, ethical dilemmas, and the thin line between persistence and intrusion. Stories of phone hacking, whistleblowers, and brushes with danger offer a fascinating look into the real-world risks behind each headline.

Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
06:01 Challenges of Investigative Journalism
09:58 Political Corruption: UK vs. US
13:10 Access Denied to National Archives
17:03 Secrecy and Borrowing in Britain
19:21 Inside Parliament: Access and Records
23:12 Political Heat Spurs Inquiries
25:39 BBC Director General Tax Scandal
29:38 Eureka Moment: Story Confirmed
32:20 Princess Diana Interview Scandal Allegations
36:29 Chaos Over Conspiracy Beliefs
37:49 Media's Role in Public Interest
43:31 Factory Settings Risk Explained
47:13 Thief Caught Targeting Homes
48:39 Lawyer's Trash Yields Secrets
52:51 Inquisitive Hunger: Still Alive?
54:40 The Cost of Investigative Journalism

If you love uncovering hidden truths or have a passion for the stories behind the news, this episode is for you! Tune in to hear how legendary investigations come together and pick up tips from Chris Blackhurst about following your curiosity. Don’t forget to subscribe to the Intelligence Advantage podcast for more fascinating discussions with industry leaders and to stay updated on future episodes!

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What is The Intelligence Advantage ?

An insight into the character, personality and passion of the leading figures in the Investigation and Intelligence industry who have shaped the way we gather, analyse and utilise information and intelligence.

I know there's so many, but pick out your favorite, Your favorite

investigation. One that at the time caused

a massive stir. I discovered that the. The Director

General of the BBC, John Burt, that he was actually being

paid as a freelancer to allow him to

avoid paying tax. Being the investigative journalist,

it's very frustrating. I mean, for every story that

you succeed and break, there are lots of failures.

It is obsessive, it's time consuming. It's also

very much, I wouldn't say out of

favor, but proprietors like it when

it succeeds because they get all the plaudits and

win awards and things. But if somebody doesn't

want you to find out something, there are lots of things they can

do to keep it secret. And the way our,

our society, our financial system, our

legal system, the way that's all structured, in my

view, it helps people who want to hide things.

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence Advantage podcast where we talk

to the movers and shapers in the investigation and intelligence

space. My name is Gary Miller. I've been an investigative

lawyer for nearly half a century, and I'm also the chairman of the

IfG, a network of international investigative and

asset recovery lawyers. My guest

today is somebody who has spent a lifetime on both sides of

the headlines, writing them, managing them, and

occasionally becoming one himself. Chris

Blackfoot Hearst has been the editor of the Independent City, editor

of the Evening Standard, director at CT Partners, and

is now a writer, commentator and strategic communications

advisor. He's also the author of two cracking

books, Too Big to Jail on HSBC

cartels and the World's Most Expensive Apology

and the World's Biggest Cash Machine on Manchester United,

the Glazers and Football's Uneasy Marriage with money.

Chris, welcome to the Intelligence Advantage and thank you for

swapping the Editor's chair for the interviewee seat.

Okay, It's a pleasure, Gary. And I think

what I've got to do is kick off immediately with the question

of what is it that drives your quest

for knowledge and unearthing

things? What is it? Was there a particular event when you were

a young lad? Did mom and dad drop you on your head and that's when

it started? What happened? Look,

it's interesting. I think I always say this to.

When I speak to people who say they want to be

journalists, I often say,

how nosy are you? I am. There's

something about me. I am a nosy parker. If I go in

a garden, I have to look over the fence to see what's

next door. I was once given a great piece of Advice. As a

journalist, somebody said to me, never walk past the photocopier without lifting

the lid. And it's great advice, great advice.

It's sustained me ever since. You find out the most amazing things. Look, if there

was one event, and I was absolutely gripped

by it at the time, we all were, and I suppose I'm

dating myself now, but it was all the President's

men. Watching two journalists bring

down the most powerful man in the world without firing a shot

was an incredible, incredible film. I love the book. Woodward and

Bernstein were my heroes. And

that diligent, plodding,

when you're dealing with incredibly

mighty powerful forces, but

you're probing away and getting inside them

and uncovering a scandal.

It sustained me. It's something I've always thought about. My first

national newspaper was the Sunday Times. Right. That was the

Insight. Was that the Insight magazine or. Yeah, I

started. No, I started on the business section and then they moved

me to the Insight team. I was deputy editor of

Insight. And that was. Well, it was a mixture, really.

But its remit was investigations, and

we tried to keep them in the public interest.

I mean, perhaps others could be the judge of that, whether we succeeded or

failed. But we broke some very big stories, including the

super gun affair. We led on that.

I mean, we were.

Some of the time. It's hard to imagine, looking at me now, but

are you gonna say you. Did have hair at one stage, like me?

I didn't have hair then, actually. I was. I was. I. I

lost my hair quite. Quite young. But

hard to imagine me going undercover. But we did go

undercover, and we posed at all sorts of people. And

sometimes successfully, sometimes not, sometimes scarily. And

it was. It was

fascinating work, sometimes

very frustrating. I mean, you know, you can spend forever

investigating somebody and, you know, I mean,

as we like to say, we know the story's true, but it's not good enough

to be true for a lawyer. And we.

We lacked the killer fact. And however hard we tried,

we couldn't get the killer fact. Was this on a particular. Was this on the

super gun case or not? No, I'm

trying to remember one. I mean,

certainly I spent some time investigating

the funding of the ira. That was very

frustrating. I mean, one of the lessons.

One of the things you realize is that while, I

mean, the way. The way it's painted and,

you know, obviously all the President's men and onwards, but

the way it's painted on screen is you've got these

journalists and they're racing around and they're trying to Find

out and get inside things. Well, if you're dealing with

people, an institution, an organization

that doesn't want you to find out something, then

the odds are stacked very heavily in their favor. I mean,

it is very, very hard. I'm sure you know this in

your work. They're very similar. And I dealt a lot with lawyers

and we were often hand in glove because

we can ask questions, they can't. Likewise, they

can find things that we can't. And sometimes we come together on

story and work well together. But if somebody

doesn't want you to find out something, there are lots of things

they can do to keep it secret. And the

way our society, our

financial system, our legal system, the way that's all

structured, in my view, it helps people who want to hide

things. I mean, I

think since I was probably in short trousers,

politicians have talked about the

need to crack down on tax evasion,

money laundering, terrorists,

financing drug, organ financing, a drug crime,

you name it. And yet

all around the world, there are offshore

havens that literally sell secrecy.

That's what they do. And some of them are even

protected by the British Crown. Is there,

when you mentioned the secrecy

factor here, Chris, is there another jurisdiction that,

now that you look at it and over the years that you would say, gosh,

I would have loved to have been an investigative journalist there. Would it be

the States? Is that any better or not? I think it would be the States.

Actually. We have a view and I don't know what it's

like right now. I'm not sure if I'd want to be an investigator. Well, I

think it'd make much difference. But the truth is,

America, we like to think in Britain that we have a very open

society. It's one of the things we're taught. It's almost in

our. It's slipped into our DNA

the moment we're born that Britain is this very liberal, open,

cultured, even intellectual place,

liberal, et cetera, et cetera. Certainly

that's how we sell ourselves to the world. In

fact, it's a very secretive

place. And

compared with America, which we like to view the

American legal system,

we're all a bit on this side of the pond. We're a bit snooty about

it. They do crazy things, but actually, I take my

hat off to them. It works. And they

have a very open. I mean, look, I can't find out,

you know, I'm sure you haven't, by the way, but I can't find out if

you've got a criminal record in this country in the States.

And you're in the States, you can. I see, yes,

in the States. I mean if you think

about, and I've written many, many of

these stories about politicians,

you know, taking bribes, being, being paid to ask

questions, paid to say things,

offered inducements. Well, in the States

and they're often put through on expenses or they're,

they're shrouded in some sort of opaque

explanation. In the States they

don't, I mean obviously they have

bribery and sleaze and that happens there as well. But

if I want to find out, I mean, the best

example I can give is the scandal in the UK of

MPs expenses. You know,

that entire scandal

rested on one person effectively

stealing, well, improperly.

He took something he wasn't supposed to take,

which was a CD

detailing all the MPs expenses and selling it to a

newspaper. Now as it happens in the States,

and the idea

in the States that journalists pay for information

is anathema. I mean they just do not do it.

It's absolutely forbidden in the States and

they look down on the British media because

sometimes frankly do have to pay.

I mean, as it happened, I worked for newspapers that were deeply impoverished.

But you know. Can you

think of a particular case where you had no alternative but to

pay? We certainly had, we certainly had to pay in the

past, private detectives and people to find out

information. We have. Look,

when I was, when I was in the Sunday Times, we did pay, not

large sums and we would say that these were

for the public interest. We weren't doing, we weren't

at the tabloid end, we weren't doing celebrity tittle tattle.

But the point I'd make is that

the Telegraph, which broke the MP's expenses story,

they paid for that CD

in the states, members of Congress,

the Senate, et cetera. Their expenses are

detailed, they're listed. I mean all we were asking

was all

we wanted to see, all the Telegraph paid to see, if you think about

it, was information

detailing what our taxpayers money has been

spent on. These are MPs claiming

expenses paid for out of public funds. Yet me

as a member of the public, I cannot find out

what they're claiming. And that is a typical example. I

mean, I can think of another one. A very good friend of mine,

Andrew Lowney, the author and literary agent,

he has spent now,

I think it's 400, I mean certainly more than 350,

getting probably around £400,000

of his own money, trying to get access to

the Lord Mountbatten archive.

Mountbatten died when he died, his

archive, all his material from his life,

much of which contains his time as

Viceroy of India, was left to the nation

for historians, future historians, et cetera, to study.

So you'd think it perfectly reasonable that Andrew Lowney, who's a very

respectable figure, should be allowed to look at this archive?

The answer's come back, no, you can't. Just because it was left

to the nation doesn't mean the nation can necessarily see it.

So you can't see all of it. And that's an example.

So this has passed me by, I'm sad to say,

Chris. So who has he been suing? What body or which

part of government or whatever? He's been involved in

countless legal claims against

the. It's actually against Southampton University, which

is the keeper of the archives. I see. But,

you know, the palace is involved. And,

look, this happens all the time. I mean, you know, all walks of

life. I mean, another one that comes to mind is people who

leave their houses and their art collections in lieu

of tax on the basis that

the public will be able to view the art or go around the

house. And it is heavily restricted.

I don't know. I don't know what it is. I don't know if it's our

class system. Sorry. Let me ask you this.

Which newspaper either covered or is covering the Andrew

Rowney story? It's been in many papers.

Honestly, recently. Yeah, yeah. It's been, of course,

celebrity. He's written the. He's just produced the new book about

Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, but before that,

he wrote about Mountbatten. Okay. So do you happen to know

what the grounds are that Southampton University say

they are not allowed? The

palace has the. I think it's the. I need

be careful about my facts here, but Southampton University

or Buckingham Palace? I think it's Southampton University.

It might have been left to the Nation, but they have the ultimate

veto as to what can be made available

to the nation. It's just an example of

the way this society is. I mean, there is a scene

and there's an episode in all the President's Men that's always stuck

with me, which is. And I can't remember why, so

forgive me, but there's a point in the saga

where the two journalists, Bob Woodward and

Bernstein, want to. They need

to find out what the President. What Nixon

has been borrowing or what his staff have been borrowing.

What book have they been borrowing from

the Congressional Library. I know it sounds an

arcane point, but it's relevant to the story.

Okay. And I Can't remember why. And

after some persuasion, they get the

answer. And the answer is actually quite critical at that

point in the story in this country. If I asked

Downing street, what are you

borrowing? What are you borrowing from the

British Library or the House of Commons library, I

would be told politely, but,

you know, rudely, if you want to apply rude, you know, but,

you know, I'll be told where to go. Yeah, more politely than

that, but it would be denied. You could not find that out.

And that really goes through all walks of life in Britain.

I mean, a very good example I would give you, which

has always stayed with me, and I was closely involved, so

we're going back in the midst of time, but I

was. One of the big

scandals, big core celebra,

was the supply of arms to Iraq

when we were not meant to be supplying arms to Iraq.

Is this the Matrix Churchill saga? Yes. So

this is 88, 89. It

was much later than that. It was the mid-90s.

Oh, okay. Well, the. The. The. I. I was.

It broke in the early 90s

in the John Major. I think the John Major government, because I was in the

Houses of Parliament then, and it led to

the Scott inquiry. Who. Who were you working for at that

stage? You were. I was at the Independent. I was their

Westminster reporter. I see. Okay. I had my dream

job. Of all the jobs I've had, it was probably the best job I've ever

had. My job was simply to go around the Houses of

Parliament and find stories.

So this is when you were Westminster correspondent, is that right? Yes,

I was in the lobby. I didn't have to go to listen to the briefings

or anything like that. My job was effectively to be a

sleuth with a. How many sleuths were there

wandering around Parliament at the time? You were. There's probably all sorts,

but I was one wearing a pass, and I

was allowed to, you know, I could effectively go

anywhere I wanted, pretty much apart from the House of Commons

chamber and the Members bar. But everything else was

pretty open to people carrying passes. I

could go around and what people may not realize

about the place like that, and I'm sure it's true of other jurisdictions,

the amount of material is generated on a daily

basis in the Houses of Parliament. Written material

that literally just piles up every day.

Every day there will be reports.

There'll be a report, there'll be the

publication of the minutes. Of course, there's

Hansard, which, you know,

Hansard every day faithfully reproduces every

single word that is said

inside the House of Commons, inside the House of Lords,

in the main chambers, but also in all the committee rooms.

Yeah, but what I want to know is, Chris, I want to know what you

picked up by being an intuitive sleuth.

How many. How off. How long were you Westminster correspondent

for? I was five years. I was five years. I broke the

story about the Purgau Dam, which was a

deal to. Between the British

company and the Malaysian government to build a dam,

a hydroelectric dam, but it was

really a sweetheart deal being

used by the government to UK

government to further an arms contract. We

wanted to sell arms to Malaysia and that

was a pretty scandalous use of taxpayers money.

That was one. But hold on, hold on, before you move on,

just give me. Because you've alighted on it, just

tell me, how did you. You were the Westminster correspondent. Did you pick it

up by speaking to someone in the House of Commons

or was it something that you decided you wanted to research? I

think I saw it referenced in a report I was taught, and this is a

very good tip for anyone. Right, Another tip, apart from

never walk past a photocopy without lifting a lid. Another one is always

read a report from the back. You normally have the executive

summary at the front. I would

venture that 95% of people never get beyond the executive

summary. And at the back there's the

appendices. And those appendices

contain all the written evidence, all the written material that's

been submitted. I think it was in there. I saw reference

to it. But what piqued your interest? What was it that.

I think it was

the way it was described. Honestly, Gary, I can't.

No, it was a long time ago. Now, just give you an example of how

secret Britain is and how it works. So the Matrix

Churchill affair, which we were. The government was accused,

the Conservative government was accused of supplying

allowing arms or military equipment,

equipment that could be used for military purposes, to be

sold to Iraq in contravention of an

embargo. And that led to the.

That was a big scandal, big hue and cry. And then

governments do. What they always do in these situations is

that they. Did you break that story, Chris? Did you break the arms?

I can't remember if I actually broke it. I was certainly doing it day after

day after day, and it was an unfolding drama.

But then they do what they always do in this country,

which is when it gets too hot

politically, they call a halt and appoint a

judge to hold an inquiry, to have an inquiry. This

happens all the time. We've seen it with, you know, Right now

we've got inquiries into Covid. The post office

inquiry is still reporting. I mean, you

know, if it, if it looks awkward, you, you

immediately call a review. And the second

you call a review and it goes to judicial inquiry.

And of course, famously, we have this with Len and phone hacking,

which I was heavily involved in. Yeah, Tell me a little bit about the phone

hacking story. How do you. Let me just finish. Let me just finish about

Scott, because the main. I'm only going to let

you finish if you promise. You've got to promise me no more, no

bleating on about how secretive the government is. I want

to know what you personally have done to lift the lid on that secrecy.

Okay, okay, okay. Let me just tell you, gives the example. So

Scott inquiry. It sat for 18 months. Richard

Scott, the judge Lord, very senior judge, held this

inquiry vast expense. When the report was coming

out, they announced that it,

for the first time ever, and I'm dating myself, it would be published,

released as well as in hard copy. It would be released with

all the evidence on CD rom. Right. Remember a CD

rom? So we immediately got a bike messenger,

sent them over to wherever it was in Whitehall to get the

CD rom. They hot hooped back to the office. We

loaded it into the machine. We were expecting,

hallelujah, documents after documents. And

what we saw were literally blank pages where

all the documents had been redacted. Just because it was being

published on CD Rom didn't mean it couldn't also be

redacted. What was the

biggest scandal that you have, that you have blown the

COVID on? I know there's so many, but pick out your

favorite, um, your favorite

investigation. One that at the time

caused a massive stir was

I discovered that the, that the

Director General of the BBC, John Burt,

was. And this is the Director

general. I mean, this is the man in charge of the department, a whole organization,

the BBC, that he was actually being paid as a

freelancer to allow

him to avoid paying tax.

And that was a very big scandal at the time.

There was front pages everywhere. I was accused of

being. I mean, it's bizarre because the other thing that happens when you break stories

like that is the people turn on the messenger. So

they look at the message, but they also turn on the messenger. So

I was then accused of being part of some cabal to

get rid of the Director General of the BBC. And this story

ran and ran. I think I won an award for it. How did

you break it? Why did you pick it up and how did you break

it? I'm Sorry to be very mundane about this,

I literally. The phone went. And as it

happened, I was at the Independent, and our office back then was in

City Road in the City of London. And across the road

was company's house. And this person said,

go across the road to company's house. And

we dealt back then in microfiches. Oh, I remember those days.

Get the feesh for John Burt Productions and phone me

back. So who was that? Who was on the

phone? I can't. We don't reveal sources. Of course you don't, silly.

Okay, come on. But did that person reveal their name then?

Or did they just say, I knew who they were? Oh, I see. Okay. And

I went across the road. I paid my. Probably back then, only a

pound or five pounds, whatever it was. I got the leash. There

it was, loaded it up to the. Into the reader, and

there it was. And what. What was there was laid

out in black and white. John Vert had a very poor

accountant, and his

accountant hadn't effectively summarized

his expenses, which you were allowed to do. He'd actually detailed them

in glorious Technicolor. So it had literally did have his

Armani suits, his satellite dish he was having on the roof of

his house. His meals, his taxes, everything was laid out

in minute detail. Okay, let me ask you this. Pause.

The point about this is, I would say this, it still didn't

prove that. He wasn't paying tax.

Exactly. And that this, the money in this company wasn't

necessarily his BBC salary. It certainly matched

it at the top. But what we were told he was being

paid, but there was no proof. And when I put the call to the

BBC, it was completely denied.

They said, this is rubbish, blah, blah, blah. And I actually

wrote the story that was. And it wasn't destined for the front page

for this reason. It was full of words like might, maybe,

could. But I

decided to have one more go. And on a Saturday morning, this was for

a Sunday newspaper, Sunday Independent. I actually went to his

house in Southland and I knocked on the door.

He came to the door, he tried to close the door. He nearly broke my

foot, literally. Were you there with a camera as well, with a cameraman?

No, no. But he pushed the door on my foot, right.

I said to him, you're breaking my foot. And he said, I don't talk to

journalists at my house. I thought, that's a bit odd thing, as the Director General

of the BBC. But.

Had you tried to go into his office, Chris? Had you tried to go

or you knew you. You would never get past the reception desk, is that it?

No, we'd never get in the security. So he.

I went back to the office feeling very crestful and

I still couldn't prove anything. And then my phone went and it was the

BBC head of corporate affairs who said,

look, in return for leaving John

Burt alone, we will issue a statement.

And then five minutes later this statement came across

confirming my story and it literally was

a eureka moment. I had the pleasure

of going back into the story and changing all those words.

May my could to is, is and

has. So it became definitive, it went on the front page

and we had the story. But another one,

hold on, before you. Go on, I want to ask this question. On a

scale of moral turpitude or even

unlawful criminal turpitude, what

is coming out and what I've seen is, is there's certainly this theme of

government servants who are not accounting, in your view,

for what they are doing with the government's money,

etc. And using money

in, for example, the Malaysian deal. Do

you have a really narrow scale of

what you want to reveal and what you think is heinous?

Is it one of the most heinous things that a government servant, or the most

heinous thing they can do is use

government money for personal purposes? And why

I would say, look, we're all brought up on

James Bond films and things like that.

That's at one extreme. Do they really

sanction black ops

wet jobs, whatever the phrase that they use in

spooksville, I've no idea. But you'd have to

suspect they do, wouldn't you? Yeah, you would. But you know,

it's never really surfaced occasionally in connection

with more to do with other

agencies in other countries. So you come back from that if

that's the worst thing? Well, coming back from that is

misuse of public funds, misuse of taxpayers money,

Hypocrisy. We don't like hypocrisy. No one

likes hypocrites. And then the other thing I think is

the, and this is obviously true of Watergate, the COVID up is often

worse than the crime. Of course. Yeah. And I

mean, another story I broke was the story that

to when Princess Diana

gave her famous interview to Martin Bashir, the

one saying that there's the three people in this marriage, you know,

the famous interview, the Panorama interview. Yeah. The

following day I had a phone call from somebody and I'm not saying

who, and I've been asked countless times,

somebody rang me and said, you should ask

the BBC, did they use, did

they falsely accuse, did they falsely allege

that MI5 were following and

watching Diana and was that how they got the interview? In

other words, was she made to believe that

she was herself the target of

MI5 and being watched and, you know, she felt

under massive pressure. So I put the call in,

it was completely blanket, denied. Who did

you put the call to? To BBC Press office. And

I then went back to the person who phoned me

and said, told him what had happened.

He said, you should go back to them and ask,

did they actually use, did they falsify documents

to back up their claim? And I put that to them and that was completely

denied. Now, I was able to write the story

saying that speculation, it was based on speculation.

I couldn't prove anything. I was being assured

by somebody who obviously had very close

connections or was within the BBC. And I'm not saying more than

that. They knew what they were talking about later,

years later, and we're talking very

recently, there's been yet another

official inquiry into this whole affair. And in

the timeline, in the timeline of

events, the very first call alerting the BBC

or people at the BBC to what Panorama might have been doing

was yours, made by yours truly. But

that led actually to a very big cover up.

Let me ask you this before you continue. Did you ever meet

Bashir? Was he a good buddy of yours? No, no,

Bashir did not want this story out and it's cost him

dearly because it's now being shown that,

yes, he got the world famous. I mean, look, there's two schools of thought on

this. Yeah. I'll be very frank. Some people say

he got the world famous, the historic interview on

the back of subterfuge and effectively deceit.

But others say, yeah, but he got the interview. Yeah.

And there's two ways of looking at it. The point was, though,

that the

snowball effect of that interview led to the.

I mean, following that interview, the Queen ordered Charles

and Diana to separate. They were told, and as

publicly documented, they were told by the palace

to. That's enough. And

that led to divorce. It led to Diana

not having the palace security and of course it led

to her dying in the car

crash in Paris. Arguably, if she'd had

palace security with her that night.

She might still be alive, is your point. And certainly

those around William and Harry and others blame

that interview for what happened. I see. Do you. Do you think that

there is a valid connection between those

events? Yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah. I

don't believe necessarily it was. I mean, some people go much further and

talk about conspiracy

that the

supposed forces of darkness, she had to

be effectively silenced.

I don't buy that. I mean, one thing I have learned, Gary, is that,

and I learned this very early on at the House of Commons, I went to

the Parliament believing that much of what

happens around us is based on conspiracy.

And I've been there about two weeks and I realized it was total chaos.

It's based on incompetence. Not. Not conspiracy. Right. It really

is. It really is. And, but I want to

ask you. This before it goes out of my brain. What

level of misrepresentation,

inference, inducement and

then deceit? What is it that a journalist, an

investigative journalist, in your view, is entitled,

justified to use to get at the truth, and

does it vary in severity according to what that

truth is likely to be or is suspected

to be? Yeah, I would. Look, I would be very

candid about this. I would argue,

and I have argued and I've appeared in court

in cases on the wrong side.

Pretty much anything is justifiable if it's

in the public interest. I believe that the media,

the fourth estate, has a duty to

hold our politicians, hold our whole businesses,

but certainly politicians, where it's public

money involved and the national interest and the

good of the nation, we have a duty to hold them

to truth. And anything

pretty much that

gets to that is justified. Now, the problem

with what I've said is that we, the media,

me, the journalist, I am putting, I am effectively

making myself judge and jury. Who am I to say if

something's in the public interest? And that's where it gets very

tricky. But particularly when you are

the journalist on, let's say, about to

enter somebody's or knock on their door.

And the most, in a way, the mildest

misrepresentation is, yes, I'm the gas man.

I've come to look at this.

So you are going to be the determinator there. And then I doubt very much

you're going to call up your senior editor or whoever it is and say, is

it okay if I do this? That just doesn't happen in real life, does it?

No, it doesn't happen in real life. And the

less people know at the top, they don't want to

know. They want to be protected.

And the way to protect themselves. Is that the view you took as editor?

Don't tell me, go out and do your job, but just don't tell me what

the hell you're doing. You're putting

me on the right. I'd like to say that I did know.

I'm Pretty sure I didn't know everything. I remember

on one occasion. I won't say what this was about, but I had to put

somebody on the spot in my office and say, I need to know who your

source is because we were in very deep water on

something. What exactly the people at the

top of those media organizations,

News Corporation in particular, knew exactly about what

was being done in their name? It's hard to tell,

but the point is it was being done in their name and

they should have known. But is that a classic

example of the COVID up being, I say,

10 times worse, being just exponentially worse than

saying, yes, we figured out that with

mobile telephones that if you called them and you press this number

in, we could breach confidentiality

and find out what they were saying. Is that. Is the

COVID up worse than the, than the crime, do you think?

I think it is. I think if. Well, in that particular

case, on incident or even

a handful of incidents. Yeah. A handful of celebrities

and politicians and all sorts of people. I mean, you know,

the mother of Stephen Lawrence, I mean, you know,

Millie Dowler, I mean, you know, the poor girl who was murdered. I

mean, is that where it started? Was it the Millie Dowler

murder inquiry? Is that where it kicked off? No, no,

it started before that. It started

with. It actually began with a

report in the News of the World

about Prince, Prince

Charles, as he then was expressing concern that William

had, I think he'd either broken his arm or injured his arm

playing rugby at Eton. And

the palace showed Charles the

cutting. They get the cuttings, the news, you know, and they.

He looks at it and said,

that's exactly what I said. I see.

Those were my exact words. And the interesting thing

about this is that I'm sure you'll say you're not Gary, but,

you know, let others be the judge of that. We're all fundamentally

lazy. If something is given to us

on a plate, you know, we just can't help

ourselves. And that's what happened. I

mean, you know, hacking was. I mean, it's called hacking,

you know, I actually think it's a misnomer. I still think hacking in most

people's minds, that, you know, you're thinking of people sitting

at computer screens and actually hacking into someone's

account. It wasn't like that, as you rightly say. It was,

you know, it actually all started with a

double glazing. I think it was a double glazing salesman in South

Wales who couldn't get his phone messages because his phone had

broken. So he phoned Vodafone.

It's true story. He phoned Vodafone and said he

needed one for work. He knew someone had left him a message

about an order, right. So he phoned

Vodafone and said, do you keep phone messages? And they said, no, sir, that would

be highly improper. And he said, oh,

I need this. It was message. And the person

on the other end said, well, did you change the factory setting? And

he said, what factory setting? And of course, all of us,

all of us, you know, you get your mobile

phone, it comes in a box, you rip open the box, you turn it on

and you start using it. How many of us actually read the instructions?

And there is none of us. Security setting, security setting.

And this lady said, if you didn't change the factory

setting, what sort of phone is it? He told her, she said,

you dial something like hash,

hash, and then the number, and then 333,

whatever it is, hash and you'll get your messages.

And he twigged immediately and said, can

anyone do that? And they said, if you haven't changed the

factory setting, anyone can access your messages.

And oh, my God. So he

phoned. He did his duty as a

citizen and phoned. He phoned MI5.

He actually phoned MI5. There was a phone number. He phoned

Scotland Yard. They weren't interested, presumably knew about

it already. And then he did the crazy thing really

well. You thought he was doing the right thing. He phoned the sun news

desk or the News of the World in the Mirror and

they said, we'll get back to you. And of course, they

never did. I see. That's amazing. So

somewhere, somehow, somewhere, is a phone call from this

salesman. I think he was called. I'd have to check. I'm pretty sure he was

called John Morgan. And he was in Swansea, somewhere

like that, in South Wales. And you can just imagine the person at the

sun who then goes up to whoever was in

control of the sun at the time and says, you've just been told this. And.

And the. And the champagne

bottles start to open. Right. Yeah. And the point I'd make as

well is that journalists

hacking would never have been discovered. Really.

Coming back to the Buckingham palace, the Royal story, if you. And

this happened with a lot of the celebrities, that the

journalists were lazy. Instead of. And they didn't. Yes. They didn't summarize.

Instead of summarizing or changing the words, they just

repeated what the person had said and that

just put everyone on alert. Yeah. Let me ask you this question.

You have uncovered Some of the most. Some of the biggest

scandals in the last

30, maybe 40 years. Do you ever worry

about a Chris Blackhurst

identifying you, you know, an alter ego, saying, you

know what? This man is Mr. Whistle, not

whistleblower, Mr. Scandal Breaker. I'm going to

do a deep dive on him. I'm going to try my best to

embarrass, to find out something illegal, unlawful.

Do you worry about that or not? Yeah, I mean,

they wouldn't. I like to think they wouldn't find much.

I've. I've certainly. I mean, there was. I don't know if you remember

this episode, but during the whole

British Airways dirty tricks saga against

Richard Branson and Virgin, they were employing private

detectives and they were going around and I was. I was writing

story after story about that. Who were you with at the

time? I was with the Sunday Times and they picked

up the police, caught a guy,

literally, in

London, in West London. He was

stealing somebody's rubbish and

when they searched him, he was literally found

stealing a dustbin full of bags of

rubbish. And when they searched him, they found a list in his

pocket of names and mine was the next name.

And when he was interviewed,

he said that he'd been

around looking at the houses, checking them out.

And in my case, I had a

side gate, side access, but there was

a board on top to stop people, anyone climbing

over. I see. And that's. The bins were behind that locked

door. So you were aware

of this technique and so you protected your bins, is that it? No, no,

no, not at all. It was just. No, but there was, if you

remember, there was later, about that time actually,

there was a famous. They became famous. There was a guy called

Benji the Bin Man. Oh, yeah, I remember him. Benji the Bin

Man. His real name was Benjamin Pell. He was

going around the Inns of Court

and that area around where all the lawyers are,

Hoban, et

cetera, and literally loading up the rubbish

in the back of his van, taking it to his house

in North London, into the garage where he had a

tarpaulin spread on the floor and he was spreading out all

the contents. Now, between all the bits of

sandwich, the half eaten Mars Bar

and the whatever people chuck in their bins,

he was finding original and important legal

documents that had just been thrown away and

he would then phone and I would get the calls from him.

Right, so you knew him well, did you? I

wouldn't say I knew him well. We knew him and he

did want money, but he had found

documents. But to come back to Me? Look, I've

had threats.

You know, it goes to the territory. The one that really

scared me a lot was a guy who did leave a

very threatening message on a phone at home.

Right. And the message really said, because I've phoned this number,

you must realize I know where you live.

And then it clicked. That was it. Yeah, that was

scary. And that was in the context of what investigation,

Chris? That was in a political.

I mean, we're going back now, but that was the. To do

with a businessman called Owen Oysten, who was

being. It was a labor supporting businessman and he'd been

targeted by conservatives and they were

investigating him and they were

taping his phone calls, following him, et cetera, et cetera.

What they were doing was highly improper. Right.

What, in order. In order to besmirch the Labour Party, is that it or what?

To besmirch him and besmirch the Labour Party. I see.

But you know, other people,

I'm sure lawyers have threats. I mean, you know, it

goes with the go to the territory.

I mean, yeah, my life is pretty much an open book.

So you don't have a bodyguard anymore? No,

if I had a bodyguard, he'd look like me.

You mean a double? That's what we all need if we're investigating

is a double that you've seen in 28 different places. Right.

Well, you're my double and I. Absolutely, I go around

with you. No, look, you know,

if I ever felt in danger. There was one guy where we were

taping his conversation and my colleague had

to kept disappearing and looking very

panicked. And the guy said, where's your. What's he doing? We were undercover.

Well, you know, we were posing as somebody. We weren't. Or we

were showing interest in a story that wasn't the real story we were after.

And eventually, after a long hard stare,

he shrugged and said, okay, then. And

when we got back in the car, what was going on? And he

said, well, when we left the office, he put his hand in the

top drawer to grab the. The pearl

corded tapes. You know, there's tapes you use for dictaphones. Yeah, those

teeny ones. The tapes were 20 minutes. Yeah,

the tapes were 20 minutes, not. Not 90 or

60. So every 20 minutes he was going to the loo to change the tape.

I love it. And if that had been. If we'd been rumbled, I don't know

what would have happened. I mean, probably

nothing at all, but, you know, it was

things like that. All right, let me ask you, let me

ask you this has your hunger

for unearthing naughtiness diminished at all?

Or is it still something that

you wake up in the morning and you think, what can I

do now? What area deserves to be looked at and who

deserves to be, as it were, examined and

shown to be and examined to see whether or not they are

hypocritical or they're doing something unlawful? Is it

in your. Is it in your veins? It's in my veins.

If people tell me things or I spot something, I

can't let it go. I'm interested. I think as you get

older, and I think it's a

combination of age and

wisdom and possibly an element of exhaustion,

you become more selective.

And so in the past there would have

been. I think I would have gone

after anything. Now I'm a bit more.

A bit more selective, but

the hunger is still there. And now you're freelancing, are

you, Chris? You're not attached to any particular

these days? I don't really. I write

columns. I do now

and again reveal something in a column. Look,

I would say two things here. One is being the

investigative journalist. It's very

frustrating. I mean, for every story that you

succeed and break, there are lots of failures. It

is obsessive, it's time consuming. It's also very

much, I wouldn't say out of favor,

but proprietors like it when it

succeeds because they get all the plaudits and

win awards and things. But

generally, from a. A commercial standpoint,

it's a very

costly way of writing, a very

costly form of journalism. You've got people

tied up for months on end on one story that might

fail for all sorts of reasons. And

the sadness is, however good the stories

are, they don't really do much for circulation.

You know, you have your hits,

you have your sales, you have your hits,

but people then move on and go back to where they were. I mean,

and then other people pick up your story and what, suddenly

it's not your story, it's everybody's story. And so

proprietors have a very. I mean, if you think about it, a lot

of investigative broadcast journalism has

disappeared. What was that wonderful program

where I think even Mishkans

may have acted for him. He used to front up with camera

crew. Maybe it was just a version of 60

Minutes or whatever it was, was that. Wasn't there a fellow that did?

Yeah, well, we had. There was Donald, you might be thinking of.

Of Donald McIntyre. I think so. Donald

McIntyre used to do a lot of stuff like that. The Panorama

used to be an Hour long. It's now 30 minutes. World in

Action was an ITV. I see

equivalent. It long disappeared. I've done.

I've made dispatches for Channel 4.

Channel 4 doesn't have dispatches anymore that used to be an

hour long. Because these stories need telling. They're

not easy stories. No, they require a lot of resources.

Yeah, well, we have crept, or zoomed, I should

say, past the witching hour, and

I could carry on for another few hours, days and

weeks. Chris, you are one of these. You're one of these

fountains of information and experience

that requires to be tapped, if I'm not mixing up my

metaphor. So I want to say thank you big time for sharing some of

your. Stories, asking me if you ever want me back, if there's ever anything

breaking in the news. And you think, I wonder if Chris knows about this or.

I'm sure you do. And one day when we get together, I

want you to show me your little black book with all of the sources with

the code. So of course they won't have their names there. That will be,

you know, Mr. Orange, Mr. Blue, Mr. Gray. Right. I'll give

you a copy of Jeffrey Epstein's. I've got that. You can have that. Oh,

thank you. That's what you. That's what you called good friends. Thank

you, Chris. It's lovely to chat with you. Take care, buddy.

Bye bye. Thank you for listening and if

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