The Intelligence Advantage

Welcome to The Intelligence Advantage podcast. 

In this episode, host Gary Miller sits down with his longtime friend, Patrick Grayson, to delve into Patrick’s remarkable career in the military, security, and corporate investigations. From his time in the Irish Guards during the Cold War and the turbulent days of the Cultural Revolution in Hong Kong, to encounters with crises in Africa and the Middle East, Patrick shares gripping stories of real-world intrigue, tough decisions, and lessons learned on the ground, and at the borders.

The conversation tracks Patrick’s evolution from soldier to tobacco marketer, then to a key player in the global investigations field. Patrick Grayson gives listeners an insider view into high-profile cases such as tracing assets for governments, navigating moral dilemmas, and training security teams in volatile territories, all while reflecting on the importance of camaraderie, integrity, and knowing when to trust your instincts.

Timestamps:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:06:24 Kenyatta, Kennedy, and Unexpected Moments
00:14:07 Border Tensions and Encounters
00:15:49 Border Incident and High-Level Tensions
00:24:58 Recovering Tobacco Brands Internationally
00:28:42 Ex-SAS Officer's New Offer
00:33:48 Training Foreign Security Forces
00:40:25 Hijack Story in Middle East
00:44:48 Joining Crow and Returning to London
00:49:04 1986: Pre-Internet Intelligence Work
00:57:11 Surveillance Operation in Geneva
01:00:28 Hachette Scandal Sparks Awkward Encounter
01:04:24 Independent Consulting and Competition
01:13:25 Lessons from Overexpansion
01:16:03 Grateful Tribute to Patrick

If you’re interested in behind-the-scenes action from the world of intelligence and investigations, or looking for wisdom on making tough calls, this episode is not to be missed!  Don’t forget to subscribe to the Intelligence Advantage podcast for more fascinating discussions with industry leaders and to stay updated on future episodes!

Video Production & Editing: PodLab
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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.

Is there anything that happened where you all in good conscience,

you said, and you made a decision saying, on balance, I think this is the

right thing to do, and then turned out that you'd made a.

Not horrific, but you'd made a decision that you didn't feel comfortable

about. We did have, have four of our people kidnapped in, in

Angola. Wow. So we obviously made

not a mistake, but we put people in harm's way there and they

were kidnapped. I have all had a philosophy that secrets,

secrets are not secrets. In certain places, every secret is a secret, but some

places not a secret. Yeah. A man's secret from his

affairs may be secret to his family, but not to the men in the golf

club sort of thing. So you need to identify where

the secret is not a secret.

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. I welcome a very

dear and long standing friend of mine, Patrick Grayson, to

share stories and experiences with me.

It's difficult to sum up in just a couple of lines Patrick's

experience in this space. He has either guided,

met, worked with all of the leading

CEOs and owners of corporate investigation agencies over

the years. And he is the point of call

for anyone in the industry that needs wisdom

and guidance. I'm thrilled to have you with me this

afternoon, Patrick. Welcome. Thank you, Gary. I'm delighted to be

here and I hope I can live up to some of your kind, generous

introduction. No problem at all. That's the easy

part. Now, I

know because I have known you for a while. I know

that you started off in Her Majesty's

Armed Forces, if I may refer to them, the Irish Guards,

in fact. And having done a little bit of research,

what appears to me is that it may well

be, and the Irish Guards, who you're with, is a famous

group all of its own. But you've been in interesting

places at very interesting times.

And I want you to tell me a little bit about

how you turned up or ended up in a place and it just

happened to be a hotspot or a few examples

of what's happened to you in the

army and in your postings. Thank you, Gary. Well,

yes, I joined as a regular officer and I was

actually joined in 1960. 1960.

And I was the first in the first intake in Desantis that was post

national service so all those ahead of us had all been co

opted or most have been co opted proportion and

we were the first 100% volunteer intake to Santos intake

29 so that was an interesting time.

Santas was then a two year course and a tremendously good training and

one thing which one should know about the British army is that the people who

teach you your skills and your trade are not the other officers, they're

the non commissioned officers. And anybody who's been to Sandhurst will be in

awe of the tremendously wonderful

non commissioned officers. Warrant officers who taught us our,

our skills will scare the out of it most of the time but that's, that.

Was something we see on, on the screen

about staff sergeants and don't call me

sir, call me sergeant and giving everyone a super hard time. It's the

same in the British army as it is in the American Army. I

don't, I have been with the American army but I'm not quite sure. But the,

the famous day Fr. Sanders when the sergeant Major talks to you

he says I call you sir and you called me sir. The difference

sir is that you mean it sir and that's the sort of relationship but it's

a wonderful extraordinary relationship that until you've experienced that you can't

imagine it. The bond between officers and non commissioned officers and

the soldiers, it's extraordinary bond and it never leaves you. Really

stays with you all your life. You were talking about interesting places. You

were in the Suez at a particular. No, no, in Aden

maybe. Yes, I caught, as I always say to

people, I caught the tail end of the Empire. Everywhere I went they pulled down

the flag. Yes, well I want to hear a bit about flag pulling in a

minute. Well I was in Germany first in the British army of the Rhine as

it was in the Cold War 1962 when we really felt we

were facing a threat from, from East Germany and we

were on the Weser river to sort of hold the line should they come across

the line and, and it was, it was

serious soldiering then. Quite, quite nerve wracking actually. Shots

fired across the Rhine. No, no, no, no, no. It was

tense but the Cold, Cold War st of course was

Berlin isolated and we used to do train trips

into Berlin taking resupplies into Berlin through East Germany.

That was very interesting but that was also peacetime

soldiery. I was lucky enough from Germany to be

pointed to Kenya to send to Kenya in 1963

and that led up to Kenya independence in late

63 and that was an interesting time for Kenya, or

Kenya, we call it Kenya. And there we

had a violent. Was that a violent birth? It wasn't a

violent. No, it wasn't actually. There had been a mutiny by the

King's African Rifles, the armed the Kenyan

army at the time we arrived there and we joined we the

Irish Guards. A company of Irish Guards joined the Scots Guards there

and they were. When we arrived in Kenya they were spread around the country helping

to bringing line the mutineers. So that was

tense and we were. I wasn't actually involved in that. But then we were there

throughout the Uhuru, as they call it, independence. And we

were scattered around the country during the actual

ceremonies to keep a low profile, quite rightly.

But it went very smoothly. And Kenyatta at one

time terrorist was only by then the new president, which

was extraordinary event in many ways. And

I was there when President Kennedy died and like all of us, we always remember

exactly where we were when we were when he died. And I was walking up

the stairs in the officer's mess when we heard the radio playing and I thought

it was a play like a lot of people did. And that was Kennedy's death

and that was a big moment everywhere in the world, particularly in Kenya. And

I found myself a few weeks later standing in the

castle cathedral in, in Nairobi as an

officer with my sword around a coffin representing

Kennedy. And my right wrist was on Kenyatta's

shoulder, which was quite my brush with. Wow. Do you still have

that photo in your archives? I do indeed.

From the front page of the East African Standard. Wonderful. I tell you,

I now kick myself for not being better prepared, Patrick, to say

I want a photo of you in full regard

regalia. But there you go. So. So I

mean if you want to go briefly my career then I was back in

England for Britain, back in Germany again. And then my next

serious posting overseas was to Aden, what you referred. Yes. And

that was 1966, 1967, when again

Aden was still a British colony. And we were, we the British

were being. They were

local pressure groups to try to get us out of it. Yeah. As was the

colonial style. And there was a terrorist

group, insurgency group that was

terrorizing Aden and terrorizing the British there. So it

was really quite, quite unpleasant.

There were shots fired in that part of Ireland. Yes, yes. We the Irish

guards left behind 23 dead there. Wow.

Buried in Aden, one of them,

four of them were in a own goal. We had a horrible gun

accident there which killed four, which was tragically part of. Of the

active service. Wow. And we lost some in ambushes, etc, so

that was a nasty time. Unpleasant time. And growing

up, what lessons? Sorry, let me, let me ask you this

because it's always these things sort of just appear momentarily

being you training, you've got your.

Whatever it is, Staff Sergeant non commissioned officer and then there

you are with. With people sadly

dying, et cetera.

What's it like for somebody, you were still

relatively young. Is it like a massive

earthquake to your system or are you so well prepared

that it's business as usual?

Well, people in more recent times, having had

a far more difficult time than I had, could probably speak to that

and I listen to them a lot. But when you're in a situation

like that, it is of course exciting. There's no question that's what you're trained for.

Your adrenaline is up and because you're surrounded

by comrades and people close to you

feel a tremendous esprit de corps. That's what soldiering in any

army is all about. And that buoys you on.

And as they always say, your training kicks in.

That was hard. Wilderness. I surprised myself that

when things were difficult, training kicked in. Right.

And, and the relationship you had with your, your soldiers around you, your

fellow, the whole team, it was extraordinary. And that

put you. To really test you. And, and those who've had far more difficult

times in more recent times in Afghanistan

etc, have really found it very hard going and

I understand that. And, and they talk about. We were

less sympathetic then to, to stress.

Post stress syndrome. Yeah, it was still a little bit of stiff upper

lip. Not necessarily saying was good or bad, but it was just

different. Just what it was. Where after Aiden.

Well, then I spent spells in. In UK and then I

found myself going to Hong Kong. That's right. And that's an interest. That was

a really interesting time for Hong Kong and China, wasn't it? Well, it

was, it was during the Cultural Revolution. I went there in

1986 when the cultural Revolution

was at its peak in China and Hong Kong.

Always been isolated, but was very isolated then. Where were you

based? Because of course I was in Hong Kong for a number of years. Well,

you were in Hong Kong? Well, we were based. Well, I spent

two stints in Hong Kong. I was there for two years as the adc,

the Age of the General, the command of British forces, who

had been itself an Irish Guardsman. So I was sort of close

to the. The source of. Where were

you? Well, then I was in Flagstaff House in Hong Kong Central.

Yes. Hong Kong Island. Yeah. With a. With a Whole household of. Of staff

working for the general, then the commander force, who was the number two to the

governor, very senior position. So that was for me, who was. The governor at that

stage. The governor was governor called Trench. But the. My. My boss was

someone called General Sir Basil Euster. Okay. Who'd been

an Irish Guardsman himself. And he had distinction of having been

a young officer in the Irish Guards when they were on the. No,

the Norwegian expedition at the beginning of the outbreak of the war,

when the Irish Guards were on a ship sailing to Norway and

the ship was bombed by the Germans and most of the officers

were killed in one explosion. Wow. Young Euster, as he

was, was a second lieutenant or lieutenant, I think, and he found himself

stark naked in the sea, having been blown overboard. Pleasant. Let

me. Let me ask you what stood out to you

in that first stint you were in Flagstaff House, and the next

stint was how many weeks, months, years later? Well, two years

later. I was there for two years doing that job. And that was tense because

we were the army were then pretty sure we were eyeball to eyeball

with the Chinese army pla. At the border from the

right, across the border. So where were you stationed then? Still at

Flagstaff or not? No, Flagstaff is always then, but that was that then.

And then I. My own battalion, the Irish Guards, were posted to Hong Kong by

happy coincidence. So I was already there. So after a

brief stint I stayed there. And then we were based in Stanley. Fort

in Stanley. Gosh, you got some really peachy postings. I

did. I did. Stanley was wonderful. Oh, wonderful. Well, now it's a.

It's a plaque barracks, I believe. But. But then we

had a. My wife and I had a house that you would die for on

the peninsula of Stanley, but we spent most

of our time up on the border. And that was quite. It had its

moments, to put it mildly. Anything particular

comes to mind of some weird scenario of someone scrambling over.

Oh, yes. Oh, yes. I had a. I would

say they'd almost start to the Third World War, almost personally.

There's a village on the eastern side of the border

where the border hits the sea called Chateau Kok. You may

be familiar with it. And this village, famously the.

The border between British Hong Kong and China went down the main

street, little village street, and there were

bollards down the street demarcating the border.

And it was very much an enclave. And there was always a British company there,

company soldiers, often it was Gurkha Company,

and it was a real hot spot. And as you came along the border

road. The road came into Shatta Cock and then you

had to turn right to stay in British territory.

So it was so dramatic you couldn't get it wrong.

And to help there was usually a PLA soldier standing

by the wine shop, it was called, with his gun, looking at you as you

drove down. So you turned right and waved at him and went along the border.

But it didn't come for the Irish guards who

turned left. We had a truck that went down

there. You weren't in charge of that truck, were you Patrick? Well, it was

my truck, but I wasn't driving it. Okay. It was a terrible

mistake. No doubt about. Was a Land

Rover and a truck behind with in total 8

guards were on board. And unfortunately the PLL

soldier had gone for a break and he wasn't there.

And the driver got it wrong and turned left. And I'm making light

of it, but actually it was very serious incident. They disappeared

down Chung Ying street and I was in one of the observation

posts and I heard a shot ring out, bing, bing, bing across the

rooftops. And I thought disaster had happened. What did happen was that

they were immediately surrounded by a group of very angry

Shatokok residents from the Chinese side with knives,

et cetera. And they disappeared into Shatukok and were taken

prisoner. And the shots were fired by. Well, it

was a misfire by the Chinese, but it set the alarms going. I see.

And there was a mini riot right on the border with people on the toes

of the border and I was there with a Chinese policeman trying to

calm it down, which we did. And then actually it went right

high up the political chain of command. It would be an

incursion and it was our fault. And

it reached Peking as, as an issue. And James

Callan, the Prime Minister. Yeah, it was really dramatic and it was a great

mistake on our part, an accident. But for 24 hours I

was alone in Shadowcock with my soldiers not knowing whether,

you know, it was going to come out right. And then negotiations happened

right up the line. And then three o' clock in the morning we heard the

trucks revving up right behind Shadowcock in the night. And then

these eight rather shame faced cars and came

came back. But it was not with some take.

This is really cheeky, isn't it? Not with some takeaway food. I guess they've been

well treated. But it was very alarming and

a mistake on our part. And give, give me a time anchor in

terms of cultural revolution. Are you there

at the beginning of. My history

probably is not I was there 68.

68 to 72. So

we're right in the middle of it. Right in the middle. Right in the middle,

yeah. Hong Kong was very, very tense and what vibes.

What to what extent would you. Of course, you're on the border

a lot of the time. But what do you pick up out of

the Cultural Revolution? Are there of. I'd say obviously. Are there

people that are trying to escape and getting across to Hong Kong or what.

What do you as a soldier learn about history, about that period

of time? Oh, well,

it was the Star Contra and

I've been also on the border in Berlin and I've been to

Panmunjom on the Korean border. Right. And

every case as you peer across the border or cross

the border, the change is discernible.

You feel it in your bones. And as you looked across the

paddy fields to north. To the north side of the border in Hong Kong, you're

looking into a. An alien territory and people under

a different regime and tilling the fields. And it was

extraordinary sort of view into a different other world. And I know the.

And in Panmunjeong, when I went, when I was in Hong Kong, we had

a. I was attached for a period of time to the U.S. 8th army

in Korea and was on the, on the

DMZ with them, which was interesting. And, and went to

Panjong itself. And there, there was, you know, the ever increasing bigger

flags and bigger flags and it was quite scary. And there was. There. There's a

3.3mile codon sanitaire in Hong Kong. There wasn't. It

was just a fence and we used to have Chinese

soldiers presenting, patrolling with their weapons. As

close as you and I would be, it was really. And you. Did you

have any, any instances of.

Of people that were being

maltreated as a result of the

goings on who were escaping to Hong Kong and you had

to give them back or not they did escape. I never

experienced that person. But what we did find was very unfavorably was

bodies coming down the belt Pearl River. Wow.

And that they used to. People on picnics from Hong Kong used to see

bodies in the river. Said the very real in your face.

And to what extent. I mean obviously you see that.

But was it something that as an

outsider that you sense

that there was because there was huge disruption and

people were being

persecuted and imprisoned and murdered. Was it the scale

of it something you were aware of or. Not really. Not really. Because

Hong Kong was in the biggest scale of China was a dot

on the rump. Yes. And the vista from China

was from Hong Kong was very limited, it was a hot spot. But, but there

wasn't great massive force there. The PLA were making their point, they

were there and we always knew that they could come across.

Who knew. And of course it was also the time of the Vietnam war

going on. Down there, of course in the 60s, in the 60s. And a lot

of the Americans were taking their r and R in Hong Kong. Absolutely. Were

they not? Yes, they were there massively. And when I was the

aide de con, we used to have to organize

willingly, happily organize parties for visiting U. S

Warships and the officers would like to come for,

invite people onto the, onto the carriers or the

warships. And of course the American sailors wanted to let off

steam in, in Hong Kong, in Muanchai,

So that was, but they were, you know, we all

recognized that it was the war we were not involved in, but we

sympathized enormously with them and they needed their breaks and they were happy,

happy, you know, welcome visitors. Okay, so let's

segue now from armed forces, albeit

in some really critical, critical

times in really interesting places. You start to think

about leaving the comfort, if I use that word

cheekily of the army and decide that actually you've had enough

of borders and revolutions, you're going to go

for the quiet life. When does that happen? Give me a fixed time wise.

That was when I was, in 1974,

I decided to quit the army. I was going to the army staff college which

was an important point in

officer's career to get to the staff college. And I was lucky enough to pass

the examination and get a nomination at staff college proved that I

wasn't, wasn't a dropout. But that for various reasons, family reasons, I, I.

Various reasons including family reasons. Yeah. That I, I left.

Had by then three small children and money

was tight. So yeah, a number of reasons I left.

So yeah, so I, I quit of my own volition

and which was a sad moment for me, but I launched myself

into the blue. 1974, if you do your thinking

history. It wasn't a good time to be looking for a job as a really

unqualified civilian. Yes. What's interesting, I'm

just thinking now you were changing

your entire Persona from

member of the armed forces looking at at

civie street. Yeah, I was just

coming out of 74,

75. I was in my final year at university.

Yeah. Wondering having already applied for job one,

wondering what on earth was going to happen. Because if I'm not mistaken,

74 was the minor strike, absolutely. Three day

week and all that stuff. Three day week. And I remember studying for my

final exams at LSE under candlelight.

I did, yes. That doesn't surprise me. It was a three day week and it

was really. So you coming out of here's me as a, as a

spotty kind of not, not

long teenager looking and thinking, what on earth is happening

to this country? And you'd come out of. After defending the country

and protecting it to, to, to disaster.

Yeah. I took it. It was like paradise. How I had the

courage to do it, it staggered me now because it wasn't, it wasn't good

timing. It wasn't. So what did you do when you first came out? Well,

I, I was offered a job. A job was lined up for me in a

financial services company. Would have been a disaster for me. I would have

been hopeless at that. Right. One of those sort of financial

advisory company. But. But as I left the army, I rang up my.

My friend and said, I'm out now. He said, oh, damn, I meant to call

you to say the job's off. I mean it was that. Oh no. Yeah. So

I was literally up the pedal, up this morning by the paddle. But to cut

a long story short, I ended up working, joining Imperial Tobacco

in the marketing of Imperial Tobacco. Ok, Imperial Tobacco then. Were

anybody's familiar with this? It was a really two big tobacco companies in, in

operating uk, British American Tobacco and Imperial Tobacco.

And way back in history they sort of carved up the world and Imperial

Tobacco stuck to UK and Imperial. BAT

were introduced. Were you doing any investigations in that role?

Well, not that I never knew what investigation was in those days,

but. But yes,

foreign intelligence was important because you had to know what was going on with the

other brands. I see. And so that's where you got your. First

whiff of probably literally, to coin the phrase. Yes, yes,

yes. I'm clearly my brain is not working because

I didn't really mean that. No, no, there you go. Yeah. I used to have

traveled all over Europe because it was. Well, I was a thing in

a thing called Imperial Tobacco International, which was a

small group of Imperial that was tasked with recovering brands from

BAT under some complicated arrangement. We had to take back some brands.

The BAT had to reluctantly hand these brands across to us and they were

pretty sort of low brands. Right. And we had to

not only take these brands back and learn to market them

in places, territories that we as a company were not familiar with, but then

also we were then licensed, as it were, to develop our own

international. Brand and did you. Did you come across any

skullduggery between brands and between

salespeople? Oh, yes, kickbacks and things like that.

There was a lot of that, but also, yes, intelligence. You needed

to know what the opposition were doing, the new brand they were

planning, or you need to have your ear to the marketplace to know

what was going on. And of course there is a tremendous trade

or was and still is, I'm sure, in contraband

cigarettes. So we had to fight the. The smugglers and the contraband.

So we became very adept. I could take a cigarette packet

apart very quickly and tell you whether it was real or not. So was. Was

marketing a pseudonym for foreign intelligence

investigations? Not really, no. Marketing. I was a straight

brand manager. I had a brand and my job was to market it,

really, from the whole market cycle of brand development to

packaging to advertising and blah, blah. But there were

departments in Imperial Tobacco and.

And I think bat that were operated on the ages of. Of.

I'm not going to say legality, but they had to deal with the. This

you fight the. The smugglers and the

counterfeiters and they were rather especially good. I wasn't in that, actually.

No. And where did you go from Imperial? What was next

stop? I had a moment of conscience

over tobacco. I had been a smoker as a young man, but by then

I wasn't a smoker, but I had smoked. I knew what they're all about.

And I learned a trick that smokers absolutely

infuriated other smokers. I could have a cigarette and enjoy it and not want another,

which was amazing. Still could if I wanted to, I suppose.

But then I left Imperial Tobacco and

joined a company called Heclo and Koch which made

guns. Gosh, you certainly. You couldn't

get rid of that sort of dangerous lifestyle, could you? From the

army to cigarettes that could. Turn into guns that do.

Ironic. Ironic, yes, it really was. And that was interesting because

I joined when I got the job. On the day of the Iranian embassy siege,

I was walking up, walking up St. James's street, having

decided in a meeting of Imperial Tobacco

brand managers or something in a big advertising agency in James's

Square, I suddenly felt, what a dopey subject

we're discussing. A lot of bright, intelligent, creative people and around a big table

looking at some advert for some young girl. We were pitching a

brand, 22 real girls or something. I thought, this is not right.

And I really had a sort of come to Jesus moment in that moment,

mentally, I left and decided, I've got. To go and sell guns. Well, no,

I didn't decide that at all. I decided to get out of it. Yes, below

it, but not far from it. And I walked up St. James's street and coming

down the road the other way was someone called Alistair Morrison

who was. And had been. He was being. He was in the Scott

Guards in Kenya and he'd been with the SAS

and done deeds of daring do in the SAS and very distinguished deeds of daring

do. He was one of the SAS officers who was sent by James

Callan to storm the aircraft in Mogadishu.

Kala Halid, the German Paris. Okay,

lady. So they came to him, SAS officers to. Well,

friend. He was coming down from James street and he said,

I've been trying to reach you. So I said, why aren't you in St. James's

Paris storming the embassy? He said, no, I left the SAS

and I've just joined Hecklin Koch and I've had permission to join, to get a

part partner to join me and I'd like you to join me. So I joined

Heckland Cock there and. Then with

real spontaneous. It was completely spontaneous. We walked into

a club in, in St James street, had had lunch, went around the corner

and their offices were in Piccadilly and I was signed up to Heckle and Cockville

and there. So for three years. It sounds as if there wasn't too much

HR protocol in those days. Oh, no, not on it there for three years.

Alice and I, interesting time at Heckland Cochrane. We

laugh about. Well, we don't laugh about gun, but we still just need

guns and good ones. And the Germans produce very good

weaponry. Selling to the British army at the Special

Forces. What did you learn that you hadn't learned before

out of your time at the gun factory? If

I can call it that, that. I hadn't learned that. What I did learn.

Yeah, but I learned a lot about Germans from Swabia. I won't be

about that. But the, the Swabish. Swabish are

very tough breed of people and

they make, among other things, they're very efficient and they produce this

extraordinary machine tool process. And in Novadorf

they, they build superb weapons.

Handguns. Yes. Do you have any, any pangs

of conscience in terms of who you were selling to and who the company did

business? No, no, I didn't. No, I didn't know. I

recognize that Buckingham Palestine needs new rifles,

so armies, police forces, other

agencies need weaponry, as we well know, and they needed

good weaponry and they needed. And we needed to put weaponry in

safe hands. But you were a private company you

weren't exactly a government deciding to support so were there not

dilemmas there in terms of do we sell arms here, do we not sell arms?

Yes, there were. I was level. Was probably above my pay grade at that point

but there was at the higher level in German

which politics kicked in and do you

sell guns, weapons to certain African countries or not? Was

there an incident that happened or was there a transaction that

you look back on now and you say I didn't feel comfortable with that.

I can't remember. It's a very good. Wish I could answer directly.

I don't remember in Hackercock any particular incident

but I do remember tensions over a certain African country

where we had been selling weapons and there was a regime

change and what you sold, you sold and then the

question of did we go on resupplying this, this. This regime?

And the answer I know was taken no enough. I

see, okay. Weapons were silver. I mean I'm not, I'm not applauding the trade

but no, but it's not like gun on arms dealing with. Which is

dealing, you know, with people and you careful of selling into

third parties because you sell to some in some

reasonable end user but you don't know what the end user is going to do

with it. Oh absolutely. So you and Alastair are together

there for how long? Three years. And then

who goes first? Alistair goes. Well we. We

plot to set up a company. We plot

to set up a company and Alison and I together

perceived of a company which we would now call it a private military company

but then they weren't so well established and recognized. Right.

PMCs, private companies, you've all heard of them in Iraq

and other places. Would I be right in saying

you understand now what the market is like in terms of manufacturing.

You also know who is buying it at the end game and

you saw an opportunity to add some value. Yes, absolutely

that right. And we also recognized which other people have done of

course over years, the value of British army training

and what that can bring to the party. So with our

concept was to set up a company drawing upon mainly

ex Special Forces but not entirely ex Special Forces, Royal Marine

Commandos, SAS and other

specialists, helicopter pilots and the rest and offer our services

to accompanies in difficult places. As for protective security

in the same way that is now massively common in

around the world. Right then it was so common you had mercenaries, real mercenaries who

are paid by foreign governments who gunslinged.

Did you ever get asked to train mercenaries and people like that, Patrick

or you can't Recall. I can't recall mercenaries. And if we did, we'd

be probably shied away from it. But we trained foreign

security services. Yes, we worked a lot in Angola

for De Beers and De Beers had sort of

vast enormous areas of.

Of Angola where they were. Had gold mines and

they had to protect the gold mines and the illegal gold

smuggling and they had to have their own sources

and we did train them and that that's was. Was

helpful because they could be out of control and they had. They

were armed and we brought, I like to think an area of

sort of self discipline and command and control

in. In those days. Did you have to be licensed by the

government and things like that in this country? Not. No, no. The

whole, whole issue when it comes to investigation world. But. But no, we didn't have

to be licensed. And so did you have. Did you and

Alistair ever have again, that pang of conscience

or someone comes to you and says, I don't know, a diamond company, I

won't use the DB and say, look, these people are doing

this. And you two sit down and think, well, I don't feel

comfortable about it. Definitely. Absolutely. It happened.

Africa is usually the place that happened. And

we took some decisions that were commercially attractive, but. But

morally we felt, and commercially dangerous. And is

there anything that happened where you were all in good conscience? You

said, and you made a decision saying, on balance, I think this is the right

thing to do. And then turned out that you'd made a. Not

horrific, but you'd made a decision that you didn't feel comfortable about.

Good question. I did. I don't recall. Not that we were perfect,

but I don't recall. But we did have four of our people kidnapped in.

In Angola. Wow. So we obviously made

not a mistake between we put people in harm's way there and they were

kidnapped. And I was not directly

involved because I was running our Middle east business by then. But. But Alice, I

had to go through a lot of negotiation to get them back, which he

did. Was it a ransom kind of request or something?

Yes, it was ransom. Right. And also

it was for. We were working for De Beers at the time, I think, so

they obviously were our masters. And so between us, we. We got

them back safely, but it was, I think it was more, you know,

don't mess with us sort of thing, you know, a shot across our bars.

I see. Okay. They got out okay. But that was. Was

edgy and out of. Right. And how long were you in the PMC

for? For about three years. And then that took Me,

we work in Africa, as I said, but we also worked in. In the Middle

East. And I went home, ran our Middle east business. So we set

up in. We had a little headquarters in Cyprus, but then

we had a joint venture in Jordan, in Amman, in Georgia. Okay.

And there we teamed up with the former

deputy chief of the General staff, who'd been retired from the general staff and

he'd become the commissioner of police. And then he left with police

joining in, obviously. And a very senior man. He was a general in the police,

in the army. And he set up his own security company.

And we teamed up with him as a joint venture. Again

bringing together to ask, because every other location

you've been in, there's been a crisis. What was going on in the. In the

Middle east while you were there? This is in the.

In. Well, the Iran Iraq war was going on.

I see. Okay. And that was edgy because

it wasn't my business. But, you know, it wasn't the business I was in.

But. But weapons would be reaching the. The various

sides in that conflict. And a lot of it was going

through places like Oman.

Right. But our job was

protective security. We tried to stick to that. And we got a

job protecting the US Embassy in Amman

provided this morphed into dsl.

It was dsl. Yeah. And

so I covered the whole region. I was based in Jordan, but

also I was working in Dubai and Bahrain.

Yes. Little outpost. And in

Bahrain, I secured a contract with the US

Embassy there to provide a third guard force. In other words,

they had their US Marines inside, were themselves

targets, and the local forces outside. But

they wanted a third force, the buffer force. I see Green.

And I came up with the suggestion of Gurkhas,

former Gurkhas. And they didn't know much about Gurkhas, the US

security apparatus, but I convinced them of the value. So I

found myself going off to northern India and Nepal

and recruiting former Gurkhas, British army and Indian Army.

Gurkhas. Right. And the gunk is a very special soldiers,

as you know. Yeah. You must have seen them in place in Hong Kong and

other places. And I not being a former Gurkha

officer, because they had British officers in the Gurkhas, as you know.

But this is again, a very special edge between Gurkha

soldiers and their British officers, which is very close bond.

And I wasn't one of those. But the fact that I had been a British

army officer and I could wear. Enabled you to bring the

group together. Yeah. So I arrived with a sort of

law of friendship and

authority and I recruited 100 Gurkhas and marched

them, as it were, to Bahrain. And Seth, any particular incident that you

can think of that an impenetration of

the. The security setup that was worthy of

note while you were protecting people? No. You see,

you're longing for me to find some sort of bombshell out of the.

No. Because we did a good job. They got very good. The only thing they

weren't allowed to carry their cookies, the big knives they had.

That was a step too far. That was a. No. No. Okay. No, no. Yeah,

that was scared. Anybody? So let's, let's move closer

to the transition from DSL

into both Kroll and the UK because I know

that's where you went next. So tell me a little bit about that

transition and how it happened. Well, that's

a strange story in a way. I was working in Jordan, as I said, and

with these Jordanian partners. And there was a young man

there, a Jordanian who became rent. A very close friend.

And he said to me one day we've had a request from. From an American

to learn a bit about a hijack that had happened.

I think a Kuwaiti Airways jet. Well,

I can't remember the airline, Middle east airline jet had been

taken off in I think Kuwait and landed

Dubai and taken off again when it was hijacked

and hijacked and taken to Iran

Tehran airport where the combination was that the

U. S. Pilot was shot dead. Wow, horrible

experience. And that's. I think the background to this was a

lawsuit in the States against the airline by the

families, I think. So they needed to understand where the weaponry had come

on. You can imagine how for legal. But you're the lawyer.

The legal. Legalizes of how this came about for insurance and

etc. So the Jordanians said they

think they. The Americans think we know everything. We certainly don't. And you know Dubai

better than we do. So go to Dubai and try and get to the bottom

of it. And I was able to do that through my contacts in Dubai.

I won't go into it, but I. I got the answer. They were looking. Well,

an answer which was very valuable. So I wrote that,

wrote up that report and gave it to my Jordanian friends. But they might put

my confidence. There's a report. This report found its way

by securities means to the desk of one Jules Crow in New York.

Whereupon Jewel said who wrote that? And the American said I have no

idea. Some Britain. And Jules was representing one of the

parties. He was representing, I suppose the lawsuit.

Yes. Yeah. So he found this report, but land on his desk. And it was

a very compelling report, apparently. And so, as it were,

they pulled the threads in and I was on the end. Right, you're on the

other end. Are you able to tell us anything about how you track

down the supplier without, of course,

compromising? I. I can't. I can't. I. I

had in Dubai because my job was security.

I had very close contacts with the. The

senior intelligence officers, UAE intelligence officers, and they

were. They're very helpful. I can't go beyond that.

Okay, we got the answer. So. So Jewels apparently said, I want to

beat this guy, right? So I was tracked down. And I still have somewhere

in a Filofax, a message I received

long before. We only had telex in those days. Called Mr.

Crow C R O W.

So I. I got this message, I don't know how. So I called

Mr. Crow in New York. And this telephone answer the search.

I said, can I speak Mr. Crowe? They say, Do, Mr. Crowell. I said, well,

maybe. And then I found myself being bidden to New

York by Jules Crow. I hope he flew you first class. Patrick

did come and meet me, so I was intrigued. Did he fly

you first class? I don't remember his first class, but

when choose a style. He probably did, but I don't remember. But I

certainly. I was intrigued. Of course, I took time out, went to New

York, went into this funny little office in. On third Avenue, which

was above the. The place where they tried to murder

Gotti. Literally, a little Italian cafe in the floor bars,

great location, which is a small office, 20 people in a small office, where

I met Jules and. And other Crow characters who still

around today, I guess. What did you know. What did you know about the.

The private investigation industry at that stage?

Anything? Absolutely nothing. Absolutely nothing.

So when you went to see Mr. Crow, it

was just a kind of again, spontaneous decision,

saying, I may as well got nothing to lose. Let's go and talk to him.

Absolutely. But I said to Jules, I said, look, I've got a job with

dsl. It's all going fine. And he sort of said, don't worry about that. We'll

fix it. So it was complicated. And we happily

negotiated with Alice and my partners. Jules wanted me to join them.

So I said to my partner, so that's what I want to do. So I

joined Crow, left dsl, joined Crow.

I couldn't come back to England for tax purposes, so I was in Paris for

six months working for Crow

on and off. I mean, I was retained by them, and I didn't do very

much or it wasn't asked to do very much. And then I

found my way back to London where they just sent across

someone called Dan Carson, a lawyer working with

ex prosecutor working for Crone in New York to put a stake

into uk, right. And he was one man and

a secretary in Leadenhall street, just behind the bank of England.

I pushed the door open and there was this chap looking rather like Woody

Allen actually remind me saying that opening a box. And he said,

who are you? And I said I'm Patrick Grayson, I work for Crow. And he

said, well, so do I open that box. You know, that was the beginning of

my time in Crow in London. Then Dan.

Dan Carson, that didn't. Really wasn't confident in London,

but he did a good job. So we get the thing right. Then he said

as soon as he could, he handed the parcel to me and said I'm off

leaving me. And was there. Was there like a. I don't know,

a rule book, a guidebook that said Investigations 101. This

is what you do. You pick up the phone. No, no, no. On

job. It's an extraordinary time for me, an extraordinary break for me

because I was given a carte blanche by Jules

with vague control from New York. I don't picked

up a few tricks along the way, but we were very much to own

devices. Jewel used to come across a lot and take me to meetings with him.

And I learned the spiel from Jules.

Who were you targeting? Was it anybody that would talk to you or was there

a particular focus? Yes, because Jules, you see by that point he'd

become Wall Street's private eye. I see.

There was then an article in the New York Times, I think

suddenly a headline. Jules with his feet on a desk and a big cigar and

his big suspenders. Right. Wall street paradigm. Jules had

perceived of the investigators. Not men in shadows or women

in shadows. Men dressed up. I happen to be

suit and tie now. So we were suddenly dressed up and acceptable

in the boardrooms of Wall street. And Jules was. And it was already then

becoming the word of

mouth that if you had a hostile beard in a acquisition

or something or some big problem investigation. The person you called with

Jules Crow. And that's where he started.

But then he entrusted to me,

but potentially entrusted to me the

carving out the space in London. So that was carving out new territory. And this

comes back to the. We talked of the whole

industry. That's the right word. Sector that now is occupied by

a massive number of players. There were other players here There was people, you

know, Mike coma of network. He was already on the

ground doing sort of work. John Ferris Smith of Arjun. But

they were doing it rather low profile. Right. Jules is up there.

Yeah. And he was definitely out there and up there.

So what was the first big investigation that you got involved

with in Crow? Well, when I

joined we were looking at baby Dr. Vallier,

baby Doc. Wow. Baby doc. And tell me a

bit about that scenario. Well, I, I fell into that. Dan Carson, who

was very clever when he was in London still before he

hightailed it back to back to uk he was I think

running the case from London. So I learned a lot from him and essentially we

were doing asset tracing on his ill gotten gains from the,

the people of Haiti and, and he'd stashed it all around the

world. So you were acting for the, for the government of hate of

Haiti at the time? Yes, yes. Kind of looking, kind of. It was

very complicated. But yeah, we were tasked to try and find where he

stashed the assets. Right. So you know, I'm going to ask you, Patrick,

that you're not going to get away with just that. What. Tell me a bit

about what you were able to do because this is not, you

know, high tech. How did you go about this exercise? What,

what was involved? Well, this was. Remember

talking about 1986 before the days of

the, the Internet and, and then it was still

was and actually remains today still a lot of, of

foot. Foot shoe leather. Yeah.

Force intelligence was the key to it. So we

had to work very hard. We had something called Nexus and Lexus was the only

sort of database we had this those days. So it was all

heart finding sources, finding substantractors,

knowing where the bodies as it were, might lie, the

assets might lie and developing human resources to go and

get the answers. So it was men in Mobuto, men

in women, sources in Monte

Carlo, sources in Geneva, sources in Switzerland. You had to find these

sources and proper intelligence work of

winkle out of them to the extent of their knowledge. And people often know a

lot more than they think they know. So you've got to sort of see. Behind

was there a particular, not a name? Because I, I know

you well enough by now you're not going to say, yes, it was Mr. Smith

who lived at 19, whatever it is, but an

individual that, that either

for their own reasons or for other reasons, opened

the door either a little or a lot and gave you access

to a real

cachet of assets. Yes, there was.

And that was in Monaco

who we. I can't remember how we could find him. Him.

Doesn't matter how you found him. Yeah, yeah, he, he.

I. We had a name for a code name for him. I can't remember what

it was, but he was the, the, the bird

we needed to sing. And he was very, very helpful

with, with them. I can talk if you talk more about asset tracing settlement,

same as another one, which I was much more clear. Was this fellow

for Papa Dot? Was he your classic

intermediary? Absolutely was. He was incorporating companies,

opening bank accounts, that kind of thing. Yeah, that kind of man In, In

Monaco. In Monaco. He. He. He was a

open. A Pandora's box for us. And that was a big

breakthrough in Tavadock. Did you, did you. Were you the one that

got the information from him or was it one of the team? No, it was

subcontractor. We did it through sub, sub. Subcontractors. Okay.

But it was. Just tell me, in those scenarios. Yeah. Everybody,

particularly when you, you see so many movies, everybody is

concerned about the information being trapped back to them

and them being. Of course. Yes. How does that work? How

do you protect that person? First of all, you have to be very conscious

of. Well, what, what's their motivation for telling you? First of

all, backing up. I have all had a philosophy that

secrets, Secrets are not secrets. In certain

places, every secret is a secret. But in some places, not a secret.

Yeah. A man's secret is from his affairs may be secret

to his family, but not to the men in the golf club sort of thing.

A crude example. So you need to identify where the secret is not a

secret. I see the office of the producer. It's not a secret. And then

secretaries know, the people know they were dealing with. You need to identify the

little sort of buzzbox of where the secret is. And that's a

task in itself. Then you need to, to. To

find somebody who knows that and you've got to find that person

who, who would have the, the

means and the motivation to share that. Right. Perhaps

unknowingly. So it's against the game, perhaps just. Because of boasting

about, oh, I act for so and so. And I opened an account. I see.

Yes. And you had to be. You know, we, you know, my. All the trade.

I've been in this business, we try and do it right. It's not

big brown envelopes. It's often you can find a motivation that isn't.

You don't feel uncomfortable about. Right. If you're, if you're paying someone to

breach their fiduciary duties and so on. You're in dangerous areas

there for them and ethically for you. And

in the being, of course a man that lives and has

lived in the various court systems. With the Papa Dot case,

was there was this totally out with the

legal court system or was it a combination of legal action?

Combination. Combination. We know

because you and I work together the, the best.

We always said in, in, in, in. In my, my business, if

we can work alongside a law firm, it gives a much greater power and

capability. Of course. And, and the strategy can be so much

better. I mean investigators who go wild

can get into real trouble. Yeah. I mean not. You just get to get it

wrong. We have to be guided by. But I

like to be guided by law firms. But something as big as Papa Doc

clearly would have had international political

implications. And was there was. Were there times in that

case where you were able to as it

were, call in aid some

of the government who were affected

by Papa Doc who wanted to help you? Yep. Well,

if I could switch the conversation from Pav Dog who I which I wasn't

central to. Okay. Into a similar

case of Saddam Hussein. In the Iraq where you were central to. Oh, absolutely.

Yeah. Right. Okay. Yeah. That became later. So I was

a bit of a newborn the block in the value days. So that's why I'm

a little hazy. But very much under my watch we got

the assignment. And here I talk about how we

as a company CROW worked,

probably do still do in the United states, often for U.S.

agencies. U.S. agencies are far more inclined to recharge

the private sector in the United States than in this

country and probably elsewhere in Europe. Help me here. What

chronological timing are we talking about? How long after Saddam

Hussein was toppled or war? No, this was, this was the height of the

Iraq of the war. The height of the war. And the American

forces and the allied forces are bombarding. Absolutely.

Height of the war. And we were, we were retained by

the ofac, the Office of Foreign Asset Control,

which is the task on behalf of the Kuwaiti

government to go after the

supply financial supply stream to the Iraqis. They were

being funded. Right. And where was. How are they funding

here? Because there were a lot of forces that were trying of

financial process to try and discover where the

source was, how are they getting the money in and out.

And we were tasked to do it. It was a global assignment forum for

crow, but we were playing central in UK

with Europe on our doorstep. And we soon

identified Saddam Hussein's brother, Tarzan

Alta Criti, who died, was killed

later on and he was Saddam's brother in law, I

think. Yes. And he was the United nations

ambassador. Ambassador based in Geneva.

That was his quote role, unquote. But he was

actually operating in Geneva.

Siphoning out the funds. Exactly, yeah. So that's. We had to discover who

he was tasking, who he's dealing with and

we had him under surveillance. Right. Again, surveillance

is a whole subject so people get twitchy. But I'm. I'm quite

clear in my mind about surveillance, its values and its risks and its dangers.

Right there. There's obviously verified reason to see

who he, he was meeting and who he was dealing with. So

bearing in mind as a foreign country, we had to conduct ourselves properly, but we

had him under surveillance to be able to track down who he was meeting

in the lobbies of the hotels of Geneva. Right. And

that was quite a, you know, extensive exercise and not

cheap exercises as you well know. And

also source intelligence about the scuttleback in the communities of

gen neighbor, the gossips and the restaurants and hotels. You know, we

really got under the skin of the Geneva community to find out how

this man was living and working in. In Geneva under

you know, auspices that were plainly

concocted and what he was doing. And we managed

to discover, I won't name it, but the Fiduciaire Company

that was the, the junction point. Right.

Did that by. Were there many of those

junction points? This was an absolutely major junction

point. It was like a major terminal and there were

local Swiss mansions and otherwise. On the

face of it, legitimate and well respected organization.

Absolutely. Yes. Yeah. And that we absolutely nailed it. That they

were the organization that was funding it. And then what we discovered

in passing was that amongst other things they had

been instrumental in taking a very large

slice of Hachette, investing a various. Under

investing in a large size of the French publishing company Air Group

Hachette. And that became public

whether by intent or mistake. I probably by intent.

It was announced that it had been discovered that Saddam Hussein had

80% of Hachette sizable

mistake in her shed. But of course in the middle it really hit the

headlines. And did the name of the middleman ever get

revealed in the litigation or in the criminal prosecution? Yeah, yeah,

yeah. He his name. Well, the aftermath, you're going to ask me, but I don't

fully know the aspect because like a lot of these things in our business, one

of the frustrations is when you've done the hard work, it sort of goes into

you, into the legal sort of

world and you never quite hear the outcome and it takes a long time.

So the question was whether the Kuwait is ever recovered. What they should have done

is a good question. And. And the answer probably they didn't do

act as they should have done, thus forcing. Well, you've got. So you've got that.

You've got what he took from Kuwait, but then you've got what he was

squirreling away Iraq for many, many, many

years. Yes. And we discovered a lot. Lot clearly this, this fiduciary

company. We discover a lot about the fiducia company.

I just asked you and you said yes, it was named. Are you. Are you

unable to mention the name of that company? I don't feel

comfortable to do so. You don't? Okay. No, no. Okay.

And do they still exist to this day?

I don't know. I see. No, I think that they did

become public, I think. And did they. Did

anyone get prosecuted for that or you just don't know? I don't know the answer

to that. But what I do know is that Hachette were

deeply embarrassed by this and it caused a major

for all. And I had an interesting aside about

this because I was in New York about this time and I went to a

social event in New York with a friend of mine and as I arrived at

the door, she took me to one side, said, by the way, just so you

know better because it's all in the news over the corner there, the North

American head of Hachette. So I said, okay, fine.

So what. He was then introduced to me and I said,

I'm crow thinking he would be elegant

in sort of whatever. He grabbed his wife's

hand and as only French can, he flounced out,

left the party. I just want to say it was not my fault,

but it was rather funny at the time. And do you recall at

all the amount of the value of that which you

were able to either track and. Or recover?

Ah, Gary, I'm going to fail you. I. I don't know. Okay,

that's fine. But that was an interesting. That was a pretty. That was a pretty

impressive scalp for the Grayson belt, if

I may use that expression. Yes, yes, it was.

And the next one, it was me. And

one of my people in London who, you know. Yeah. Who.

Who did that. So that, that was a. That

was a what I call a major set piece investigation. The

whole firm was involved in that one way or another. It was a

major. Was there any. Any other investigation that was

difficult to find something as high profile? But what was the

next high profile investigation that you were

engaged In. Involved with.

Well, over time, we. We did a lot of work on Poly Peck.

Oh, with Nazare Nazuladia. Yes.

Both before and after. He did a runner from

his office in. Just by the corner of Barclays Square.

Yeah. Hidden in a. I can't remember, In a fruit bat box or something. Is

that right? Yes, he did. Around. Yes, yes. And then we followed him

to Northern Cyprus, where.

Anyway, that was a set piece

exercise. Can you tell us anything about

what happened in that. That you can

anonymize other than in. Somebody said this. And we were

able to then track him to a particular location.

No, actually, I'm feeling. I can't. No, no,

it's okay. Yeah, but

it was. We sort of knew it was happening before. Before the.

The whatnot hit the fan. We were very aware of what was going down.

So for some reason, I can't remember quite why we had him under surveillance at

the time. Right. And we missed the time that he

did a runner from. I can't what airport he got away from,

but, Yeah, I.

No, I'm not. My memory is not good. And I know we're

getting closer, the witching hour, but. Yeah. And we'll have to

concertina things, but you go, you leave Kroll.

You've done your time and you've had at least a

couple of huge investigations, and then you decide

that you want to have your own shop. Yes,

yes. And you do with. You do that with

the blessing of the man of. Of jk. Yeah, perfectly

agreeable. Yeah. And you start a company

called gpw. No, that book, that came later, actually. Oh,

okay. I am. When I left Crow, I set up a

small company called cx. Oh, that's right.

With a colleague of mine from. From Crow. Right. And we were there together

for two years, and then for various reasons, we split. And I spent a

period of time then operating entirely independently as an

independent consultant, because then I knew pretty much all

the heads of all the companies in London by then there'd been a

starburst of other companies look alikes from Krill,

and it was healthy because competitors were.

Nothing is more complimentary than a competitor or imitator. And

they're all over the place. And you know a lot of them, and I think

you probably interviewed some of them for this program. And

so I operated healthily,

my business. I was the person that if people knew of me, they came to

me first, they being clients, institutions,

investment banks, law firms, even said, here's this issue.

Where can we get the best value for our buck in

this sector, you. Were the respected broker. Yes,

I was. So I knew how to interpret a client's need

into language that investigation firm would understand and get the best value. So

yeah, I was on occasion tasks to go out and get

investment bank in New York said to me gave me a task that we want

four quotes for this work. So I went to names I can name went

to Kroll, Alico, Confro, Wrists and

Hacklered individual like getting quotes for a building site

and then was able to assess those

and make recommendations and the clients acted upon my recommendations

and that and I took my fee from the client and also backhanded

and so I did that. But then you got itchy feet and you. Or

itchy backside and you said I needed to get out there again. Not itchy

feet, I got curl feet. Always.

Operating by yourself as anybody who's done it will know that it's. It's good news

and bad news. It's quite. So I decided to.

To set up my own company again. So I moved to an office in the

West End. Yeah. And found myself bumping in, literally bumping into

two colleagues from Crow. They're still at Crow but I discovered they leaving Crow

and they were younger than me and, and. And I had the.

Some. Some age and some experience and a book of business

and they had young men leaving Crow decided to

find a landing pad and I was a landing pad and they were. They have

a gpw. Peter Pender,

if you had to pick. One particular

investigation that you did with your GPW hat on that you

can tell us a little bit about, which one would that be?

Ah, let me think. Oh, we did so many things

there. We. We got to be involved. Well can

I mention a couple of. Yeah. You've talked months

before about moral judgment

and there's some cases that we did at GPW when we really had

to make a. Take a. A view on the moral morality of what we

were doing. But you need to flesh it out because I understand

everyone's got moral dilemmas. Well one actually

this Crayola. We took a decision here. We were working

for a come for a law class action suit

representing the victims of

asbestosis. Yeah. And that was

people were dying of asbestosis through monstrous

misbehavior on behalf of the. Of the companies involved. And

our job was to try and track down the asbestosis sufferers

and get them together. And of course became very apparent to us

that the client actually was dragging their

heels was the asbestosis claimants were dropping dead rather

quickly. So there was Suddenly impetus to get these

people get. Move the case along

while they were still alive and well enough to benefit from the, from

the event. And it was a real issue to us that

the. The other side. But this was still at Kroll. I wanted you

to have a sonnet at gpw. Yeah, well, there was a. One case

was we were working for a major lawsuit for. On a

lawsuit for a UK

bank and the other party was a. A Russian

oligarch, a name familiar to many of us.

And we had to serve him papers which was

absolutely critical in the whole case. And he like many of

those people was surrounded by serried ranks of bodyguards and very well

conducting protection. And it took us six

months to serve him, to find the moment when we could throw the

documents into his hand. But we knew any day of the week

we record him in London taking his kids to

school. We knew where he lived and we knew where he took him

to. And this man, to his credit was in the

habit of taking little kids to school in a London street. Yes.

Would have been easy as pie to go and serve him over

his little kid's head. Right. We feel very, very uncomfortable about that

and we took our own decision. No, we're not going to do that

and we're going to tell the client if we don't feel comfortable. And to their

credit, the client said, you're right, we don't want it done on our watch.

So I felt good about that and the fact. How did you serve

him by hurling? Well, I. Not

personally. We penetrated the security

team, distracted them and

he was getting into his car in a certain well known

place and the man just got through the security

cordon, opened the door and handed it a paper and he took it.

Okay, you've got to tell me what the distraction was. That can't be a

secret. Well, did they cause a. I think

a bicycle fell over. A bicycle? The motorbike

fell over. So a staged pretend accident. Exactly. It was

really well done. And the car stopped and everyone goes. To

help the poor victim. And then you nip in and you serve the

rascal. Well, there's an interesting. You see that the. The security staff of

the man went to help the victim. What they should have done was ignored him.

But that's. That's natural instinct. Natural,

yeah, exactly. We played on their good instincts, poor things, and they fell for

itself. There's a bit of a game. Were those English proceedings you were

serving or. In this town

around me here. Okay, now we're getting really close

to the witching hour. Sorry I want to ask you,

have you ever been

cross examined in court as a result of investigation

activities that you or the company you were involved in?

Has that been something you've had the displeasure of facing? No,

never. Myself I think we have provided

expert witnesses on occasion. Right. In.

In my cruel days, we also vested in

investigated the death of the Italian banker.

Help me. Oh God's banker.

God's banker. Under Blackfriars Bridge. Blackfriars Bridge.

And we were investigating his. His supposed suicide

and our person, I can name him, Jeff Katz, he's

now sadly died. He had to give a bad witness in that

because he'd done a very deep. Well, we managed a very deep

investigation but he was my case manager on that. You even had

a model in the office of the Blackfires Bridge and

it's scavenging and Jeff had to give witness statement in

court. But not you. You've never been cross examined?

No, luckily I wouldn't want. Wouldn't you? You on the other

side either? Well, sadly, because

I'm you know, just a poor relation of the barristerial

solicitorial combination. I'm always there sitting

comfortably as it were while the barrister does the real heavy lifting.

Before we part company, at least on this

program, let me just

throw something that

often is asked of people who have been in the

business as long as you have. As

Frank Sinatra would say, regrets? I have a few.

Yeah. Not

many. I've enjoyed very much my career in

this but I think that.

I think that I could have if I'd

stuck with the smaller companies and grown them more rapidly. Yeah.

More cannily. Not cannily, very more cannily. I could have

been probably more successful. Right. You mean

financially? Yes, well in every way. I mean GPW

became too big right. Quickly, which is a pity. We

started a small company, just three partners and a very small team

and we were doing very well but we overstretched ourselves and got too many people

and then had to downside which was really bad and that was a

mistake and I learned that mistake. So I

would have been small and lean

and I think, I mean the company CX that I set up would. Go as

foundation so small, lean and mean and not get

tempted by being too big. That's right. That's right.

Is that the advice that you would give to people starting. I would,

yes, absolutely. Know young people who've been

worked with many people and I'm proud to say that many of the people I've

worked with have now gone on to great success and it's A matter of

pride to me. And the ones who. Till today, I've got half a dozen,

probably half a dozen I know well, who are operating very well by

themselves. And can

you throw up. Throw up a name or two. I probably know them. Who would

it be that you say? They've kept it lean, kept it meant,

and they've got a real solid and successful business. Well, there's a

girl called Jessica. Jessica

from Crow. Jessica Miller. Jessica Miller. Yep. Your

name say Jessica Miller, who is with us. One of our

star players at Crow. No, no, no to

gpw. I see. Okay. And she set up herself and she's done very

well indeed. And she's got lots of languages, this young lady, which

helps. And she's done terribly well by herself.

And of course, Aliko did very well. But they were not necessarily your

disciples or. They were. Oh, very much so, yes.

So that was the obvious answer because they've just been bought out by

private equity. Yes, they have. Yeah. Well, they. I mean,

I can say it because they were. You may be interviewing some

Amber. Amy Lishinski. Yeah. Who just retired from. From.

From Grow. She was one of my first American

implants, or exports, whatever you want to call it, from the United States. And

she arrived in London when she was 26 years old and became one of my

star players in London. I also employed, at about the same time,

Ambrose Carey. I hope, Patrick, that when she

signed an Ambrose on the dotted line for all of that

money, which I know nothing about, but other than it must have been a king's

ransom, that she raised a glass to Patrick Grace. And I just

hope she did that. I. She did, actually. Excellent

on that. I'm very, very proud of them. There is no

nicer, happier note to end

a wonderful sojourn

through the very small smatterings of the

life of. Of Patrick. I'm sure there's many more, much more

to be covered, but what a lovely point to

end the success of others that came through

and were guided by you. There is no better feeling. So,

Patrick, thank you so much for sharing some of your

journey with me, and I'm really

grateful and I wish nothing but

continued success for Patrick and whatever you're doing.

It'd be my pleasure. Thank you so much. Thank you, my friend.

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