Paul Lashmar is a research academic, investigative journalist, author and TV Producer who is head of the Department of Journalism at City, University of London.[1] He writes about terrorism, intelligence, organised crime, offshore crime, business fraud and the Cold War. He also usually works on one or two TV programmes a year.[2]
Author
Paul Lashmar is the author of five well received books:
SpyCast
In 2022, Paul Lashmar appeared on the SpyCast podcast to discuss “My Life Looking at Spies & the Media” with host Andrew Hammond.[3]
Drax
In 2022, Paul Lashmar revealed how Richard Drax still owned the family ancestral slave plantation, Drax Hall, in Barbados. He also set out questions Richard Drax had to address about the accuracy of his entries in the House of Commons Members’ Register of Interests.[4]
Leigh and Lashmar
Paul Lashmar recounts:
- "The Observer's news editor Robin Lustig hired an investigative reporter from The Guardian called David Leigh, an extraordinary character, and suggested I work with him.
- “David and I just clicked and thirty-seven years later we still do. Leigh and Lashmar we were the investigative team at the Observer, up against the other Sunday papers such as the Sunday Times who had much larger resources. We considered our task was to beat them every week, getting the stories they didn’t. We did Mark Thatcher in Oman, MI5 vetting at the BBC, several investigations into police corruption, Stalker, Spycatcher, Clive Ponting, the Belgrano, and many, many more.
- “I learnt that as a journalist if you take on the government you don’t do so lightly, but in those days we were a gung-ho, fearless lot. Many of the people we went after were very rich, very powerful and had the best lawyers, and we had to out-think them. After I and many others left the Observer due to owner Tiny Rowland's interference, I went to work at ‘World in Action’ on TV.
- "There were some very exciting times, some too exciting, following stories on police collusion with organised criminals, being rammed by their cars, and travelling to Brazil to cover how street children were being murdered like vermin, following the death wagon to get footage as they went round in the mornings collecting bodies. That was a pretty hairy time, but perhaps my best story was investigating the Royal Family’s ability to negotiate how little tax they paid, a privilege which changed after we wrote about it."[5]
Many thanks to our
Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.
References