A Gleaming Model Of What Investigative Reporting On TV

 REVIEWS
 Time Out December 8 1986
20/20 Vision: No Man Mants to die: 10.30-11.30 20/20 to C4
A gleaming model of what investigative reporting on TV should be.
Punchy, hastily re-written, and updated ‘No Man Wants to Die’ reports on
Derrick Gregory imprisoned in Malaysia and facing that country’s
mandatory death sentence for heroin smuggling.
”””””””””””” 
Today Dec 8 1986
Tonight’s television could save a man from the gallows
Derrick Gregory, who goes on trial in Malaysia next month charged
with heroin smuggling, was arrested in Penang in 1982 wearing a gidle
stuffed with the drug.
He claims he was forced to smuggle because his wife and child were
being threatened by Paul Dye, recently sentenced at the Old Bailey to 28
years in prison.
Psychiatrist Dr. Colin Brewer was flown out to examine Gregory by the
20/20 Vision team behind tonight’s documentary ‘No Man Wants to
Die’.(No Man Wants to Die C4 10.30 p.m.)
Brewer was commissioned after reporter Andrew Drummond discovered that Gregory attended special schools as a child.
‘The examination,’ says Drummond ‘revealed that Gregory has an
enlarged brain cavity and has had it since he was about four years old.
‘In a British court he would be able to plead diminished
responsibility and possibly be acquitted. In Malaysia there are no
precedents for mercy at this late stage.’
Gregory’s Malaysian lawyers hope the psychiatric findings will swing
the balance of the trial. If they don’t the west London man will hang.
‘Gregory, with only a prayer and a television programme to pin his
hopes on is clearly scared: ‘I’ve lost everything….no man wants to die,
do they?’
”””””””””””’- 
U.K. Press Gazette, December 5 1986
Award winning journalist Andrew Drummond has completed his first
television documentary, ‘No Man Wants to Die’ with Claudia Milne of
Channel 4’s 20/20 Vision.
The programme, which goes out this Thursday, is based on Drummond’s
investigation for 20/20 Vision of the Paul Dye heroin syndicate which
ended last week at the Old Bailey with the jailing of Dye for 28 years.
The programme’s title is taken from the words of Derrick Gregory, 32,
the next Briton to face execution in Malaysia on drugs charges.
Drummond was the winner of the Maurice Ludmer Memorial Prize for investigating racism and facism.
He is a former News of the World staffer who refused to cross the picket line.

One thought on “A Gleaming Model Of What Investigative Reporting On TV

  1. I hear you Andrew and I'll accept the "fine" expect an AU$50.00 Pay Pal transfer this coming week. Sorry I've been a bit caught up with other matters that have diverted me away from the all encompassing Drew Noyes issue. I apologise for my repitition, and it won't happen again, I repeat, it won't happen again and I do apologise for my repetition. It won't happen again. My repetition that is. It won't happen again. It won't. Happen again that is.
    Love your work AD, fifty bucks coming your way, and you must win this in all sincerity, if for no other reason than when I get back to Pattaya, I won't have to be confronted with old copies of The Pattaya Times looking back at me at every 7-11 store I enter.

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