David Leigh

David Leigh
David Leigh
Education Nottingham High School, King's College, Cambridge
Occupation investigative journalist, assistant editor
Title The Guardian's Investigations executive editor
Nationality British
Years active 197? – present
Website
http://twitter.com/#!/davidleigh3

David Leigh is a British journalist and author, currently investigations executive editor of The Guardian.

Contents

Early life

Leigh was born in 1946 and educated at Nottingham High School and King's College, Cambridge, receiving a research degree from Cambridge in 1968.

Career

Leigh has been a prominent investigative journalist since the 1970s[citation needed], He was a journalist for the Scotsman, The Times, and the Guardian, and a Laurence Stern fellow at the Washington Post in 1980. From 1980 he was chief investigative reporter at The Observer.[1] His 1988 book The Wilson Plot increased public interest in alleged attempts by the British security services and others to destabilise Harold Wilson's government in the 1970s. His 1995 TV documentary for World in Action, "Jonathan of Arabia", led after a libel trial to the jailing for perjury of former Conservative defence minister Jonathan Aitken. With colleague Rob Evans, he published a series of corruption exposures in the Guardian about international arms giant BAE Systems. After criminal inquiry by the US Department of Justice and other international prosecutors, the company was eventually hit with penalties totalling $529 million. [1] In 2006, Leigh became the Anthony Sampson Professor of Reporting in the Journalism department at City University London.[2]

Wikileaks investigation

in 2006 Leigh headed the Guardian team, which investigated the WikiLeaks releases, and which worked closely with Julian Assange. This relationship soured however. This caused David Leigh to tweet: "The #guardian published too many leaks for #Assange 's liking, it seems. So now he's signed up 'exclusively' with #Murdoch's Times. Gosh."[3]

In a book he published with Luke Harding, Leigh mentioned the password to a set of unredacted classified US State Department cables.[4] Wikileaks had earlier distributed multiple copies of files containing all these cables. Julian Assange of Wikileaks sought controversially to blame Leigh and the Guardian.'[5] In response the Guardian said "it's nonsense to suggest the Guardian's WikiLeaks book has compromised security in any way". According to the Guardian Wikileaks had indicated that the password was temporary and that Wikileaks had seven months to take action to protect the files it had subsequently decided to post online.[6]

Awards

In 2007, he was awarded the Paul Foot prize, with his colleague Rob Evans, for the BAE bribery exposures. The prize is awarded annually by Private Eye and The Guardian in memory of the campaigning journalist Paul Foot. Leigh and Evans were also presented with the Granada TV What the Papers Say Judges' Award for "an outstanding piece of investigative journalism that uncovered a story of great significance". In 2010, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists awarded him and five other journalists the Daniel Pearl Award for their investigation of Trafigura.[7]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ Stewart, Angus (1983). Contemporary Britain. Routledge. p. viii. ISBN 071009406X. "David Leigh has been chief investigative reporter, the Observer, since 1980" 
  2. ^ "David Leigh to become Britain’s first professor of reporting". Citynews. 27 September 2006. http://www.city.ac.uk/citynews/archive/2006/09_september/27092006_1.html. Retrieved 20 November 2006. 
  3. ^ Nitasha Tiku "Julian Assange Picks a Media Fight With the Guardian", New York Magazine, 21 December 2010
  4. ^ "WikiLeaks: Breach has exposed unredacted US cables", Associated Press, 31 August 2011
  5. ^ Stöcker, Christian (1 September 2011). "Leak at WikiLeaks: A Dispatch Disaster in Six Acts". Der Spiegel. Archived from the original on 4 September 2011. http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,783778,00.html. Retrieved 4 September 2011. 
  6. ^ "Unredacted US embassy cables available online after WikiLeaks breach", The Guardian, 1 September 2011
  7. ^ "ICIJ Names Winners of 2010 Daniel Pearl Awards for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting", ICIJ, 24 April 2010

External links