Don Hale

Don Hale OBE (born July 1952) is a British journalist.

Career

Early in his career Hale was a professional footballer for Bury, Blackburn Rovers, York City and Shrewsbury Town.[1]

While editor of the Bury Messenger in the early 1980s, he says Barbara Castle, then the local Member of the European Parliament gave him confidential information on political figures who appeared sympathetic to the Paedophile Information Exchange and indicated that several high ranking senior politicians were also allegedly involved in promoting a Westminster paedophile circle. After refusing pressure to hand over the dossier put on him by Cyril Smith MP and Special Branch not to publish it, his office was then raided by SB officers and the papers were confiscated with the threat of prison.[2][3]

He was later editor of the Matlock Mercury, where he became involved in the campaign to overturn the murder conviction of Stephen Downing.[1][4] In 1973, Downing, at the time a 17-year-old with the reading age of an 11-year-old, was imprisoned for the murder of Wendy Sewell and served 27 years in jail. Following his six-year campaign, the conviction was eventually quashed and declared unsafe by the Court of Appeal in 2001 and Downing was released.

Hale's work on the case eventually helped to force a change in both European and British law, allowing any prisoner, particularly in denial of murder (IDOM) and/or convicted of any serious offence, to be allowed to appeal for parole consideration directly to the Parole Board. Downing's case was one of three test cases originally presented to the European Court of Human Rights by barrister Edward Fitzgerald. After several years of debate and despite a late appeal from the British Government, the case went in Downing's favour and he received £500 in compensation. When the murder conviction was later quashed, Downing also received over £900,000 in compensation. Hale's book about the Stephen Downing appeal case, Town Without Pity, became a best-seller. It was adapted into a BBC TV drama starring Stephen Tompkinson and Caroline Catz called In Denial of Murder.

Hale was voted 2001 Man of the Year by The Observer newspaper, Journalist of the Year by What the Papers Say and was made an OBE for his efforts and campaigning journalism. He has also been national journalist of the year on three occasions, and his campaign to free Stephen Downing won the national campaign of the year award.

Hale has also been heavily involved with helping to successfully overturn the convictions of several other former prisoners including ex-policeman Graham Huckerby, who was jailed for his alleged part in a Salford bullion robbery - first highlighted on BBC's Crimewatch programme - and his extensive investigative work on the controversial case of Barry George, jailed for life for the murder of BBC TV star Jill Dando. Both prisoners had their convictions quashed.

During 2013, Hale began investigating an alleged miscarriage of justice for ex-Sheffield United footballer Ched Evans, who was convicted of the rape of a teenage woman in Rhyl and sentenced to five years in jail. Hale has helped present fresh evidence to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) on behalf and in support of the family's claim that the police inquiry was flawed, and that much of the evidence that could have helped his defence, was not presented at trial. Evans was routinely released from prison on licence in October 2014 and evidence sent to the Criminal Cases Review Commission. On 6 October 2015, they announced that they were referring the case back to the Court of Appeal, where he was later acquitted. Evans faced a retrial in Oct 2016 and the jury took three hours to return a 12-0 verdict of not guilty.

After a short spell working for the North Wales Pioneer newspaper, Hale became editor of the newly formed North Wales Living magazine in 2005. He won a succession of prestigious awards but later left to pursue other interests. During the autumn of 2007, his book about the famous frogman spy mystery 'Buster' Crabb, called The Final Dive, was published by Suttons/The History Press. Hale has also had published Secrets of the Royal Detective about his great-grandfather, James Wood, a notable Manchester detective from 1890 to 1914, who was also the first Royal Protection Officer acting as a personal bodyguard to the Prince of Wales, following the death of Queen Victoria.

Hale's book, Mallard - How the Blue Streak broke the World Speed Record, also became a popular best seller and was first released in paperback by Aurum Press in May 2008 to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the speed record for steam locomotives held by LNER Class A4 4468 Mallard. The book was reprinted and published in July 2013 as a specially updated version for the 75th anniversary of Mallard breaking the world speed record on 3 July 1938, by publishers Aurum Press. The book was officially launched at the NRM in York on 3 July 2013 as part of the Great Gathering commemorations

Hale returned to mainstream newspapers working as a freelance from January 2014.

Hale has written several other books, including a crime novel titled The Wrong Body and non-fiction works such as "The Child Killers," Sounds of the Sixties - Club 60 & the Esquire, Birth of the British Bobby, The World of Dreams, and Joe Cocker and the Clubs.

References

  1. 1 2 "Journalist Don makes a footballing comeback". HoldTheFrontPage. 25 June 2007. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  2. Roy Greenslade (15 July 2014). "Editor explains why he didn't publish Barbara Castle's paedophile dossier". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  3. Andrew Rosthorn (24 July 2014). "How Cyril Smith Outwitted Barbara Castle in the Strange Case of the Paedophiles at the Home Office". Tribune. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  4. "Don Hale: Campaigning editor". BBC. 7 February 2001. Retrieved 2 September 2014.

External links

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