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Scoops from trash
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, APRIL 1. He is every journalist's dream and some of the
``scoops'' in the London press should be carrying his byline but
he is happy simply supplying the information - and most often
without even claiming a service charge. But what happens when the
word gets out that a story, shortlisted for the ``scoop of the
year'' award, actually came from him and not the newspaper's
``investigative team''?
Meet Mr. Benjamin Pell, London's most famous rubbish collector
and popularly known as ``Benji the Binman''. He specialises in
picking up rubbish from high-profile addresses in the city and
when he stumbles upon something newsworthy, passes it on to
newspapers though how exactly he decides which bit of rubbish
should go to which newspaper is not clear. One leading newspaper
reportedly has a financial arrangement with him and is said to
have paid over £ 3,000 to Mr. Pell for three stories he
supplied to them in 1999.
Recently, Mr. Pell found himself at the centre of headlines as it
emerged that a Sunday Times story, shortlisted for the ``scoop of
the year'' prize for the British Press Awards, was supplied by
him rather than the newspaper's Insight investigative team. The
whistle was inadvertently blown by none other than a Times
journalist who told a German TV channel that the story was based
on documents provided by Mr. Pell.
The story published on June 11 last year quoted a memo from the
Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair's pollster, Mr. Philip Gould,
warning Mr. Blair that he was seen as being ``out of touch'' with
the people. The memo was written on the eve of Mr. Blair's speech
to a women's gathering and - as predicted by Mr.
Gould - it turned out to be a disaster with the audience greeting
him with a humiliating slow handclap. This was first of a series
of ``confidential'' memos frontpaged by The Sunday Times that
caused a huge political embarrassment to the Blair Government and
earned the newspaper the envy of its rivals.
Whether Mr. Pell picked up the memos from Mr. Gould's bin after
they were rubbished or someone gave them to him is not clear but
according to The Times' whistle-blower, they came from him. Mr.
Pell appeared to confirm that he was the source when he told The
Guardian that in the event of The Sunday Times winning the prize
he should be the one receiving it - just as well, that it didn't.
Mr. Pell (36), claims to have contributed to the professional
rise of a number of prominent journalists by feeding them his
rubbish. ``We all know I'm the best thing that's happened to
Fleet Street for the last 150 years...''.
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