I am ashamed to call myself a Journalist
by John Darvall
On Saturday 31st October, at 1.30am, my 22-year-old eldest daughter Polly was killed when she lost control of the car she was driving and hit a tree. She was alone in her VW Beetle, no one else was hurt and, I am told, it was instant.
I can tell you that having lost my father as a child, other close family members along the timeline of life and having said many times ‘on air’ that losing a child must be the worst thing of all, it is. It really is. It’s not a grief ‘competition’ it just is. Losing a child is the worst thing of all.
Polly’s mother Sarah and her dad Simon, who brought Polly up from the age of 3 and did such a brilliant job, are broken by this, as are all our families. My eldest son, Polly’s brother Oliver, is broken too but one of the few comforts I am taking at the moment is what a fine, brave, courageous man he has become. Again his mother Sarah and dad Simon deserve all the credit.
It is Simon, Polly’s dad, who has prompted me to write this blog. I am Polly and Oliver’s father, Simon is their dad. That is always the language we use, though Ollie and Polly always call me dad when we are together. Language is vital if we are to understand who we are and what we do.
The news of my daughter’s death, because of the nature of the work I used to do (I know I will never be the same again) and who I am engaged to means that there is some media interest in me with the local and national newspapers and TV. Those who know me well will know that I never, ever wanted to be the story, just to tell or share the story, as a journalist, correctly. I have never wanted to be on TV, I don’t want to be known, perhaps just be known of, to do my job well and to help people if I can and to get to the truth for others.
As all the family came together on Monday morning to start the process of making arrangements for Polly, I was contacted by the BBC for a quote about her. There has been quite a reaction to the news, because of me, with many kind words paid in tribute to my daughter and kindness shown towards me from those who listen and maybe even enjoy what I do daily on the radio. I gave the BBC ‘the line’, agreeing it while on the ‘phone to them with Polly’s mother Sarah and Polly’s dad Simon hearing me do this. I wanted the quote, the tribute to come from Sarah, Polly’s mum, who did such a brilliant job in bringing our daughter up with Simon. The name order was also agreed to be ‘Sarah, her husband Simon Bosworth and John Darvall’. I was clear.
On Monday night, on Points West the local BBC News opt for the West, none of this happened in their broadcast about Polly. Simon was called Polly’s ‘stepdad’, a phrase we have NEVER used. Simon, Polly’s dad was straight on the phone to me. He was rightly furious and more. This journalistic failure significantly added to his pain, and to mine. To hear Polly’s dad rage at you about your profession, about the things you have clearly agreed whilst standing in his family home just hours before when our daughter has been killed…words fail me. This poor piece of journalism made Tuesday probably the worst day of this whole episode so far. This includes seeing our dead daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed.
Newspapers have contacted me and provided appallingly written articles, which I have had to change, ‘polish’ or make actual sense of. Other papers have published articles using my personal relationship as ‘the in line’, when this is NOT the story but, at best, just a very small part of the story. This has hurt many who are in the throes of grief. Other papers have just published without checking and have got facts wrong. See earlier blogs. One paper spliced a year off my age. I will take that!
The way we all consume news is changing. The way we share news has changed and will continue to change at a faster pace. This week TV and newspapers have proven to me why they are not the future of news. If they can’t even get their facts right, be trusted with clear information and then report it accurately is it any wonder that we are all turning to Facebook, Twitter and other internet sources for our news and information? The internet allows us to come to our own conclusions by checking our own facts. We really can’t trust the traditional outlets to do it right or properly.
I write this as a father who has lost a daughter. I write this as a journalist who loved his work but can now clearly see why so many have lost faith in his profession and traditional media. They, we and I have brought this on ourselves.
I also write this to set the record straight for Polly’s mother Sarah and Polly’s dad Simon. I am ashamed to call myself a journalist and I am truly sorry to have added to your grief. I have spoken to Simon and he knows I have written this.
Two bits of advice for you reading this, if I may:
Trust nothing you read or watch. Check it, at least twice, as it’s more than likely wrong from just a single source.
Love your children and loved ones. Properly love them. Tell them every day, make sure they know that you love them regardless of what might be happening. Nothing is more important than that.
[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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I am sorry for you lose I am ashamed of the BBC for not doing right my your family I believe you are right about the media in England
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Dear John,
My heart goes out to you.
Such integrity that you’ve shown is hard to match. I pray that you and your extended family find peace in the love offered to you. I take your words to heart. I’ve never heard you as far as I know (but people seem to rate you)
but this blog entry will hopefully have, eventually, a positive impact on the traditional media, that save a few shining stars of integrity may even still be somewhat complacent sitting on the laurels of badly researched received wisdom and lazy journalism.
My hat goes off to those who really get to the bottom of stories and represent all sides fairly. A really good piece should still leave you trying to make up your mind and thinking hard about the issues rather than it being a fait accompli, and it is good that an insider exposes the weaknesses of our beloved BBC.
Thank-you for putting your head above the parapet. I hope some good comes from this. Even if it just more people questioning the information fed to them. Including me!
Thanks. Take care.
Jez in Bristol.
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Hi John. My heart goes out to you all.
My daughter is nineteen, and I bought her a Toyota with an airbag, even though she wanted an old Beetle. It hasn’t saved her life yet.
Are you interested in using your influence to publicize this aspect of youth car choice? The modern ones are many many times safer.
Apologies if I seem uncouth.
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[…] A BBC journalist, John Darvall, has lambasted his own career at the BBC. The insensitive way the tragic death of his daughter, Polly, has been handled by several outlets led him to lay bare his thoughts about the BBC and the British media industry as a whole, in a heartfelt blog post. […]
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Dear John
I am so sorry for your families loss. My husbands daughter died 2 weeks ago, just 16 years old, and although I am childless I can see from my husband how devastating losing a child can be.
I am so touched you call Simon Polly’s dad, it takes a big man to step back and accept someone else is the ‘dad’ to your children.
As for media, I lost faith many years ago. The half truths, the agenda, the downright lies. I’m not sure social media is any better but as you say rooting around the Internet can often find the other side of every story.
I wish you success and a better career to follow.
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May you all be comforted in your time of grieving and may this article be passed around the world so that others will know how lazy the media has become and that they must seek out the truth of every story. The motto, “Never let the truth get in the way of a good story” applies now.
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I’m sorry for your loss,it must be off the scale horrible, couldn’t begin to imagine what you’re going through,
Stay strong if possible
When I had a death and newspapers get details wrong, anger gets multiplied!! It can open your eyes to a great many things!
Edwin x
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So sorry for your loss. I stopped reading mainstream press and watching TV years ago, as it is all so clearly biased and untrustworthy. I found your blog via http://bsnews.info/bbc-journalist-trust-nothing-you-read-or-watch-i-am-ashamed-to-be-a-journalist/
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I really hope you can persuade at least one national newspaper to print this story. And show us all there remains at least one crumb of common deceny in the corporate media, though I fear there isn’t.
Nevertheless, you owe it to Polly and your family to try.
My best wishes to you and your family circle in your time of need.
Bryan Hemming.
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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You are a very brave man, my heart goes out to all of you dealing with your loss, just know a lot of people will read that and fully understand how the media manipulate. Prayers and thoughts with you..
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I am sorry for your loss and i agree that the media should nt be trusted, but I think you’re over-reacting to BBC’s use of the word ‘step-dad’. It was hard to follow who is what in your article, “Sarah, her husband Simon Bosworth and John Darvall”, Polly & Ollie, dad, father, age of three, etc. Readers do not know all the minutia of your life. I had to read your column twice to ascertain that it was your biological daughter and your, I assume, Ex-wife’s second husband, was the step-father. Even I had to write the phrase step-father here again, because THAT IS THE WORD ENGLISH PEOPLE USE IN AMERICA, and I assume in the UK.. What other word am i supposed to use?? Like I said I’m very sorry for your loss of your daughter but since you brought this issue up with such outrage about the use of the word step-dad, i think your outrage is grossly misplaced.
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The simple fact that this has made you think about the language used is one the points I am making. Whether it’s a family tragedy, an election or a plane falling out of the sky every journalist or reporter should carefully choose the words used, mindful of all the parties involved in the story, throughly check their facts and never use shorthand. Never assume or ask for a quote then change the quote to suit. I have leant from this and I hope others do too.
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John I am very sorry for your loss, and I agree that it was an insensitive and totally inaccurate description of your family. However, I would not say that I can understand why it makes you ashamed of being a journalist. On the whole it is accepted that papers all present things with their own take on it – I myself have rung to complain on several occasions when I have been misquoted and I know it can range from being mortifying to being distressing.
However, I think the problem is more that certain things that aren’t news are turned into news – family tragedies aren’t really news; they are surely private matters, but they can sell papers more than “drier” news – who wants to read about tax, etc, even though it’s something that is news that can affect us all?
Whenever personal tragedies get told in the press the goal would appear to be to entertain the public by telling a narrative that people feel they can buy into. The answer for me is to go to the press for maximum publicity to tell a story about a subject that otherwise will not be known enough, but avoid them like the plague if I am feeling vulnerable and needing sympathy for some bad, (but not particularly unusual) event. Ultimately the press needs to entertain its readership, and for this reason should be approached with caution; journalists have their uses, and one of them is drawing attention to otherwise un-publicized matters, and if that involves a degree of sensationalism, then so be it.
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You make good points. but i just hope that you don’t hold too bad of a grudge or resentment against the reporter who used the word in question, because he/she was probably just using the commonly held understanding of the term. I still don’t quite understand why the word is so offensive.Even if you don’t use the term step-dad, is it reasonable to demand, or to expect, that the general public therefore won’t use it either?
Anyway – Once again i am very sorry for your loss, take care of yourself and I will pray for you & your family, for what that’s worth.
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I also had to read over again and more carefully to ascertain who was who. Having said that, can you think of nothing else to say to this man who just lost his daughter, except to argue with him about the term “stepfather”? If you are a troll, have your laugh, I fell for it. If you were sincere in your letter, please think before you write something so insensitive again.
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I read John Darrell’s article once and had no problem identifying who was who.
John – like so many who have already commented – my heart goes out to you, to Polly’s Mother and her Dad.
I cannot begin to know what you are suffering, but know that my thoughts are with you and all of Polly’s family.
May the memories you have of Polly bring smiles into your grief.
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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I am so sorry for your loss. Genuinely, painfully, I am so sad for you.
Yet, I must ask, as someone who has been a journalist and editor on two of the biggest papers in the world, are you not playing a semantics game? As a journo, you must have taken those calls before where the person is stenuously asking for wording a certain way, to use their family words in a certain way?
For communication, we need a shorthand somehow. If we didn’t, context is lost. It is painful for you to have your family shorthanded in that way, but it was logical to tell the story. I know it caused grief, but this was someone else telling your story, not yourself. If i was retelling to my family thr circumstances of this accident, it is probably the words I would use.
I am truly, tremendously sorry, but I understand why this was used. It wasnt caring for your family’s suffering, but it was trying to tell the story succintly. If every news report was filled with nuances and explanations, a 10 minute bulletin would become an hour.
Your feelings are right though and deserve to be shared as a warning. And God bless you and your family.
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Thank you for your reply.
Of course it is semantics and there is a difference in reporting and journalism. Shorthand should only be used if we don’t have the qualified information from the source or have asked for it from source. To ask for a quote or ‘a line’ and then change that quote or line is wrong. You are right in that I have taken many calls and used shorthand but I have the luxury of speaking to people and getting them to share their story. Newspapers are binary and the standard of writing and what is written as fact that is factually wrong is a concern. It was not the first time I experienced it, together with two newspapers actually telling lies. Leveson tried to deal with this along with the sourcing of information too.
We all need to do better. I will do better. I am proud to work for the BBC and I will do my job better. I will ask what is important of any story I tell, explain the arc of the story and do better. I hope you will too.
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This may not mean much to you personally, but I have been trying to bring to the attention of the citizenry how the media is just another tool as Orwell warned it would be in a larger set of systems designed to keep us distracted with bread and circuses. I don’t judge one’s singing capability on looks and do not own a tv. I can’t speak for your loss other than to give my sympathy. But if you ever want to look into truth as the media won’t report it *BECAUSE THEY SUPPORT NOT HOLDING THOSE TRULY RESPONSIBLE ACCOUNTABLE*, a good place to start would be http://dissidentvoice.org/2015/07/a-single-change/ with links to my website http://worthy-individuals.org/ I’m trying to tackle this social issue at its source. The media helps to distract us from even seeing what that source is, giving us the impression that they are caused by things beyond their control. Nonsense. Whenever there is unrest from fringe groups in the middle east, tiny island countries like Haiti or anywhere in Africa, you only have to ask one question the media never does: where do they get the arms they are using for combat? None of them are produced in these areas. Must be the same place ISIL is manufacturing its fake beheading videos and uploading them to a British news service I’d guess.
Again, I’m truly sorry regarding your personal loss. But to keep similar things happening to others, we have to tackle the problem at its source.
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[…] A BBC journalist, John Darvall, has lambasted his own career at the BBC. The insensitive way the tragic death of his daughter, Polly, has been handled by several outlets led him to lay bare his thoughts about the BBC and the British media industry as a whole, in a heartfelt blog post. […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog post. – ‘Newspapers have contacted me and provided appallingly written articles, which I […]
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Your telling us something that thousands of U.S. Already knew. Shame it took something that happens all the time to happen to a journalist for it to be recognised in print.
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We live in a superficial world fabricated by irrational human beings.
” The world we now live in, is a product of the irrational mindset. Everything that is wrong with this world comes from irrational man. The only evil on earth is the irrational mindset. Natural man has bungled up this world beyond comprehension. Everything that is programmed into the mind of irrational man is distorted, falsified. When I say everything , I mean everything. Everything from basic arithmetic to advanced mathematics, everything form elementary science to quantum mechanics, everything that is taught in our schools and universities; history, psychology, economics, sociology, biology …… etc. Everything has been falsified. We live in a fantasy world that cannot be sustained. The world as we know it is now falling apart, coming to an end.” The faithful witness
Believers Information Network
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] A BBC journalist, John Darvall, has lambasted his own career at the BBC. The insensitive way the tragic death of his daughter, Polly, has been handled by several outlets led him to lay bare his thoughts about the BBC and the British media industry as a whole, in a heartfelt blog post. […]
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Reblogged this on Not quite a scientist.
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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Hey John, I feel for you. But I have to say, isn’t ‘stepfather’ AP style? It is in the States. I’ve taken those calls on the news desk and, at least over here, we certainly try to accommodate folks, but I’m fairly sure my night editor would have changed it to ‘stepfather’ anyway.And lest you think I’m some ass American, I had to write my mom’s and my dad’s obits. It’s the job, my friend.
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Sending love to you all
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[…] ‘This poor piece of journalism made Tuesday probably the worst day of this whole episode so far. This includes seeing our dead daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog post. […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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John
Like others, I share your grief. My ówn sister was murdered 20 years ago at age of 30. I’ve never got over it, only learned to live with it.
I’m certainly familiar with the inaccuracies in press reporting, especially an inability to get basic facts correct and an insensitivity towards those who are in the depths of a brutal grief.
Subsequently, I’ve noticed more and more the inaccuracy in established ‘trusted’ institutions such as the BBC and their portrayal of the news. This has forced me to look elsewhere for the truth.
Best wishes
JohnPD
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John
Thinking of you, my old friend and colleague. I too feel the same about journalism. Thank you for putting it so eloquently.
Chris.
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I m saddened by yr lose.ashamed of BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION
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I can understand your pain, and Simon’s. I am truly sorry for your loss.
But as I see fringe blogs and websites presenting this as a journalist “coming clean” about a “profession systematically lying”, I most make note of some things. Especially your second-to-last paragraph, a perfect out-of-context two-liners.
From an outside, distanced perspective, the nuances you make and had within your family between “dad” and “father” are faint, almost hard to distinguish. Fact of the matter is, legally, semantically, “stepdad” was the right word to use.
Using the nuances you make – even reading your post makes it hard to understand – would’ve been the wrong thing to do, for it would have only caused confusion.
Was it tactful? Was it respectful? Not to the immediate family. But it was right for the article to use that word.
The age is a basic fact, yet fairly meaningless and barely relevant error.
The rest? Perhaps you’d need to get into more details, but I don’t see anything here that justifies such a broad, strong statement as the one you’re making.
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Thank you for your reply and your kindness. You make some valid and interesting points too.
As I’m sure you know you can not legislate for what happens after you publish anything. It is down to nuance, semantics and interpretation. The words used by the BBC were correct and legal but when, as a journalist, you ask the family for the words to use and they are not used it is a different matter. One of the basic questions is ‘what is important to you’ within the arc of any ‘human interest’ story. If it can’t be done within that story, because of time or format or publication then that journalist should, indeed must, refer back. There is no real blame here just circumstance, procedure and events.
I am sorry you don’t understand what others have within the relationships outlined in my blog. I accept that may be nuance too. As someone known within the region of broadcast, having been open about my family for many years, it would have made sense to many. The age issue is a fact that is incorrect. A very basic fact, which had been incorrect before in articles published about me from earlier this year. If you can’t get the basics right surly you must question the facts that really matter to be certain they are correct too? Other facts in the printed articles are incorrect, will be detailed in due course and some are subject to formal complaints. Some papers kindly gave the family a chance to see what was written before printing. The quality of this original writing was, in a few cases, quite poor.
My second but last paragraph is applicable to trusted news sources such as the BBC (who I am proud to work for and who very rarely make mistakes through very careful and exacting diligence) as it is to blogs like mine and all media in between. If we only accept one news source as the truth in our increasing plural media landscape then we really do need to question our judgement.
Lifting quotes from social media without checking them or even verifying the source is foolish at the very least and potentially dangerous in the extreme. Claiming you have tried to speak to the family, me, when you have not is a lie.
Again, thank you for your reply. If by opening a debate on this means some journalists and reporters take a little more care in what they do, on a human level and on a news reporting basis too, is that such a bad thing? I don’t think so. As a journalist I will certainly try harder.
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] A BBC journalist, John Darvall, has lambasted his own career at the BBC. The insensitive way the tragic death of his daughter, Polly, has been handled by several outlets led him to lay bare his thoughts about the BBC and the British media industry as a whole, in a heartfelt blog post. […]
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Sincere condolences to you at this very sad time. You have I am sure the support of all those who for some time have known that the mainstream news, is mainly a large proportion of propaganda and poor reporting. Sad that you had to have such a terrible thing happen to see this for yourself. Mainstream media is living on borrowed time ,and rightly so.
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I can sympathize.
I’ve been struggling against misinformation by journalists and professionals for much of my life -regarding art and digital technology.
I believe the taboo on formalism in our society is causing great harm.
So what will you do now?
Good luck!
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My sincere condolences to yourself, Sarah, Simon and Oliver.
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Reblogged this on campertess.
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[…] Source: I am ashamed to call myself a Journalist […]
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Condolences to all the family on their loss
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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[…] in journalism, John suffered consequences of careless reporting of Polly’s death, which he wrote about in his blog. John had come to our attention this year by interviewing Naomi Whittingham (whose […]
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[…] daughter in a hospital mortuary just 12 hours after she was killed,’ Darvall wrote in a moving blog […]
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