Ian Wishart
Encyclopedia
Ian Wishart is a New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses and numerous smaller islands. The country is situated some east of Australia across the Tasman Sea, and roughly south of the Pacific island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga...

 journalist, author, an opponent to the hypothesis of anthropogenic climate change
Climate change
Climate change is a significant and lasting change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns over periods ranging from decades to millions of years. It may be a change in average weather conditions or the distribution of events around that average...

, and the editor of Investigate
Investigate (New Zealand)
Investigate is a current affairs magazine published in New Zealand. It has a conservative Christian editorial standpoint and has published a number of controversial articles. Many of the more notable articles have been critical of policies and members of the centre-left Fifth Labour Government of...

magazine. He has featured twice in the Listener magazine's power list
New Zealand Listener Power List
The New Zealand Listener Power List is a list of the most powerful people in New Zealand, compiled annually by the New Zealand Listener from 2004 to 2009. From 2004 to 2007, the list covered the 50 most powerful people without separating them by field...

, with his highest appearance being 29, and a listing as the country's "most influential journalist" in 2007.

Wishart has said that his book Eve's Bite (2007) is "the most politically incorrect
Political correctness
Political correctness is a term which denotes language, ideas, policies, and behavior seen as seeking to minimize social and institutional offense in occupational, gender, racial, cultural, sexual orientation, certain other religions, beliefs or ideologies, disability, and age-related contexts,...

 book ever published in New Zealand". In the book, Wishart argues that New Zealand society is being "poisoned" and the Western world
Western world
The Western world, also known as the West and the Occident , is a term referring to the countries of Western Europe , the countries of the Americas, as well all countries of Northern and Central Europe, Australia and New Zealand...

 as a whole undermined "by seductive and destructive philosophies and social engineering that within the space of a generation have intellectually crippled the greatest civilisation the world has ever seen". His more recent books include Absolute Power (2008), which details Helen Clark
Helen Clark
Helen Elizabeth Clark, ONZ is a New Zealand political figure who was the 37th Prime Minister of New Zealand for three consecutive terms from 1999 to 2008...

's years as Prime Minister and Air Con (2009), in which he says that man-made climate change is not significant against the scale of natural forces, and that climate change is being used primarily as a revenue-generating exercise by the climate-industrial complex. Both Absolute Power and Air Con were #1 bestselling titles on the NZ Booksellers List.

Wishart went to Onslow College
Onslow College
Onslow College is a decile 10 co-educational state secondary school located in Johnsonville, a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand. The school opened in 1956 to serve the city's rapidly-growing northern suburbs. The new Principal will be Mr. Peter Leggat, and he will begin at the start of the School...

, and studied journalism at Wellington Polytechnic, graduating in 1982. He has worked for Radio Windy, Radio Hauraki, Radio Pacific, TV3 and Television New Zealand. He started a book publishing company, Howling At The Moon, in 1995.

He has married twice with children from his first marriage and from his second. He and his second wife, Heidi, are Anglican
Anglicanism
Anglicanism is a tradition within Christianity comprising churches with historical connections to the Church of England or similar beliefs, worship and church structures. The word Anglican originates in ecclesia anglicana, a medieval Latin phrase dating to at least 1246 that means the English...

s.

Career

Ian Wishart studied journalism at Wellington Polytechnic (now Massey University) in 1982 and began working at Wellington's Radio Windy from the middle of the year after filing eyewitness reports for the station from the scene of a hostage drama. Wishart went on to work during the 1980s for Radio Hauraki, the Radio Pacific network, and New Zealand's first commercial FM licence holder, 89FM in Auckland, but resigned his position as News Director to take up a position with the new TV3 network in 1989 as one of its founding reporters. Wishart was serving as Chief of Staff for the network's news division when he resigned to join rival TVNZ in 1993. Wishart is listed as working for One News, and the TVNZ current affairs shows, "Frontline" and "Eyewitness" - as co-anchor/reporter with Alison Mau.

'Reporter who became news'

In October 1983 Wellington's two daily newspapers both carried front page stories about an armed bank robbery where two men were stabbed by the offender as he escaped. Ian Wishart is named in the reports as a Radio Windy journalist, an eyewitness and one of six people who intervened to tackle and disarm the robber.

The Winebox Affair

In 1992, New Zealand politician Winston Peters
Winston Peters
Winston Raymond Peters is a New Zealand politician and leader of New Zealand First, a political party he founded in 1993. Peters has had a turbulent political career since entering Parliament in 1978. He served as Minister of Maori Affairs in the Bolger National Party Government before being...

 began raising a series of allegations in Parliament about prominent business leaders trying to bribe politicians. As he escalated his claims to include movie and bloodstock financing deals and tax havens in the Caribbean and the Cook Islands, it was revealed Peters had been meeting with a second-hand computer dealer named Paul White, who had come into possession of 92 floppy disks that had been inadvertently sold by Citibank
Citibank
Citibank, a major international bank, is the consumer banking arm of financial services giant Citigroup. Citibank was founded in 1812 as the City Bank of New York, later First National City Bank of New York...

's New Zealand division with client banking data still on the disks.

Paul White was killed in a controversial pre-dawn car crash in Auckland on 4 September 1992, and when emergency services arrived on the scene the Citibank disks and NZ$15,000 in cash he had been paid in an out-of-court settlement by Citibank the previous day were missing.

Ian Wishart was assigned by the TV3 network to report on the case, and subsequently found ties between information on the Citibank disks and tax haven dealings. Wishart then came into possession of some confidential business transaction papers that became popularly known as "The Winebox documents" because they had first turned up in an old wine carton.

The documents detailed extensive tax avoidance and tax evasion
Tax avoidance and tax evasion
Tax noncompliance describes a range of activities that are unfavorable to a state's tax system. These include tax avoidance, which refers to reducing taxes by legal means, and tax evasion which refers to the criminal non-payment of tax liabilities....

 schemes run through Cook Islands offshore companies associated with an entity part owned by the New Zealand Government state bank, the Bank of New Zealand
Bank of New Zealand
Bank of New Zealand is one of New Zealand’s largest banks and has been operating continuously in the country since the first office was opened in Auckland in October 1861 followed shortly after by the first branch in Dunedin in December 1861...

, and merchant bank Fay Richwhite & Co, whose principals Sir Michael Fay
Michael Fay
Michael Fay may refer to:*J. Michael Fay , explorer and biologist*Sir Michael Fay , New Zealand merchant banker in the America Cup's Hall of Fame*Michael D. Fay, American Marine combat artist...

 and Sir David Richwhite
David Richwhite
David MacKellar Richwhite is a New Zealand investment banker and was a partner in Fay, Richwhite & Company with Sir Michael Fay.Educated at King's College, Auckland and the University of Otago, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce degree, Richwhite's personal wealth was largely acquired...

 were close allies of both the Labour and National political parties.

Although Winston Peters and other financial journalists and newspapers also had copies of the Winebox documents, it was Ian Wishart who first identified the key “Magnum” and “JIF” transactions, later confirmed by the Privy Council and the New Zealand Court of Appeal to be prima facie criminal fraud. against the revenues of New Zealand and Japan respectively.

Wishart was pressured by TV3 news director Rod Pedersen to drop the investigation and instead take up a promotion to the position of 3 National News Chief of Staff, a position Wishart had been appointed to in an acting capacity after the earlier resignation of the incumbent. Wishart decided to quit the network however after being advised by former National government
Third National Government of New Zealand
The Third National Government of New Zealand was the government of New Zealand from 1975 to 1984. It was an economically and socially conservative government, which aimed to preserve the Keynesian economic system established by the First Labour government while also being socially conservative...

 cabinet minister, turned immigration consultant, Aussie Malcolm
Aussie Malcolm
Anthony George "Aussie" Malcolm is a former National Party politician in New Zealand.-Early years:Aussie Malcolm was born in Australia, educated in Canada and Australia , and then attended Wellington College and Victoria University of Wellington...

, that TV3's Canadian CEO had been hit with an immigration status challenge by the NZ Government as a direct result of Wishart’s ongoing investigations into the tax haven deals.

TVNZ head of news Paul Norris immediately hired Wishart to continue working on the project as a special investigation for TVNZ, to be carried out in secret with the assistance of “Frontline” journalist Michael Wilson and producers Carol Hirschfeld and Mark Champion. The investigation was dubbed “Project X” internally.

The documentary was originally scheduled to air in December 1993, but was prevented from going to air by TVNZ management after the intervention of the TVNZ board of directors. Wishart and his colleagues decided to leak details of the banned programme to other news media, turning the blackout into a public issue.

The network was enjoined to an injunction forbidding broadcast of the programme, but the leak of further information made the gagging writ worthless and the documentary finally aired in June 1994 as a special primetime two hour broadcast. The revelations forced the establishment of a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Winebox transactions. A senior Inland Revenue Department investigator, Tony Loo, subsequently told the Commission of Inquiry that he and other IRD staff did not understand how the transactions had worked until they watched Wishart's documentary on TV.

Although the Commission report initially exonerated the transactions, the Commission findings were overturned by New Zealand’s highest court which found the transactions were prima facie fraudulent and that the Commission had made substantial errors in finding otherwise.
Ian Wishart published three books detailing his investigations and the outcome: The Paradise Conspiracy (Howling At The Moon, 1995), The Vintage Winebox Guide (Howling At The Moon, 1996), and The Paradise Conspiracy 2 (Howling At The Moon, 1999).

Part of Wishart's first book, The Paradise Conspiracy, was loosely reworked as a feature film, "Spooked"
Spooked (film)
Spooked is a 2004 New Zealand film directed by Geoff Murphy and loosely based on Ian Wishart's novel The Paradise Conspiracy, which itself is based on actual events in New Zealand...

, starring Cliff Curtis
Cliff Curtis
Clifford Vivian Devon "Cliff" Curtis is a New Zealand actor who has had major roles in film, including The Piano, Whale Rider, and Blow, and most recently has appeared in NBC's television series Trauma. He is also co-owner of independent film production company Whenua Films...

 and directed by Geoff Murphy.

Role in "Climategate" controversy

In November 2009 Ian Wishart obtained the first confirmation that leaked emails from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit were genuine, after reaching CRU's Phil Jones by phone. Wishart published stories on both the Investigate magazine blogsite "The Briefing Room" and in the online newspaper TGIF Edition confirming the authenticity of the emails, which formed the basis for other news reports on the developing story worldwide.

The Arthur Allan Thomas case

In September 2010 Wishart published his book Arthur Allan Thomas: The Inside Story. The book reviews the murders of Harvey and Jeannette Crewe. In it, Wishart presents new evidence on the role of a police officer, Detective Lenrick Johnston, and suggests he may have in fact been the killer of the South Auckland farmers.

Wishart was accused by Police Association spokesman Greg O'Connor of defaming a dead officer, and his theory was also rejected by another author on the case, Pat Booth who believes Jeannette Crewe murdered her husband in self defence then killed herself. O'Connor said he had not and would not read the book, while Booth's comments were made before the book was released. Wishart's theory received strong support from a former police officer on the Crewe murder inquiry, retired Detective Inspector Ross Meurant
Ross Meurant
Alan Ross Meurant is a New Zealand public figure who has at various times gained public attention as a police officer, a businessman, a politician, and a political lobbyist.- Police :...

 (who later pursued a career in politics), who wrote in the country's biggest daily paper after reading the book that "Wishart's conclusions are disturbingly possible in my view". Meurant has called for the unsolved murder case to be re-opened.

Wishart's book also encouraged Rochelle Crewe, the only daughter of Harvey and Jeannette, to speak publicly for the first time ever on her parents' murder. Crewe told the New Zealand Herald newspaper that Wishart's book had provided evidence of "pervasive corruption", and she wrote to New Zealand Police Commissioner Howard Broad asking why police had never pursued Detective Inspector Bruce Hutton and the late Detective Len Johnston by way of a criminal investigation, despite the finding of corruption against both men by the Royal Commission.

Recent career

After leaving TVNZ, Ian Wishart covered the Winebox enquiry for the National Business Review, the Waikato Times, the Evening Post, the Christchurch Press and other daily newspapers. He has also written for the New Zealand Herald, Sunday Star-Times and Metro magazine. In 1997 he was named as the host of the New Zealand version of reality series Real TV, which screened on the TV3 network from that year. In 2000, Wishart began hosting talk radio shifts on the Radio Pacific network, taking over as regular evening host in the 7pm to 10pm slot. Wishart was known to whip up his audience on occasion, as evidenced when he broadcast the phone numbers of Green Party MPs and urged his listeners to make protest calls, jamming the Green Party's phone lines.

Publishing operations

In 1995, Wishart established his own publishing company, Howling At The Moon, reportedly after other publishing companies had been threatened into backing out of their plans to publish his first book, The Paradise Conspiracy.

Although it commenced as a self-publishing venture, and 15 Ian Wishart books have been published under the Howling At The Moon imprint, the majority of the more than 40 books published by Howling At The Moon have in fact been written by other authors. Some of the notable titles by other Howling At The Moon authors to make the official New Zealand bestsellers list have included:
  • Thirty Pieces of Silver by Tony Molloy QC
  • Dogfight: The Kiwi Airlines Story by Ewan Wilson
  • Presumed Guilty by Miriyana Alexander
  • Confessions From The Front Line by Murray J Forbes
  • Ruthless by Susan Rogers-Allan
  • Last Words by Christopher Lewis


Five of Ian Wishart's books - The Paradise Conspiracy; Lawyers, Guns & Money; The Paradise Conspiracy II; Absolute Power; and Air Con - have achieved number one bestseller status on the NZ Booksellers national "Bestsellers" list, while several more - Daylight Robbery; The Vintage Winebox Guide; Ben & Olivia; Eve's Bite; Arthur Allan Thomas - peaked at number two on the Bestsellers List.

Air Con managed to become the #1 bestselling climate change book for Amazon on both sides of the Atlantic in mid 2009 when it topped its category in Amazon's US and UK charts simultaneously.

Howling At The Moon has published mostly general non-fiction/current affairs titles, with only one venture into fiction, 1997's The Source: Earth Voyage by British author Martin Rackham. The book jacket specifies it is the first of a trilogy, but Howling At The Moon has never published further titles in the series.

In 1999 the publishing company established a subsidiary company to publish the monthly periodical, Investigate magazine.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK