Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

HEDLEY: FROM GC BULLETIN TO TEACHER’S PET

For the journalist whose podcast played a key role in seeking justice for Lyn Dawson’s murder, it all began on the police rounds here on the Gold Coast

- PETER GLEESON peter.gleeson@news.com.au Peter Gleeson is Queensland Sky News editor.

BACK in the mid-1980s, there was a young cadet reporter working at the Gold Coast Bulletin who was green and raw but enthusiast­ic and prepared to chase anything if it was a good yarn.

The bosses soon gave the copyboy, a former Keebra Park High student, a cadetship, throwing him in at the deep end, posting him to police rounds, the engine room of any newspaper.

His name was Hedley Thomas and he soon became known as “young scannerman’’, because everywhere he went – everywhere – he had a police scanner and radio earpiece to pick up where the police were, and what big jobs they were doing.

He didn’t miss a thing. If there was a murder, Thomas was there. If there was a robbery, Thomas was there. He quickly gained a reputation as a gun and was snapped up by the Courier Mail. Again, he turned the police rounds beat into his own.

Thomas was then posted to London, where he was News Corp’s youngest ever European correspond­ent, and his first job was on November 9, 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down.

Back then, Roy “Rocky’’ Miller, who went on to be managing director of the Gold Coast Bulletin, was editor of the Daily Mirror, and he loved front page promotions.

An ideas man, he got on the phone to Thomas and asked him to get a slab of the Berlin Wall, send it back to Australia and he’d do a giveaway promotion.

“Win a piece of the Berlin Wall’’, was the front page promo.

Thomas didn’t know whether Miller was fair dinkum or not, but after a few phone calls, he realised Miller was serious.

Unbeknown up until today, Thomas – in the quiet darkness of a cold German November night – brazenly stole a piece of the Berlin Wall.

It was flown back to Miller’s office – the excess baggage fee was a bomb – and he ran the wildly successful promo.

Back in those heady days on the Gold Coast in the 1980s, in his spare time, Thomas could be found at the old Southport greyhound track near Queen Street, where the Tigers footy club is now, or he’d be playing tennis with his journalist­ic colleague, a fellow named Paul Whittaker.

Whittaker, a former TSS student who is now the chief executive of Sky News, went on to marry Thomas’s sister, Kate, and their passion for the dogs and tennis never waned, nor their ability to weed out spivs and colourful racing identities.

Nor has their passion for outstandin­g journalism ever gone, and it was under Whittaker’s stewardshi­p as editor-in-chief of The Australian in 2017 that the hugely successful podcast, The Teacher’s Pet, was commission­ed.

The rest, of course, is history.

Thomas shone a light on a flawed original police investigat­ion after Lyn Dawson vanished in January, 1982.

His extraordin­ary investigat­ive skills exposed Chris Dawson, Lyn’s husband, as a philanderi­ng killer and he was found guilty earlier in the week.

At 74, the former football star will now die in jail.

For Thomas, whose home was shot up in 2002 after he got too close to a story that would expose a property fraudster, those early years at the Gold Coast Bulletin moulded him into one of Australia’s best modern-day reporters.

He has never shied from the big story, regardless of the personal risks.

It’s also interestin­g to note the commercial support of Katie Page, of Harvey Norman, who backed the podcast, describing the Dawson result as a massive victory for women and the scourge of domestic violence.

The evolution of journalism and the emergence of the long-form podcast has also become an integral part of the way to explain a big story.

Journalism is about storytelli­ng, whether it’s in the printed paper, online or through the podcast.

When Thomas started his journalism career, typewriter­s had just been replaced by old Coyote computers.

It was the era on the Gold Coast where the first Coolangatt­a Gold event was held, the art gallery opened and Carrara Stadium was opened.

Bond University was launched, as was Australia Fair.

Movie World opened, as the city’s population surged past 300,000 (it’s now near 700,000).

Denis Pie was mayor, succeeded by Lex Bell.

Tiki Village in Surfers Paradise was the number one

spot for end of year footy tours. Sizzler at Mermaid was popular. Meter Maids were known around the world.

It was not just a surfer’s paradise, but a reporter’s heaven.

There were stories everywhere. Dodgy developers, seedy underworld figures, rampant crime (nothing’s changed).

The one thing we can take from Thomas’s wonderful expose is that quality journalism is a cornerston­e of the Fourth Estate.

He exposed a corpulent police culture in NSW in the early 1980s, that through laziness, or incompeten­ce, did not provide justice for Lyn Dawson and her family members. The courage to take on the police and the judicial system should not be underestim­ated.

The Gold Coast is often referred to as a “sunny place for shady people’’. It was the perfect apprentice­ship for Thomas, now eyeing off a third Gold Walkley Award, the highest honour in Australian journalism.

He has never shied from the big story, regardless of the personal risks.

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 ?? ?? Journalist Hedley Thomas and Lynette Dawson’s family leave the Supreme Court, Sydney, after a guilty verdict was passed down in the Chris Dawson murder trial; and (inset) as a young journalist with the Gold Coast Bulletin. Main picture: Justin Lloyd.
Journalist Hedley Thomas and Lynette Dawson’s family leave the Supreme Court, Sydney, after a guilty verdict was passed down in the Chris Dawson murder trial; and (inset) as a young journalist with the Gold Coast Bulletin. Main picture: Justin Lloyd.

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