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Mark Williams Thomas

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Name
  
Mark Williams-Thomas

Role
  
Police officer


Mark Williams-Thomas wwwbcuacukmediaitemmarkwilliamsthomascase

Full Name
  
Mark Alan Williams-Thomas

Born
  
9 January 1970 (age 54) (
1970-01-09
)
Billericay, Essex, England

Awards
  
Royal Television Society awards London Press Awards Scoop of the Year George Foster Peabody Award

Education
  
Birmingham City University

Nominations
  
British Academy Television Award for Best Current Affairs

Occupation
  
Investigative reporter

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Mark Alan Williams-Thomas (born 9 January 1970) is an English investigative journalist and former police officer. He is best known for exposing Jimmy Savile as a paedophile in The Other Side of Jimmy Savile, a television documentary he presented.

Contents

Mark williams thomas madeleine woke wandered or police investigation evidence with john gaunt


Career

Williams-Thomas was a constable and family liaison officer with Surrey Police from 1989 to 2000. He was reportedly awarded several commendations.

In July 1997, Williams-Thomas led an investigation into public school teacher Adrian Stark, who was charged with possessing child pornography. Stark committed suicide at Beachy Head, East Sussex days after his arrest. In 1999 Williams-Thomas was involved in the investigation of Anthony Bridger who subsequently pleaded guilty to 32 serious sexual offences against boys and was jailed at the Central Criminal Court on 8 January 1999 for a minimum of 15-years. In 2000, Williams-Thomas was involved in the investigation into Jonathan King, which was launched by Mervyn McFadden of the National Criminal Intelligence Service and led by Detective Inspector Brian Marjoram. The investigation resulted in King's conviction for the sexual abuse of under-age boys.

Between 2001 and 2002, Williams-Thomas was the marketing manager and a director of GumFighters, a "national chewing gum removal specialist". The company were hired by various councils to clean their streets.

In 2003 Mark Williams-Thomas was charged with blackmailing a funeral home director, after alleging that there were multiple bodies buried in unmarked graves. An article ran in a national Sunday paper describing the mass burials. He was acquitted.

In 2005, he set up WT Associates, an independent child protection consultancy firm.

Television

From 2003, due to his past in the police force, Williams-Thomas began script advising for various television crime dramas which included : BBC series Waking The Dead (2007-2011), BBC series Inspector Lynley Mysteries (2007), Ch5 series Murder Prevention (2004), ITV series Identity and BBC series The Silence.

On 9 August 2012 ITV News broadcast an exclusive interview Williams-Thomas undertook with Stuart Hazell who was the last person to see missing 12-year-old schoolgirl Tia Sharp. Hazell went missing the day after this interview and was arrested later the same day on suspicion of Tia Sharps's murder. He was later charged and on 14 May 2013 was jailed after changing his plea. The judge ordered that he serve a minimum of 38 years.

On 3 October 2012, almost a year after Jimmy Savile's death, Williams-Thomas presented a documentary 'The Other Side of Jimmy Savile' on ITV. The expose of Jimmy Savile examined claims of child sexual abuse against Savile and led to extensive media coverage, including 41 days on the front pages and the Metropolitan Police launching a criminal investigation into allegations of child sex, Operation Yewtree. The Other Side of Jimmy Savile and Exposure: Banaz: An Honour Killing won the 2012 Peabody Award which was broadcast on 3 October 2012.

In the Exposure documentary, several women claimed that they had been sexually abused by Savile as teenagers. In 2013, Williams-Thomas won two Royal Television Society awards and the London Press Awards Scoop of the Year for the film. The episode and Exposure: Banaz: An Honour Killing won a 2012 George Foster Peabody Award.

Williams-Thomas is a regular reporter on This Morning, Channel 4 News, as well as long form current affairs documentaries for Exposure.

His undercover work in Cambodia led to the arrest in 2013 of a person suspected of offering under-age girls for sex and the rescue of two girls, aged 13 and 14.

In 2014 Williams-Thomas covered the verdict of Oscar Pistorius and was the only British journalist to meet with Pistorius during his trial, writing an exclusive report for UK national newspaper Daily Mirror. On 24 June 2016 ITV broadcast Oscar Pistorius: The Interview in which the former Paralympian spoke in a world exclusive to Williams-Thomas, in his first television interview about the night he shot and killed his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp in 2013. It was broadcast in Pistorius's home country of South Africa immediately after the ITV programme finished.

On 11 November 2014, This Morning broadcast an exclusive interview with Jo Westwood, the ex-wife of jailed sex offender Max Clifford.

In 2015 Williams-Thomas investigated the unsolved murder of BBC presenter Jill Dando. Writing in the Daily Mirror he theorized that she was murdered by the London underworld for her work on Crimewatch.

Williams-Thomas was the reporter and investigator for ITV's crime series The Investigator: A British Crime Story, produced by Simon Cowell's Syco. The series re-examined a 30 year old previously 'closed' murder case, the murder of Carole Packman, whose body has never been found. The series was broadcast over four consecutive weeks on ITV, from 14 July 2016. Dorset Police subsequently confirmed that the case remained open and that they would be examining new evidence presented by Williams-Thomas. A second series of The Investigator is planned for 2017.

Filmography

  • To Catch a Paedophile (2009; ITV)
  • On The Run (2011–12; ITV)
  • Exposure: The Other Side of Jimmy Savile (2012; ITV)
  • Exposure: The Jimmy Savile Investigation (2012; ITV)
  • Missing Without Trace (2012; ITV)
  • Living With a Killer (2013; ITV)
  • Exposure: Predators Abroad (2013; ITV)
  • Exposure: Inside the Diplomatic Bag (2014; ITV)
  • Oscar Pistorius: The Interview (2016; ITV)
  • The Investigator: A British Crime Story (2016–present; ITV)
  • Personal life

    Williams-Thomas completed his MA in criminology from Birmingham City University in 2007.

    References

    Mark Williams-Thomas Wikipedia