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Untold: The Daniel Morgan Murder Exposed

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Private Investigator Daniel Morgan was murdered in cold blood, with an axe to the head, in the car park of the Golden Lion pub, Sydenham, south London, on 10th March 1987.

Thirty years on, after five failed police investigations and an ongoing inquiry, Daniel's murder is now the most investigated in British history - yet it remains unsolved.

The phone hacking scandal that closed the News of the World was big, but that was just the tip of the iceberg. At the bottom of that iceberg of 'dark arts' - hacking, bugging and bribing bent cops - is the body of Daniel Morgan. The truth behind his killing is obscured by a web of corruption and cover-ups.

Written by Daniel's brother Alastair, with investigative journalist Peter Jukes, Untold marks the 30th anniversary of the murder once described by an Assistant Commissioner of the Met as 'one of the most disgraceful episodes in the entire history of the Metropolitan Police Service.'

Going beyond the number one hit podcast of the same name, this is the inside story in full. Including fresh revelations, new evidence, all the latest findings and, at its heart, the tragic story of a family whose lives have been torn apart in the search for answers.

If you haven't heard of this story, ask yourself, why?

378 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 18, 2017

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
398 reviews8 followers
June 12, 2017
Private detective, Daniel Morgan, was brutally murdered on the night of the 10th March 1987. He was killed in the most horrific manner imaginable – axed to death, a hatchet buried in his face. So violent was this assault – three blows in all – that the final blow, delivered as Daniel lay helpless on his back, severed his brainstem.

Murder in the United Kingdom is thankfully rare. In the year ending March 2016, the Office of National Statistics (ONS) records there to have been 571 homicides in England and Wales. This figure has remained remarkably stable, so that for 1987, the year of Daniel’s death, a Parliamentary Research Paper published in 1999 gave the recorded number of homicides in England and Wales as 599. The British police have a good track record for solving such crimes. Figures are difficult to come by – suspects might come to trial many months after the crime was committed, meaning that it is tricky to make yearly statistical comparisons between, say, the number of homicides detected in any given year and the number of convictions. That said, the same Parliamentary Research Paper records 515 convictions of homicide in 1987 (these include the full gamut of convictions: homicide, manslaughter, infanticide, etc). Obviously, as pointed out above, not all these 515 convictions will correspond to offences committed in the same year. However, like the homicide rate, the clear up rate has remained relatively stable, giving some indication that the police in England and Wales are generally adept at solving, to some degree at least, crimes of homicide.

So what does this mean for the Daniel Morgan murder? Well, going on the statistics alone, one might expect his murderers to have been rapidly identified, apprehended, tried, convicted and imprisoned. And indeed, to a certain extent that occurred. As with the murder of Stephen Lawrence, suspects were identified relatively quickly. Very early on, Daniel’s brother, Alistair, was alerting the inquiry to his suspicions regarding Daniel’s former business partner, Jonathan Rees. And it wasn’t long before a member of the murder inquiry, Sid Fillery, was discovered to have worryingly close links to Rees. Indeed, Fillery himself fell under suspicion, leading to his retirement from the police, where he subsequently took Daniel’s place at the detective agency.

These links between an officer on the murder inquiry and one of the leading suspects were deeply troubling to Alistair and it wasn’t long before the first murder inquiry was irretrievably compromised. That said, the police could have recovered from this. If the police corruption which damaged the first inquiry had been honestly grappled with, a second inquiry could have stopped the rot and brought Daniel’s killers to justice. Tragically this was not to occur. Yes, the police tried again. In fact, to date, there have been five further inquiries into Daniel’s murder. Yes, you read that right. Five further homicide inquiries. And the result? Not one conviction.

So investigated has this murder been in one form or another, that the authors claim, quite convincingly, it to be the most investigated homicide in modern British legal history. And yet the offenders continue to walk free and hardly anyone, until now at least, has heard of it. The question must be, Why?

I recently read another reviewer’s take on Untold Murder. This review claimed the reason for the case’s relative obscurity was down to Daniel’s Welsh heritage. The reviewer, a highly-respected journalist and documentary maker, who has covered the story himself and struggled to get others to do likewise, says that the Welsh media were happy to cover the case but London-based journalists in the national press treated it with indifference. He claims that this is in part due to a historical bias English people have against the Welsh. Perhaps he’s right, perhaps that played a part. I myself, however, would put the emphasis elsewhere: laziness and fear.

I worked for many years in current affairs television: first in BBC West Midlands, then for Granada Television where I worked on the Jonathan Dimbleby Programme, and then for a good ten years in documentaries, where I worked across Channel 4 Dispatches, for PBS and National Geographic. While I enjoyed my time, met many fine people, I also saw first-hand how risk averse management often was. And lazy. Seriously, a story generally had to be clear cut. It needed to be quickly explainable. These people don’t do nuance.

Let’s return to the Stephen Lawrence murder as means of example. White racists stab to death a young black man. Police mess it up due to institutional racism. Easy to understand. No complexity. There’s a reason that the police corruption surrounding that case – almost certainly a strong contributory factor - has only now begun to get traction. The media likes its tales to be simple. This argument is in no way meant to downplay the racism the Lawrences’ were up against, or belittle their achievements in dragging the police and judicial system from the darks ages of prejudice. But the fact is the Lawrences themselves suspected corruption and tried to draw attention to it but the odds at the time were insurmountable.

Now turn back to Daniel Morgan’s murder. A murky tale of organised crime and police corruption, political malfeasance and dodgy tabloid journalists. You can see why people shied away. Now note those last two points. Political malfeasance and dodgy tabloids and you reach that second element I talked about for the media’s silence: Fear.

My first run in with tabloid bully boy tactics was back at the turn of the century when I studied broadcast journalism at City University. On the neighbouring newspaper course was a young lad who was on a News of the World scholarship. The newspaper people and the broadcast students used to share the odd classes – media law, Government, etc – and me and this guy used to butt heads. Now remember the timeframe, this was back when the Screws and its ilk was at the height of its power. Mazher Mahmood, the Fake Sheikh, was still running around, and the paper was basically ruining lives at will. As journalism students, we all knew the power of the News of The World, we all heard the whispers of their alchemy – the so-called Dark Arts. Anyway, one day me and this lad got into a row about something silly and after the class he threatened me. A throwaway line about speaking to someone at the Screws to sort me out. Now to be clear, he was almost certainly joking. And I had done nothing wrong so even if some hack had gone through my bins, he or she wouldn’t have found anything. But the point is, at the time I couldn’t help but feel a shiver run down my spine. Years later, working in current affairs TV, I regularly saw this: a wariness of the tabloids, a sense that these people needed to be handled carefully, like they were dangerous animals which might bite at any moment.

Reading Untold Murder, or listening to the podcast, is a revealing experience. Back then the tabloid “Dark Arts” were little understood. But this book reveals what exactly they entailed, and there’s just one word for it: criminality. Daniel’s former business partner, Jonathan Rees, took Daniel’s company and turned it into a one-stop shop for corrupting police officers. Cops were paid by Rees and co to access the Police National Computer and other sensitive databases. Rees and his wider circle of dodgy PI’s, corrupt cops, and amoral tabloid hacks, engaged in voicemail hacking, computer hacking, blagging personal information from banks and utilities, and then selling it on. And their main clients? Step forward the tabloids, and in particular, the News of The World.

So, the reason Daniel’s murder has never been solved? The reason that the London based media were always hesitant to cover it? The same reason reading this book is so compelling, so shocking. I’ve left journalism behind, am now an aspiring novelist, and there’s an adage: stranger than fiction. And it’s true, there are things in real life that if you made up people wouldn’t believe. This case is one of them. Before the phone hacking scandal, before Leveson, if one had spun a tale of a murdered private eye, a detective agency wrenched from his dead fingers and steered rogue, of corrupt cops, amoral tabloid journalists, leading politicians selling their souls to media barons or else destroyed in tabloid stings, what would have been the response? Would readers have bought it? I suspect it would be dismissed as far-fetched, as conspiracy theory. But it’s all true. And at heart is the tale of a good man struck down and his brother, Alistair, indefatigable to the last.

In conclusion, this is a terrible true tale, albeit brilliantly told. This is one of the most important non-fiction titles published in a very long time. Anyone who cares about justice, about the society we live in, should read this book. I can’t recommend it enough.
Profile Image for TheBookWarren.
555 reviews224 followers
March 13, 2020
A great insight into one of the most truly chilling miscarriage’s of justice the western world
Has ever seen. Podcast is great also if you
Have read or heard one not the other I highly recommend going deeper and reading the book or vice versa! Jukes is truly invested here and it shows.
Profile Image for Liz Smith.
291 reviews1 follower
May 4, 2018
This story is truly shocking, heart-breaking and important on both a personal and wider social level. This family deserves justice and it is the worst-kept secret in the UK about who is responsible. It is also evident that numerous key individuals in the Metropolitan Police and media tasked with delivering this justice, actually concealed, supported and extended the corruption as it was in their own best interests. Truly appalling and I am glad that this story has been brought to light at last.

The issue with the book is that it is largely a retelling of the widely successful podcast, which I listened to. There are some small, new elements and it is useful in some ways to see it all written down (such as the large and confusing cast of characters). I hope this book reaches even more people who did not hear the podcast. However for myself, as an avid listener of both the podcasts, it felt very familiar. It seems a shame that opportunities weren’t taken to mix up the format more from a chapter told by Alastair then a factual chapter to make it feel more fresh. Perhaps inevitably, the ending is even more abrupt and dissatisfying than the podcast-form; hopefully the family will finally get some answers at some point soon. Still interesting but not ground-breaking as the podcast was.
Profile Image for Simon Jones.
93 reviews1 follower
June 25, 2021
A fantastic account of the murder of private investigator Daniel Morgan in a Sydenham pub car park and the ensuing struggle of his family to try to seek justice for the crime.

This journey is epic and exposes police corruption, shady press practices and the phone hacking scandal which was exposed in the 2010's.

There are many names and people involved, far too many to remember whilst reading this book. A word of advice- don't try to remember all of the participants involved and just plough on and it will all make sense by the end. An afterword even mentions the sheer volume of people who enter proceedings with each one playing a significant part.

I'm so glad that such a detailed and nuanced account exists of this crime which others would prefer to see swept under the carpet. Kudos to Morgan's brother, partner and mother for their tireless campaigning.

Profile Image for Jessica Ritchie.
46 reviews
October 10, 2018
I bought this book after I listened to the podcast Untold: The Daniel Morgan Murder. Daniel Morgan was a private investigator who was murdered with an axe to the head in a London pub car park in 1987. The podcast and the book both discuss in detail five failed police investigations, weak politicians, the corruption and misconduct of the police service and News of the World. This murder had far reaching ramifications and it took over 30 years before starting to see any real justice. In addition to Morgan’s murder, the authors discuss the murder of Stephen Lawrence and how overlaps occurred in police corruption and misconduct.
Profile Image for Sarah Fisher.
376 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2019
A deeply shocking true reporting of the events surrounding the murder of Daniel Morgan over 30 years ago. His assailants have never been brought to justice due to a prolonged campaign of police and press corruption, mishandling and simply being ignored by our government. A tale of the never ending suffering but steely determination of the family Daniel left behind.
Profile Image for Tim Mullen.
192 reviews1 follower
December 30, 2018
A barely believable true story of Britain’s longest unsolved murder that exposes potential corruption and clear incompetence within the Metropolitan Police. A real eye opener.
36 reviews
August 21, 2019
Good book but too small of writing. I understand the family frustration but it went on too long. It is a good true crime book and it explained all the corruption with the media. Good book overall.
Profile Image for Martin Empson.
Author 19 books172 followers
March 2, 2018
An extraordinarly eye opening book that begins with the muder of a private investigator and ends with networks of crime and corruption extending to the top of the media and through the police. Its the story of a 30 year search for justice and must be read by anyone wanting to understand how the criminal justice system fails those without power or wealth.
Profile Image for teleri.
701 reviews15 followers
June 8, 2019
DNF! Stopped reading on page 75. I could barely concentrate and found it difficult to keep the information in my mind.
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