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Spin of the Week
Melissa Sweet, a freelance Australian health journalist, reports that she recently received an email from a staffer with the private intelligence company Hakluyt. In it, she was asked if she would like to become part of a “network of well-placed individuals around the world who are able to provide us, very discreetly, with intelligence on specific commercial or political issues that may arise.” In particular, they were seeking her assistance for an anonymous “financial institution” client, on “a new project on the new Australian government’s health care policy — how realistic their reform ambitions really are,” “the role of the private sector” and other matters. Sweet responded by pointing out that she was a journalist, not a consultant. Undeterred, the Hakluyt staffer responded that as a journalist, she was likely to have “dozens of well-placed sources in the field” and that the company already works with “a number of quality, usually specialist journalists.” In 2001 Hakluyt was outed for infiltrating Greenpeace in Europe.
Source: Crikey (Australia, sub req’d), July 31, 2008
Hakluyt web site
Spin of the Week comes courtesy of PR Watch, a project of the Wisconsin-based Center for Media and Democracy.
Posted by anthony
Anthony Lappé is GNN's Executive Editor. He's written for The New York Times, Details, New York, Paper, The Fader and Vice, among many others. He has worked as a producer for MTV and Fuse. He is the co-author of GNN's True Lies and the producer of their Iraq doc,...











Well, yeah. But there are literally hundreds of such outfits – private surveillance firms. They’re hired by everyone from Hewlett Packard (spying on board members) to British Petroleum (Wackenhut was spying on one of their major critics, even trying to set him up with a prostitute on camera.)
This is standard in the modern U.S. world. Spook country. Everyone spying on everyone else, both governments and corporations. Why? So that really fucking wealthy people can keep on being really fucking wealthy. Why else?
^ That is both true and well spoken.