1A portrait of businessman Alan Hawkins, two years after the collapse of EquityCorp in the stock market crash which left 40,000 shareholders out of pocket. He was New Zealand's second richest man but now he is being sued for $500 million. He has just written a book called The Hawk, explaining what went wrong. Interview with Hawkins.
- Start 00 : 00 : 30
- Finish 00 : 12 : 53
- Duration 12 : 23
Reporters
- Keith Davies (Reporter, TV3)
- Genevieve Westcott (Interviewer)
Speakers
- Alan Hawkins (Former Managing Director, Equiticorp)
Contributors
- Genevieve Wescott (Interviewer)
Notes
- Picture discolouration during item.
2The mobile telephones of 20,000 New Zealanders could be bugged and the conversations of the users recorded. As the phones are, in effect, radio transmitters, they can be listened to with special radio tuners.
- Start 0 : 12 : 53
- Finish 00 : 19 : 23
- Duration 06 : 30
Reporters
- Bill Ralston (Reporter, TV3)
Speakers
- Duncan Ross (Private Investigator)
- Neville Wishart (Spokesman, Telecom)
- Ross Becker (Spokesman, Radio Frequency Service)
Notes
- Duncan Ross is wrongly captioned as Neville Wishart, Telecom.
Neville Wishart, Telecom is wrongly captioned as Duncan Ross, Private Investigator.
3Seventy one year old Bill Gray has lived for 25 years in remote Cape Providence, Fiordland, by choice. His home is a cave. He describes himself as a loner, not a hermit, and makes money on his occasional visits to town by selling Paua shells for $1.
- Start 00 : 22 : 49
- Finish 00 : 27 : 28
- Duration 04 : 39
Reporters
- Melanie Reid (Reporter, TV3)
Locations
- Cape Providence, New Zealand (Fiordland), undefined