Martin Brunt
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Martin Edward Brunt (born Camberley, Surrey, England, on 5 February 1955) is crime correspondent for Sky News, who has become famous as much for his unflappability as his exclusive reports. He joined the channel for its launch in 1989.
[edit] Early career
After studying magazine journalism at the London College of Printing (now the London College of Communication) in the early 1970s, he joined the editorial staff of Power Laundry and Cleaning News, owned by the International Publishing Corporation (IPC), in London.
From there he was taken on as a junior reporter with the Chatham News and Chatham Standard newspapers in Kent and after training under editor Gerald Hinks left to join a news agency in Devon, followed by the Ferrari Agency in Dartford, Kent. From there he moved to the Sunday Mirror and became chief reporter before being asked to join Sky News.
Early exclusive coverage included the Iraqis' retreat from Kuwait in the first Gulf War.
Later, Brunt was first to break news fo the death of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother in 2002 and the murder of television presenter Jill Dando in 1999.[citation needed]
In 2005, he was first to report that the July 7 explosions in London were the work of terrorists.[citation needed]
Brunt has also reported from South Africa on the murder inquiry into "Adam", an unknown boy whose torso was found in the River Thames in 2001.
Brunt's investigative skills can bring comment from other media. Hugo Rifkind reported grudgingly in The Times of 22 December 2006:
- "High praise for the Sky News crime correspondent Martin Brunt. When a hack from (another) newspaper phoned Suffolk police press office with a query on the serial killer case, he was told: 'Call Martin Brunt. He knows everything before we do.' A little concerning."