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Kerry Packer

Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer AC (17 December 1937 – 26 December 2005) was an Australian media tycoon, and was considered one of Australia's most powerful media proprietors of the twentieth century.[2] The Packer family company owned a controlling interest in both the Nine Network and the publishing company Australian Consolidated Press, which were later merged to form Publishing and Broadcasting Limited (PBL). Outside Australia, Packer was best known for founding World Series Cricket. At the time of his death, he was the richest and one of the most influential men in Australia. In 2004, Business Review Weekly magazine estimated Packer's net worth at A$6.5 billion.[3]

Kerry Packer

Packer at Parliament House in 1991
Born
Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer

(1937-12-17)17 December 1937
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Died26 December 2005(2005-12-26) (aged 68)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Resting placeEllerston, New South Wales, Australia
Education
Known for
Board member of
Spouse
(m. 1963; wid. 2005)
Children2, Gretel and James Packer
Parents
Relatives

Early life

Kerry Packer was born on 17 December 1937 in Sydney, Australia. His father was Sir Frank Packer, an Australian media proprietor who controlled Australian Consolidated Press and the Nine Network. His mother, Gretel Bullmore, was the daughter of Herbert Bullmore, the Scottish rugby union player. He had an older brother, Clyde Packer. He took part in various sports at school, including boxing, cricket, and rugby; though he struggled academically, possibly due to undiagnosed dyslexia.[4] On his father's death in 1974, the family estate, valued at $100 million, passed directly to Packer. His father had fallen out with his elder son, Clyde, in 1972.[4]

Business

Packer, through his family company Consolidated Press Holdings, was the major shareholder with a 37% holding in Publishing and Broadcasting Limited (PBL).[5] Until Packer's death PBL owned the Nine television network, and Australian Consolidated Press which produces many of Australia's top-selling magazines. He was involved in a number of other gambling and tourism ventures, notably Crown Casino in Melbourne.[6] The Nine Network and Australian Consolidated Press businesses have since been divested to PBL Media.

Packer was widely respected in business circles, courted by politicians on both sides, and was widely regarded as one of the most astute businessmen of his time, despite having been a poor student.[7]

Although Packer's reputation as an astute businessman was legendary and he made some good investments, he was by no means a self-made man—his grandfather, Robert Clyde Packer, and his father, Sir Frank Packer, had built up the media empire and its related holdings over many decades. As pointed out by internet news outlet Crikey, if $100 million had been invested in the Australian sharemarket in September 1974 through a balanced portfolio of the top 200 companies, that portfolio would be worth a lot more than $6.9 billion in December 2005, possibly as much as $11 billion.[8]

Packer controlled Nine Network and Nine's Wide World of Sports in the 1980s, and "famously sold the network to Alan Bond and then bought it back three years later for less than a quarter of the price." Writes the Sydney Morning Herald, "Packer's decision to sell Nine to Bond in 1987 for $1.2 billion - before buying back the network in 1990 for $250 million - is legendary in Australian television."[9]

Moreover, Packer was not the first choice to take over the running of the family's business empire—his father had intended that Kerry's elder brother, Clyde Packer, would take over the company, but Clyde fell out with his father in the early 1970s and left Australia permanently.

Kerry Packer's independent business life began after his father's death in 1974 when he inherited control of the family's controlling share in PBL, valued at A$100 million. Further, his principal Australian investments in television and casinos were highly protected from competition by government regulation which Packer and his employees worked very hard to have maintained.

The Packer family's business reputation suffered a blow following the 2001 collapse of One.Tel, a telephone company in which his son, James, had invested.

Kerry Packer was also one of Australia's largest landholders.[10] In 2003, a deposit of rubies was discovered on one of his properties.[11]

The Packer media empire included magazines, television networks, telecommunications, petrochemicals, heavy engineering, a 75% stake in the Perisher Blue ski resort, diamond exploration, coal mines and property, a share in the Foxtel cable TV network, and investments in the lucrative casino business in Australia and overseas.[12][13]

Media interests

The "Packer Empire"

The Packer family has long been involved in media. Packer's grandfather Robert Clyde Packer owned two Sydney newspapers while his father, Sir Frank Packer, was one of Australia's first media moguls, and Kerry's son, James, was executive chairman of PBL, before resigning in 2008. Sir Frank wanted Kerry to experience work in the newspaper industry from the ground up, so Packer started in the loading dock of the Sydney newspaper The Telegraph, loading papers. He was not originally destined for the role, but in the early 1970s Kerry took the place of the designated successor, his older brother, Clyde, after Clyde fell out with their father, quit PBL and moved to America. Kerry took over the running of PBL in 1974, on the death of his father.

The CBC Disaster

During the 1980's, Packer owned radio stations 2UE and 3AK. He decided to link both stations to form the ill-fated Commonwealth Broadcasting Corporation. With both stations networked, breakfast came from Melbourne's 3AK and everything else from Sydney's 2UE; the format last six months in 1986.

Alan Bond media buyback

In 1987, Packer made a fortune at the expense of disgraced tycoon Alan Bond. He reportedly sold Bond the Nine Network at the record price of A$1.05 billion in 1987, and then bought it back three years later for a mere A$250 million, when Bond's empire was collapsing. Packer later quipped, "You only get one Alan Bond in your lifetime, and I've had mine".[14] Packer was then able to reinvest the proceeds in a 25% share in the Foxtel pay TV consortium.

After the sale to Bond, Packer said that he had regretted the decision to sell Nine and wished he had not gone through with the transaction. At the 2006 PBL AGM, Kerry's son, James, told of the true complexities of the deal. Kerry Packer received A$800 million in cash, with A$250 million left in Bond Media as subordinated debt. As Bond went under, Packer converted the subordinated debt into a 37% stake in Bond Media. About A$500 million of debt remained in Bond Media. Packer received $800 million in cash before receiving a free 37% equity stake that put a debt-included value of A$500 million on the Nine Network, which by then included Channel Nine in Brisbane.[15]

Hands-on business approach

Packer sometimes took a direct interest in the editorial content of his papers, although he was far less interventionist than the notoriously hands-on Rupert Murdoch. Packer also occasionally interfered directly in the programming of his TV stations; in 1992, he called his Sydney station, TCN-9, and ordered its personnel to "Get that shit off the air!", referring to Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos hosted by Doug Mulray, which was cut during its first and only airing on national television. (It has since aired in its entirety). He is also said to have often manipulated broadcasts of cricket himself, to ensure that the end of a cricket match was broadcast, despite previously set television broadcast schedules.

Government inquiry and legal challenges

Packer faced a 1991 Australian government inquiry into the print media industry with some reluctance, but great humour. When asked to state his full name and the capacity in which he appeared, he replied: "Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer. I have appeared here reluctantly." Packer fronted the inquiry over allegations that he had some secret control over the content of the Fairfax papers (an organisation that Packer had wished to purchase for some time, but was restricted from by cross-ownership laws). During the inquiry, he repeatedly berated the politicians conducting it, and the government. When asked about his company's tax-minimisation schemes, he replied: "Of course I am minimising my tax. And if anybody in this country doesn't minimise their tax, they want their heads read, because as a government, I can tell you you're not spending it that well that we should be donating extra!"

At the time of his death, the Nine Network was the jewel in the PBL crown. Although it had a tough year in 2005 against rival Seven Network (which was aided largely by US TV hits such as Desperate Housewives and Lost), Nine still finished the year as the number-one network.

World Series Cricket

Outside Australia, Packer was best known for founding World Series Cricket. In 1977 the Nine Network cricket rights deal led to a confrontation with the cricket authorities, as top players from several countries rushed to join him at the expense of their international sides.

One of the leaders of the "rebellion" was England captain Tony Greig, who remained a commentator on the Nine Network's payroll until his death in December 2012. Packer's aim was to secure broadcasting rights for Australian cricket, and he was largely successful. In the 1970s the global cricket establishment fiercely opposed Packer in the courts. To counter the establishment, Packer hired the ten best Senior Counsels in the UK and put them on retainers, stipulating that they were not to take on any additional work during the court case (the sole purpose of which was to deny the establishment the best legal minds to prosecute their case) .[citation needed] When he died he was mourned with a minute's silence at the MCG as one of the most influential figures in the history of the sport.

Packer was famously quoted from a 1976 meeting with the Australian Cricket Board, with whom he met to negotiate the rights to televise cricket. According to witnesses, he said: "There is a little bit of the whore in all of us, gentlemen. What is your price?"[16]

World Rugby Corporation

Packer funded the World Rugby Corporation (WRC), a company formed by lawyer Geoff Levy and former Wallaby player Ross Turnbull. Both wanted a professional worldwide rugby union competition in 1995. A majority of the All Blacks and Wallaby teams signed up to the WRC. In response, the Australian, New Zealand and South African rugby unions formed SANZAR, who partnered with News Limited to launch two professional competitions, the Super 12 and Tri Nations Series. The South African Rugby Union told the Springboks players that they would never play for their country again if they committed to the WRC, and they remained with the SARU. Most of the All Blacks then followed them, and finally the Wallabies did too, so the WRC project was abandoned.[17]

Controversy

Packer was often the centre of controversy. One of the earliest incidents occurred on 7 June 1960, when his father was trying to take over the Anglican Press, a small publisher run by Francis James. According to author Richard Neville, Frank Packer was angered by James' refusal to sell the Anglican Press, so he sent Kerry and some burly friends to pressure him into selling. They forced their way in and reportedly began vandalising the premises, but James was able to barricade himself in his office and call Rupert Murdoch, Packer's most powerful rival. Murdoch quickly dispatched his own team of 'heavies', who threw Kerry and friends out. Not surprisingly, the Murdoch press had a field day with the news that the son of Australia's biggest media tycoon had been caught brawling in the street.[18][19]

Like Murdoch, Packer's critics saw his ever-expanding cross-media holdings as a potential threat to media diversity and freedom of speech. He also repeatedly came under fire for his companies' alleged involvement in tax evasion schemes and for the extremely low amounts of company tax that his corporations are reported to have paid over the years. He fought repeated battles with the Australian Taxation Office over his corporate taxes.

His most severe legal challenge came in 1984 with the Costigan Commission alleging (using the codename of "the squirrel", renamed "the Goanna" in media reports[20]) that he was involved in tax evasion and organised crime, including drug trafficking. He successfully counter-attacked the commission with the assistance of his counsel Malcolm Turnbull. In 1987, the charges were formally dismissed by Attorney-General Lionel Bowen. Mystery surrounded Packer's receipt of a "loan" of A$225,000 in cash from Brian Ray, a bankrupt Queensland businessman.[21] When questioned about this transaction at the Costigan Royal Commission, Packer said "...I like cash. I have a squirrel mentality. I like to keep money in cash. It is by no means the most cash I ever had in my life."[22]

Notwithstanding the significant efforts made to preserve his security and privacy, Packer suffered two mysterious break-ins at his companies' headquarters in Park Street, Sydney:

  • In 1995, 25 gold bars, weighing a total of 285 kilograms (628 lb)—equivalent to A$23.3 million at 2022 gold prices—and a Vegemite jar full of gold nuggets were stolen from Packer's personal safe;[23]
  • In 2003, a licensed Glock 9-millimetre (0.35 in) semi-automatic pistol was stolen from a desk drawer on the executive level. Packer was not charged with failing to "keep safe" the weapon, but he did subsequently surrender his firearms licence.[24]

Packer broke the sports boycott of apartheid South Africa which prevented South African sportsmen from representing their country when he recruited a number of South African cricketers to play on his World Series Cricket Team. His timing was criticised, coming just months after the Soweto riots and the death of Steve Biko, murdered by the members of the South African security forces.

Personal life

Packer's primary schooling suffered greatly when he was struck with a severe bout of poliomyelitis at age eight, and he was confined to an iron lung for nine months. His father apparently thought little of his son's abilities, once cruelly describing him as "the family idiot", although Kerry subsequently steered PBL to heights far beyond anything his father or brother achieved. The nickname his father gave Kerry made him strive to new heights in schooling, trying to achieve "A" grades. His end of year report said he was one of the most notable students. In an interview, former employee Trevor Sykes stated that "He didn't read much on the printed page. If you didn't want Kerry to read something, you wrote more than a one-page memo."[25]

Packer's grandfather Herbert Bullmore represented the Scotland national rugby union team in an international match against Ireland in Dublin in 1902 and worked as a doctor in Sydney for many years.[26]

Kerry Packer and his wife of 42 years, Roslyn Packer (nee Weedon), had two children: a daughter, Gretel, and a son, James. At the time of Packer's death, he and Ros had two grandchildren: Francesca then 10, and Ben, then 7, from Gretel's first marriage to British financier Nick Barham,[27] and Gretel and her husband Shane Murray were expecting their first child together, William (born 2006).[28] Gretel and Shane married just before Packer's death.[29]

Packer conducted extra-marital affairs with a number of women including the model Carol Lopes, who reportedly committed suicide after being shunned by Packer; publisher and former ConPress employee Ita Buttrose and Julie Trethowan, his long-time mistress and manager (from 1983) of the Packer-owned Sydney city health and fitness club, the Hyde Park Club. After his death, The Sydney Morning Herald reported that from about 1995, Packer transferred control of multimillion-dollar Sydney real estate holdings to Trethowan.[30][31][32]

In June 2009, the Sydney Morning Herald reported that former federal opposition leader, and subsequently an Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, a former legal adviser and business associate of Packer, revealed to journalist Annabel Crabb that Packer had threatened to have him killed when they fell out over their 1991 attempt to take over the Fairfax newspaper group through their Tourang consortium. Packer reportedly made the threat after Turnbull told Packer he was going to have him thrown out of the consortium by revealing Packer's intention to play an interventionist role in the newspaper group.

He told me he'd kill me, yeah. I didn't think he was completely serious, but I didn't think he was entirely joking either. Look, he could be pretty scary. He did threaten to kill me and I said to him: "Well, you'd better make sure that your assassin gets me first because, if he misses, you better know I won't miss you." He could be a complete pig, you know. He could charm the birds out of the trees, but he could be a brute.

— Malcolm Turnbull, 4 June 2009, as reported in The Sydney Morning Herald[33]

Packer was a supporter of South Sydney Rabbitohs in the National Rugby League competition.[34]

He was an advocate of the Australian Republic Movement.[35]

Polo

Packer was a keen polo player. In 1992, he and Gonzalo Pieres Sr. founded Ellerstina, a polo team that has claimed multiple titles at the Argentine Open and other high-handicap tournaments. Packer bought the Fyning Hill estate in West Sussex and expanded it to over 400 acres. Packer built the headquarters for his Ellerston polo team at Fyning Hill, and would arrive at the estate in May for the three-month English polo season.[36][37] Packer sold the estate to the Russian businessman Roman Abramovich in 1999 for £12 million.[38]

Gambling

Packer was a longtime heavy smoker and an avid gambler, fabled for his large wins and losses.[39] In 1999, a three-day losing streak at London casinos cost him almost A$28 million – the biggest reported gambling loss in British history.[40]

Once he won A$33 million at the MGM Grand Casino in Las Vegas and that he often won as much as A$7 million each year during his annual holidays in the UK.[41] Packer's visits were a risky affair for the casinos, as his wins and losses could make quite a difference to the finances of even bigger casinos. Packer was also known for his sometimes volcanic temper, and for his perennial contempt for journalists who sought to question his activities.[42]

Packer is quoted for an exchange in a poker tournament at the Stratosphere Casino, where a Texan oil investor was attempting to engage him in a game of poker.[43] Upon the Texan saying "I'm worth $60,000,000!" Packer apparently pulled out a coin and asked nonchalantly, "heads or tails?", referring to an A$120 million wager (according to Bob Stupak's biography). Some variations of the story put the sum at A$60 million to A$100 million and say the line was "I'll toss you for it".[44]

In the late 1990s, he walked into a major London casino and played £15 million on four roulette tables on his own and lost it all. This has been confirmed by casino owners in South East England.[45]

The Ritz Hotel in London even had its own room for Kerry Packer. There he was able to play blackjack with a minimum bet of £10,000 per hand. He once lost more than £19 million in this room.

Failing health

Packer suffered as many as four heart attacks.[46] In 1990, while playing polo at Warwick Farm, Sydney, he suffered from a heart attack that left him clinically dead for seven minutes.[47] Packer was revived by paramedics and then airlifted to St Vincent's Private Hospital, Sydney and received bypass surgery from Dr Victor Chang, a pioneering cardiac surgeon. It was not common for an ambulance to have a defibrillator at the time – it was purely by chance that the ambulance which responded to the call had one fitted.

After recovering, Packer donated a large sum to the Ambulance Service of New South Wales to pay for equipping all NSW ambulances with a portable defibrillator (colloquially known as "Packer Whackers"). He told Nick Greiner "I'll go you 50/50", and the NSW State government paid the other half of the cost. He is reported to have said, "Son, I've been to the other side, and let me tell you, there's nothing there."[48] And in a press conference, "...there's no one waiting there for you, there's no one to judge you, so you can do what you bloody well like".[49]

He also suffered from a chronic kidney condition for many years, and in 2000, he made headlines when his long-serving helicopter pilot, Nick Ross, donated one of his own kidneys to Packer for transplantation. The story of the transplant was covered in detail by the Australian TV documentary program Australian Story, a rare occasion on which Packer granted a media interview (and, to the surprise of many, not to his own network; Australian Story is produced by the public network, ABC). After recovering from the operation, Packer launched an organ transplant association in memory of cricketer David Hookes.

Death

Kerry Packer died of kidney failure on 26 December 2005, nine days after his 68th birthday, at home in Sydney, Australia, with his family by his bedside.[14] Knowing that his health was failing, he instructed his doctors not to treat him with curative intent or by artificially prolonging his life with dialysis.[50] He told his cardiologist earlier in the week that he was "running out of petrol" and wanted to "die with dignity".[50] His private funeral service was held on 30 December 2005, at the family's country retreat, Ellerston, near Scone in the Hunter Region.[28] Having obtained council permission, he was buried on the Ellerston property near the polo field.[51] It was reported in November 2011, both in the UK and Australia, that the grave was to be marked by a bronze statue of a horse's head by sculptor Nic Fiddian-Green, popularly known as Artemis but believed reverted to the name Fiddian-Green originally gave it: I Look Beyond for a Distant Land.[52]

State memorial service

The Packer family accepted an offer of a state memorial service, which was held on 17 February 2006 at the Sydney Opera House.[53] The granting of this taxpayer-funded honour was criticised by some members of the community, as Packer was notorious for his alleged tax minimisation.[54] At the memorial service, close friend Alan Jones was Master of Ceremonies. The service featured speeches from his son, James; Russell Crowe on behalf of his daughter, Gretel; the Prime Minister in office at the time, John Howard; and cricket legend Richie Benaud. Attendees included Tom Cruise (a friend of James Packer) and his then-partner Katie Holmes; Greg Norman; members of the Australian cricket team; and past and present figures from all sides of politics.[54]

Philanthropy

The Kerry Packer Civic Gallery within the Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre of the University of South Australia was endowed by the Packer family.[55]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chip off the old block". The Age. Melbourne. 31 December 2005.
  2. ^ Rowe, D. "Rugby league in Australia: The super league saga". Journal of Sport & Social Issues: 221–226.
  3. ^ Skeffington, Robert (24 May 2004). "The richest list of all". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 26 July 2011.
  4. ^ a b Highham, James E. S.; Cohen, Scott (2010). Giants of Tourism. CABI. p. 182. ISBN 9781845936532. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Melco/PBL Joint Venture acquires remaining 30% of Park Hyatt Project in Macau" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Kerry Packer Bio".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "A pioneer in the realm of television". The Sydney Morning Herald. 27 December 2005. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  8. ^ "How good a businessman was Packer", Crikey, 9 January 2006 http://www.crikey.com.au/articles/2006/01/09-1554-6139.htm[dead link]
  9. ^ Barrett, Chris (13 April 2018), "'No crying in television': Packer would be pragmatic about switch", The Sydney Morning Herald.
  10. ^ "Australia's richest man, Kerry Packer, dies at 68". The New York Times. 27 December 2005. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  11. ^ "How Kerry Packer unearthed $30 million". The Age. 6 March 2005. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  12. ^ "The great inheritor". The Economist. 5 January 2006. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  13. ^ "CNN.com - Media mogul Kerry Packer dies - Dec 27, 2005". edition.cnn.com. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  14. ^ a b "Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer 1937–2005". The Age. Melbourne. 28 December 2005. p. 7. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
  15. ^ Mayne, Stephen (27 October 2006). . Crikey. Private Media Pty Ltd. Archived from the original on 8 November 2006. Retrieved 27 October 2006.
  16. ^ Brown, Alex (28 December 2005). "Lillee goes in to bat for Packer but some argue his methods were just not". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  17. ^ Howitt, Bob (2005). SANZAR Saga: Ten Years of Super 12 and Tri-Nations Rugby. Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 1-86950-566-2.
  18. ^ Neville, Richard (1995). Hippie, Hippie, Shake: The Dreams, the Trips, the Trials, the Love-ins, the Screw ups – the Sixties. William Heinemann Australia. ISBN 0-85561-523-0.
  19. ^ "Nine-tenths of the law". Inside Story. Swinburne Institute. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
  20. ^ Huxley, John (21 February 2006). "Costigan angry and sticking to his guns". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  21. ^ "Missing: a mate with a loan for Packer". The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 October 1983. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  22. ^ Molloy, Andrew (2007). I'll Toss You For It!. Double Bay, NSW: Australian Media Pty Ltd. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-646-47901-9.
  23. ^ Ongaro, Daniela; Morri, Mark (9 February 2013). "Crimes can't avoid DNA tests of time". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
  24. ^ "Packer hands in licence for pistol stolen from desk". The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 February 2003. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  25. ^ . 7.30 Report. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 27 December 2005. Archived from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  26. ^ Growden, Greg (6 November 2004). "Australians breathe life into Scots' game". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 12 July 2012.
  27. ^ Davies, Lisa (28 December 2005), "A grieving Gretel gets ready for birth", News.com.au. 30 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ a b JCT (13 September 2009). . Nine News. Australia. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  29. ^ "Baby boy for Gretel Packer". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Associated Press. 29 January 2006. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  30. ^ Ricketson, Matthew (26 July 2007). "A man of means, mistresses and a few bordellos". The Age. Melbourne.
  31. ^ "How Packer lavished his property on a friend". The Sydney Morning Herald. 7 January 2006. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  32. ^ "Packer's quick $2m renovation". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 January 2006. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  33. ^ Coorey, Phillip (4 June 2009). "'Brute' Packer threatened to kill me: Turnbull". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  34. ^ "James Packer signs $3 million jersey sponsorship deal with South Sydney". The Daily Telegraph. 14 May 2013.
  35. ^ Donelly, Beau (8 September 2016). "James Packer donates $250,000 to the Australian Republican Movement". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  36. ^ Laffaye, Horace A. (28 August 2015). Profiles in Polo: The Players Who Changed the Game. McFarland. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-4766-6273-2.
  37. ^ Laffaye, Horace A. (29 May 2009). The Evolution of Polo. McFarland. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-7864-5415-0.
  38. ^ Armstrong, Stephen (15 April 2010). The Super-Rich Shall Inherit the Earth: The New Global Oligarachs and How They're Taking Over our World. Little, Brown Book Group. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-84901-441-0.
  39. ^ Club, Melbourne Press. "Kerry Packer". MPC - Hall Of Fame. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  40. ^ "Gambler Packer loses £13m in 3 days". www.telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  41. ^ "Packer's gambling feats: fact or fiction?". The Sydney Morning Herald. 27 December 2005. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  42. ^ Tiffen, Rodney (30 November 2006). "How Packer slipped on Fairfax". The Age. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  43. ^ "Biggest Win in Blackjack ($40 millions!) GamblingBaba". GamblingBaba. 28 January 2021. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  44. ^ "Kerry Packer, the Texan, the toss and the truth". Crikey. 12 January 2006. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  45. ^ Λολα. "The unbelievable life of Kerry Packer". Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  46. ^ Bull, Andy (2 May 2017). "Tall tales and a big vision: Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket 40 years on". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  47. ^ Riley, Mark (6 October 2020). "From the Archives, 1990: Kerry Packer fights for life after heart attack". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  48. ^ Obituary: Kerry Packer The Guardian. Retrieved on 2018-04-27.
  49. ^ Carbone, Suzanne, and Lawrence Money (31 August 2009), "Hold on, Kerry. It seems there is something there", Theage.com.au. 4 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  50. ^ a b Bhat, By Devika. "'This is my time' said Packer as he died with dignity". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  51. ^ McMahon, Neil (31 December 2005). "Kerry Packer laid to rest in country he loved". The Age.
  52. ^ Vaughan, Owen (15 November 2011), "Will this giant horse's head mark Kerry Packer's grave? -- Towering sculpture of horse's head is coming to Australia after mystery collector bought it to sit at her husband’s graveside", News.com.au. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  53. ^ "Date of Packer state funeral announced". www.abc.net.au. 23 January 2006. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  54. ^ a b Trembath, Brendan (17 February 2006). "Kerry Packer remembered at state memorial service". The World Today. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
  55. ^ . The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre. University of South Australia. 11 October 2007. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 27 April 2011.

Further reading

External links

  • Photo of Kerry Packer
  • KerryPacker.com.au for sale
  • Kerry Packer media profile
  • Shaw, John (27 December 2005). "Kerry Packer, 68, Australia's Media Magnate, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  • 1970s interview on Packer's childhood
  • "Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer, tycoon and transformer of cricket, died on 26 December, aged 68: Obituary". The Economist. 5 January 2006. Retrieved 13 January 2012.
  • Kerry Packer at IMDb

kerry, packer, kerry, francis, bullmore, packer, december, 1937, december, 2005, australian, media, tycoon, considered, australia, most, powerful, media, proprietors, twentieth, century, packer, family, company, owned, controlling, interest, both, nine, networ. Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer AC 17 December 1937 26 December 2005 was an Australian media tycoon and was considered one of Australia s most powerful media proprietors of the twentieth century 2 The Packer family company owned a controlling interest in both the Nine Network and the publishing company Australian Consolidated Press which were later merged to form Publishing and Broadcasting Limited PBL Outside Australia Packer was best known for founding World Series Cricket At the time of his death he was the richest and one of the most influential men in Australia In 2004 Business Review Weekly magazine estimated Packer s net worth at A 6 5 billion 3 Kerry PackerACPacker at Parliament House in 1991BornKerry Francis Bullmore Packer 1937 12 17 17 December 1937Sydney New South Wales AustraliaDied26 December 2005 2005 12 26 aged 68 Sydney New South Wales AustraliaResting placeEllerston New South Wales AustraliaEducationGeelong Grammar SchoolCranbrook SchoolCanberra Grammar School 1 Known forOwnership of Channel NineOther media and journalism interestsWorld Series CricketBoard member ofNine NetworkPublishing and Broadcasting LimitedAustralian Consolidated PressSpouseRoslyn Weedon AC m 1963 wid 2005 wbr Children2 Gretel and James PackerParentsSir Frank Packer KBE OStJ father Gretel Bullmore mother RelativesClyde Packer brother Robert Clyde Packer grandfather Herbert Bullmore grandfather Contents 1 Early life 2 Business 3 Media interests 3 1 The Packer Empire 3 2 The CBC Disaster 3 3 Alan Bond media buyback 3 4 Hands on business approach 3 5 Government inquiry and legal challenges 4 World Series Cricket 5 World Rugby Corporation 6 Controversy 7 Personal life 7 1 Polo 7 2 Gambling 8 Failing health 9 Death 9 1 State memorial service 10 Philanthropy 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life EditKerry Packer was born on 17 December 1937 in Sydney Australia His father was Sir Frank Packer an Australian media proprietor who controlled Australian Consolidated Press and the Nine Network His mother Gretel Bullmore was the daughter of Herbert Bullmore the Scottish rugby union player He had an older brother Clyde Packer He took part in various sports at school including boxing cricket and rugby though he struggled academically possibly due to undiagnosed dyslexia 4 On his father s death in 1974 the family estate valued at 100 million passed directly to Packer His father had fallen out with his elder son Clyde in 1972 4 Business EditPacker through his family company Consolidated Press Holdings was the major shareholder with a 37 holding in Publishing and Broadcasting Limited PBL 5 Until Packer s death PBL owned the Nine television network and Australian Consolidated Press which produces many of Australia s top selling magazines He was involved in a number of other gambling and tourism ventures notably Crown Casino in Melbourne 6 The Nine Network and Australian Consolidated Press businesses have since been divested to PBL Media Packer was widely respected in business circles courted by politicians on both sides and was widely regarded as one of the most astute businessmen of his time despite having been a poor student 7 Although Packer s reputation as an astute businessman was legendary and he made some good investments he was by no means a self made man his grandfather Robert Clyde Packer and his father Sir Frank Packer had built up the media empire and its related holdings over many decades As pointed out by internet news outlet Crikey if 100 million had been invested in the Australian sharemarket in September 1974 through a balanced portfolio of the top 200 companies that portfolio would be worth a lot more than 6 9 billion in December 2005 possibly as much as 11 billion 8 Packer controlled Nine Network and Nine s Wide World of Sports in the 1980s and famously sold the network to Alan Bond and then bought it back three years later for less than a quarter of the price Writes the Sydney Morning Herald Packer s decision to sell Nine to Bond in 1987 for 1 2 billion before buying back the network in 1990 for 250 million is legendary in Australian television 9 Moreover Packer was not the first choice to take over the running of the family s business empire his father had intended that Kerry s elder brother Clyde Packer would take over the company but Clyde fell out with his father in the early 1970s and left Australia permanently Kerry Packer s independent business life began after his father s death in 1974 when he inherited control of the family s controlling share in PBL valued at A 100 million Further his principal Australian investments in television and casinos were highly protected from competition by government regulation which Packer and his employees worked very hard to have maintained The Packer family s business reputation suffered a blow following the 2001 collapse of One Tel a telephone company in which his son James had invested Kerry Packer was also one of Australia s largest landholders 10 In 2003 a deposit of rubies was discovered on one of his properties 11 The Packer media empire included magazines television networks telecommunications petrochemicals heavy engineering a 75 stake in the Perisher Blue ski resort diamond exploration coal mines and property a share in the Foxtel cable TV network and investments in the lucrative casino business in Australia and overseas 12 13 Media interests EditThe Packer Empire Edit The Packer family has long been involved in media Packer s grandfather Robert Clyde Packer owned two Sydney newspapers while his father Sir Frank Packer was one of Australia s first media moguls and Kerry s son James was executive chairman of PBL before resigning in 2008 Sir Frank wanted Kerry to experience work in the newspaper industry from the ground up so Packer started in the loading dock of the Sydney newspaper The Telegraph loading papers He was not originally destined for the role but in the early 1970s Kerry took the place of the designated successor his older brother Clyde after Clyde fell out with their father quit PBL and moved to America Kerry took over the running of PBL in 1974 on the death of his father The CBC Disaster Edit During the 1980 s Packer owned radio stations 2UE and 3AK He decided to link both stations to form the ill fated Commonwealth Broadcasting Corporation With both stations networked breakfast came from Melbourne s 3AK and everything else from Sydney s 2UE the format last six months in 1986 Alan Bond media buyback Edit In 1987 Packer made a fortune at the expense of disgraced tycoon Alan Bond He reportedly sold Bond the Nine Network at the record price of A 1 05 billion in 1987 and then bought it back three years later for a mere A 250 million when Bond s empire was collapsing Packer later quipped You only get one Alan Bond in your lifetime and I ve had mine 14 Packer was then able to reinvest the proceeds in a 25 share in the Foxtel pay TV consortium After the sale to Bond Packer said that he had regretted the decision to sell Nine and wished he had not gone through with the transaction At the 2006 PBL AGM Kerry s son James told of the true complexities of the deal Kerry Packer received A 800 million in cash with A 250 million left in Bond Media as subordinated debt As Bond went under Packer converted the subordinated debt into a 37 stake in Bond Media About A 500 million of debt remained in Bond Media Packer received 800 million in cash before receiving a free 37 equity stake that put a debt included value of A 500 million on the Nine Network which by then included Channel Nine in Brisbane 15 Hands on business approach Edit Packer sometimes took a direct interest in the editorial content of his papers although he was far less interventionist than the notoriously hands on Rupert Murdoch Packer also occasionally interfered directly in the programming of his TV stations in 1992 he called his Sydney station TCN 9 and ordered its personnel to Get that shit off the air referring to Australia s Naughtiest Home Videos hosted by Doug Mulray which was cut during its first and only airing on national television It has since aired in its entirety He is also said to have often manipulated broadcasts of cricket himself to ensure that the end of a cricket match was broadcast despite previously set television broadcast schedules Government inquiry and legal challenges Edit Packer faced a 1991 Australian government inquiry into the print media industry with some reluctance but great humour When asked to state his full name and the capacity in which he appeared he replied Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer I have appeared here reluctantly Packer fronted the inquiry over allegations that he had some secret control over the content of the Fairfax papers an organisation that Packer had wished to purchase for some time but was restricted from by cross ownership laws During the inquiry he repeatedly berated the politicians conducting it and the government When asked about his company s tax minimisation schemes he replied Of course I am minimising my tax And if anybody in this country doesn t minimise their tax they want their heads read because as a government I can tell you you re not spending it that well that we should be donating extra At the time of his death the Nine Network was the jewel in the PBL crown Although it had a tough year in 2005 against rival Seven Network which was aided largely by US TV hits such as Desperate Housewives and Lost Nine still finished the year as the number one network World Series Cricket EditMain article World Series Cricket Outside Australia Packer was best known for founding World Series Cricket In 1977 the Nine Network cricket rights deal led to a confrontation with the cricket authorities as top players from several countries rushed to join him at the expense of their international sides One of the leaders of the rebellion was England captain Tony Greig who remained a commentator on the Nine Network s payroll until his death in December 2012 Packer s aim was to secure broadcasting rights for Australian cricket and he was largely successful In the 1970s the global cricket establishment fiercely opposed Packer in the courts To counter the establishment Packer hired the ten best Senior Counsels in the UK and put them on retainers stipulating that they were not to take on any additional work during the court case the sole purpose of which was to deny the establishment the best legal minds to prosecute their case citation needed When he died he was mourned with a minute s silence at the MCG as one of the most influential figures in the history of the sport Packer was famously quoted from a 1976 meeting with the Australian Cricket Board with whom he met to negotiate the rights to televise cricket According to witnesses he said There is a little bit of the whore in all of us gentlemen What is your price 16 World Rugby Corporation EditPacker funded the World Rugby Corporation WRC a company formed by lawyer Geoff Levy and former Wallaby player Ross Turnbull Both wanted a professional worldwide rugby union competition in 1995 A majority of the All Blacks and Wallaby teams signed up to the WRC In response the Australian New Zealand and South African rugby unions formed SANZAR who partnered with News Limited to launch two professional competitions the Super 12 and Tri Nations Series The South African Rugby Union told the Springboks players that they would never play for their country again if they committed to the WRC and they remained with the SARU Most of the All Blacks then followed them and finally the Wallabies did too so the WRC project was abandoned 17 Controversy EditPacker was often the centre of controversy One of the earliest incidents occurred on 7 June 1960 when his father was trying to take over the Anglican Press a small publisher run by Francis James According to author Richard Neville Frank Packer was angered by James refusal to sell the Anglican Press so he sent Kerry and some burly friends to pressure him into selling They forced their way in and reportedly began vandalising the premises but James was able to barricade himself in his office and call Rupert Murdoch Packer s most powerful rival Murdoch quickly dispatched his own team of heavies who threw Kerry and friends out Not surprisingly the Murdoch press had a field day with the news that the son of Australia s biggest media tycoon had been caught brawling in the street 18 19 Like Murdoch Packer s critics saw his ever expanding cross media holdings as a potential threat to media diversity and freedom of speech He also repeatedly came under fire for his companies alleged involvement in tax evasion schemes and for the extremely low amounts of company tax that his corporations are reported to have paid over the years He fought repeated battles with the Australian Taxation Office over his corporate taxes His most severe legal challenge came in 1984 with the Costigan Commission alleging using the codename of the squirrel renamed the Goanna in media reports 20 that he was involved in tax evasion and organised crime including drug trafficking He successfully counter attacked the commission with the assistance of his counsel Malcolm Turnbull In 1987 the charges were formally dismissed by Attorney General Lionel Bowen Mystery surrounded Packer s receipt of a loan of A 225 000 in cash from Brian Ray a bankrupt Queensland businessman 21 When questioned about this transaction at the Costigan Royal Commission Packer said I like cash I have a squirrel mentality I like to keep money in cash It is by no means the most cash I ever had in my life 22 Notwithstanding the significant efforts made to preserve his security and privacy Packer suffered two mysterious break ins at his companies headquarters in Park Street Sydney In 1995 25 gold bars weighing a total of 285 kilograms 628 lb equivalent to A 23 3 million at 2022 gold prices and a Vegemite jar full of gold nuggets were stolen from Packer s personal safe 23 In 2003 a licensed Glock 9 millimetre 0 35 in semi automatic pistol was stolen from a desk drawer on the executive level Packer was not charged with failing to keep safe the weapon but he did subsequently surrender his firearms licence 24 Packer broke the sports boycott of apartheid South Africa which prevented South African sportsmen from representing their country when he recruited a number of South African cricketers to play on his World Series Cricket Team His timing was criticised coming just months after the Soweto riots and the death of Steve Biko murdered by the members of the South African security forces Personal life EditPacker s primary schooling suffered greatly when he was struck with a severe bout of poliomyelitis at age eight and he was confined to an iron lung for nine months His father apparently thought little of his son s abilities once cruelly describing him as the family idiot although Kerry subsequently steered PBL to heights far beyond anything his father or brother achieved The nickname his father gave Kerry made him strive to new heights in schooling trying to achieve A grades His end of year report said he was one of the most notable students In an interview former employee Trevor Sykes stated that He didn t read much on the printed page If you didn t want Kerry to read something you wrote more than a one page memo 25 Packer s grandfather Herbert Bullmore represented the Scotland national rugby union team in an international match against Ireland in Dublin in 1902 and worked as a doctor in Sydney for many years 26 Kerry Packer and his wife of 42 years Roslyn Packer nee Weedon had two children a daughter Gretel and a son James At the time of Packer s death he and Ros had two grandchildren Francesca then 10 and Ben then 7 from Gretel s first marriage to British financier Nick Barham 27 and Gretel and her husband Shane Murray were expecting their first child together William born 2006 28 Gretel and Shane married just before Packer s death 29 Packer conducted extra marital affairs with a number of women including the model Carol Lopes who reportedly committed suicide after being shunned by Packer publisher and former ConPress employee Ita Buttrose and Julie Trethowan his long time mistress and manager from 1983 of the Packer owned Sydney city health and fitness club the Hyde Park Club After his death The Sydney Morning Herald reported that from about 1995 Packer transferred control of multimillion dollar Sydney real estate holdings to Trethowan 30 31 32 In June 2009 the Sydney Morning Herald reported that former federal opposition leader and subsequently an Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull a former legal adviser and business associate of Packer revealed to journalist Annabel Crabb that Packer had threatened to have him killed when they fell out over their 1991 attempt to take over the Fairfax newspaper group through their Tourang consortium Packer reportedly made the threat after Turnbull told Packer he was going to have him thrown out of the consortium by revealing Packer s intention to play an interventionist role in the newspaper group He told me he d kill me yeah I didn t think he was completely serious but I didn t think he was entirely joking either Look he could be pretty scary He did threaten to kill me and I said to him Well you d better make sure that your assassin gets me first because if he misses you better know I won t miss you He could be a complete pig you know He could charm the birds out of the trees but he could be a brute Malcolm Turnbull 4 June 2009 as reported in The Sydney Morning Herald 33 Packer was a supporter of South Sydney Rabbitohs in the National Rugby League competition 34 He was an advocate of the Australian Republic Movement 35 Polo Edit Packer was a keen polo player In 1992 he and Gonzalo Pieres Sr founded Ellerstina a polo team that has claimed multiple titles at the Argentine Open and other high handicap tournaments Packer bought the Fyning Hill estate in West Sussex and expanded it to over 400 acres Packer built the headquarters for his Ellerston polo team at Fyning Hill and would arrive at the estate in May for the three month English polo season 36 37 Packer sold the estate to the Russian businessman Roman Abramovich in 1999 for 12 million 38 Gambling Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Packer was a longtime heavy smoker and an avid gambler fabled for his large wins and losses 39 In 1999 a three day losing streak at London casinos cost him almost A 28 million the biggest reported gambling loss in British history 40 Once he won A 33 million at the MGM Grand Casino in Las Vegas and that he often won as much as A 7 million each year during his annual holidays in the UK 41 Packer s visits were a risky affair for the casinos as his wins and losses could make quite a difference to the finances of even bigger casinos Packer was also known for his sometimes volcanic temper and for his perennial contempt for journalists who sought to question his activities 42 Packer is quoted for an exchange in a poker tournament at the Stratosphere Casino where a Texan oil investor was attempting to engage him in a game of poker 43 Upon the Texan saying I m worth 60 000 000 Packer apparently pulled out a coin and asked nonchalantly heads or tails referring to an A 120 million wager according to Bob Stupak s biography Some variations of the story put the sum at A 60 million to A 100 million and say the line was I ll toss you for it 44 In the late 1990s he walked into a major London casino and played 15 million on four roulette tables on his own and lost it all This has been confirmed by casino owners in South East England 45 The Ritz Hotel in London even had its own room for Kerry Packer There he was able to play blackjack with a minimum bet of 10 000 per hand He once lost more than 19 million in this room Failing health EditPacker suffered as many as four heart attacks 46 In 1990 while playing polo at Warwick Farm Sydney he suffered from a heart attack that left him clinically dead for seven minutes 47 Packer was revived by paramedics and then airlifted to St Vincent s Private Hospital Sydney and received bypass surgery from Dr Victor Chang a pioneering cardiac surgeon It was not common for an ambulance to have a defibrillator at the time it was purely by chance that the ambulance which responded to the call had one fitted After recovering Packer donated a large sum to the Ambulance Service of New South Wales to pay for equipping all NSW ambulances with a portable defibrillator colloquially known as Packer Whackers He told Nick Greiner I ll go you 50 50 and the NSW State government paid the other half of the cost He is reported to have said Son I ve been to the other side and let me tell you there s nothing there 48 And in a press conference there s no one waiting there for you there s no one to judge you so you can do what you bloody well like 49 He also suffered from a chronic kidney condition for many years and in 2000 he made headlines when his long serving helicopter pilot Nick Ross donated one of his own kidneys to Packer for transplantation The story of the transplant was covered in detail by the Australian TV documentary program Australian Story a rare occasion on which Packer granted a media interview and to the surprise of many not to his own network Australian Story is produced by the public network ABC After recovering from the operation Packer launched an organ transplant association in memory of cricketer David Hookes Death EditKerry Packer died of kidney failure on 26 December 2005 nine days after his 68th birthday at home in Sydney Australia with his family by his bedside 14 Knowing that his health was failing he instructed his doctors not to treat him with curative intent or by artificially prolonging his life with dialysis 50 He told his cardiologist earlier in the week that he was running out of petrol and wanted to die with dignity 50 His private funeral service was held on 30 December 2005 at the family s country retreat Ellerston near Scone in the Hunter Region 28 Having obtained council permission he was buried on the Ellerston property near the polo field 51 It was reported in November 2011 both in the UK and Australia that the grave was to be marked by a bronze statue of a horse s head by sculptor Nic Fiddian Green popularly known as Artemis but believed reverted to the name Fiddian Green originally gave it I Look Beyond for a Distant Land 52 State memorial service Edit The Packer family accepted an offer of a state memorial service which was held on 17 February 2006 at the Sydney Opera House 53 The granting of this taxpayer funded honour was criticised by some members of the community as Packer was notorious for his alleged tax minimisation 54 At the memorial service close friend Alan Jones was Master of Ceremonies The service featured speeches from his son James Russell Crowe on behalf of his daughter Gretel the Prime Minister in office at the time John Howard and cricket legend Richie Benaud Attendees included Tom Cruise a friend of James Packer and his then partner Katie Holmes Greg Norman members of the Australian cricket team and past and present figures from all sides of politics 54 Philanthropy EditThe Kerry Packer Civic Gallery within the Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre of the University of South Australia was endowed by the Packer family 55 See also EditKerry Packer Foundation Paper Giants The Birth of Cleo Howzat Kerry Packer s War Paper Giants Magazine Wars Power Games The Packer Murdoch War Super League warReferences Edit Chip off the old block The Age Melbourne 31 December 2005 Rowe D Rugby league in Australia The super league saga Journal of Sport amp Social Issues 221 226 Skeffington Robert 24 May 2004 The richest list of all The Age Melbourne Retrieved 26 July 2011 a b Highham James E S Cohen Scott 2010 Giants of Tourism CABI p 182 ISBN 9781845936532 Retrieved 18 July 2013 Melco PBL Joint Venture acquires remaining 30 of Park Hyatt Project in Macau PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kerry Packer Bio a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link A pioneer in the realm of television The Sydney Morning Herald 27 December 2005 Retrieved 14 August 2021 How good a businessman was Packer Crikey 9 January 2006 http www crikey com au articles 2006 01 09 1554 6139 htm dead link Barrett Chris 13 April 2018 No crying in television Packer would be pragmatic about switch The Sydney Morning Herald Australia s richest man Kerry Packer dies at 68 The New York Times 27 December 2005 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 14 August 2021 How Kerry Packer unearthed 30 million The Age 6 March 2005 Retrieved 14 August 2021 The great inheritor The Economist 5 January 2006 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 14 August 2021 CNN com Media mogul Kerry Packer dies Dec 27 2005 edition cnn com Retrieved 14 August 2021 a b Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer 1937 2005 The Age Melbourne 28 December 2005 p 7 Retrieved 27 April 2011 Mayne Stephen 27 October 2006 Packer explodes Alan Bond myth Crikey Private Media Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 8 November 2006 Retrieved 27 October 2006 Brown Alex 28 December 2005 Lillee goes in to bat for Packer but some argue his methods were just not The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 31 March 2010 Howitt Bob 2005 SANZAR Saga Ten Years of Super 12 and Tri Nations Rugby Harper Collins Publishers ISBN 1 86950 566 2 Neville Richard 1995 Hippie Hippie Shake The Dreams the Trips the Trials the Love ins the Screw ups the Sixties William Heinemann Australia ISBN 0 85561 523 0 Nine tenths of the law Inside Story Swinburne Institute Retrieved 16 September 2013 Huxley John 21 February 2006 Costigan angry and sticking to his guns The Sydney Morning Herald Missing a mate with a loan for Packer The Sydney Morning Herald 4 October 1983 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Molloy Andrew 2007 I ll Toss You For It Double Bay NSW Australian Media Pty Ltd p 12 ISBN 978 0 646 47901 9 Ongaro Daniela Morri Mark 9 February 2013 Crimes can t avoid DNA tests of time The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 12 August 2013 Packer hands in licence for pistol stolen from desk The Sydney Morning Herald 20 February 2003 Retrieved 31 March 2010 A good boss 7 30 Report Australian Broadcasting Corporation 27 December 2005 Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Growden Greg 6 November 2004 Australians breathe life into Scots game The Age Melbourne Retrieved 12 July 2012 Davies Lisa 28 December 2005 A grieving Gretel gets ready for birth News com au Archived 30 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine a b JCT 13 September 2009 Small funeral for a giant of a man Nine News Australia Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Baby boy for Gretel Packer The Sydney Morning Herald Australian Associated Press 29 January 2006 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Ricketson Matthew 26 July 2007 A man of means mistresses and a few bordellos The Age Melbourne How Packer lavished his property on a friend The Sydney Morning Herald 7 January 2006 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Packer s quick 2m renovation The Sydney Morning Herald 15 January 2006 Retrieved 31 March 2010 Coorey Phillip 4 June 2009 Brute Packer threatened to kill me Turnbull The Sydney Morning Herald James Packer signs 3 million jersey sponsorship deal with South Sydney The Daily Telegraph 14 May 2013 Donelly Beau 8 September 2016 James Packer donates 250 000 to the Australian Republican Movement The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 10 September 2016 Laffaye Horace A 28 August 2015 Profiles in Polo The Players Who Changed the Game McFarland p 191 ISBN 978 1 4766 6273 2 Laffaye Horace A 29 May 2009 The Evolution of Polo McFarland p 229 ISBN 978 0 7864 5415 0 Armstrong Stephen 15 April 2010 The Super Rich Shall Inherit the Earth The New Global Oligarachs and How They re Taking Over our World Little Brown Book Group p 33 ISBN 978 1 84901 441 0 Club Melbourne Press Kerry Packer MPC Hall Of Fame Retrieved 14 August 2021 Gambler Packer loses 13m in 3 days www telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Packer s gambling feats fact or fiction The Sydney Morning Herald 27 December 2005 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Tiffen Rodney 30 November 2006 How Packer slipped on Fairfax The Age Retrieved 14 August 2021 Biggest Win in Blackjack 40 millions GamblingBaba GamblingBaba 28 January 2021 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Kerry Packer the Texan the toss and the truth Crikey 12 January 2006 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Lola The unbelievable life of Kerry Packer Retrieved 14 August 2021 Bull Andy 2 May 2017 Tall tales and a big vision Kerry Packer s World Series Cricket 40 years on The Guardian Retrieved 14 August 2021 Riley Mark 6 October 2020 From the Archives 1990 Kerry Packer fights for life after heart attack The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 14 August 2021 Obituary Kerry Packer The Guardian Retrieved on 2018 04 27 Carbone Suzanne and Lawrence Money 31 August 2009 Hold on Kerry It seems there is something there Theage com au Archived 4 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 August 2013 a b Bhat By Devika This is my time said Packer as he died with dignity The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 14 August 2021 McMahon Neil 31 December 2005 Kerry Packer laid to rest in country he loved The Age Vaughan Owen 15 November 2011 Will this giant horse s head mark Kerry Packer s grave Towering sculpture of horse s head is coming to Australia after mystery collector bought it to sit at her husband s graveside News com au Retrieved 15 January 2022 Date of Packer state funeral announced www abc net au 23 January 2006 Retrieved 14 August 2021 a b Trembath Brendan 17 February 2006 Kerry Packer remembered at state memorial service The World Today Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 27 April 2011 Kerry Packer Civic Gallery The Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre University of South Australia 11 October 2007 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 27 April 2011 Further reading EditBarry Paul 1993 The Rise and Rise of Kerry Packer Sydney Bantam ABC Books ISBN 1 86359 075 7 Stone Gerald 2000 Compulsive Viewing the inside story of Packer s Nine Network Ringwood Victoria Viking ISBN 0 670 88690 4 Stone Gerald 2007 Who Killed Channel 9 Sydney Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4050 3815 7 Westfield Mark 2000 The Gatekeepers Sydney London Pluto Press Comerford and Miller ISBN 1 86403 102 6 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Kerry Packer Photo of Kerry Packer KerryPacker com au for sale Kerry Packer media profile Shaw John 27 December 2005 Kerry Packer 68 Australia s Media Magnate Is Dead The New York Times Retrieved 7 May 2010 1970s interview on Packer s childhood Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer tycoon and transformer of cricket died on 26 December aged 68 Obituary The Economist 5 January 2006 Retrieved 13 January 2012 Kerry Packer at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kerry Packer amp oldid 1133474480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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