Hollings J17/07/201817/07/2018Pacific Journalism Review, 2018, 24 (1), pp. 205 - 214 (9)1023-9499https://hdl.handle.net/10179/15164Many countries have their Watergate moment, a scandal that envelopes not only mystery, intrigue, and human tragedy, but also something bigger, some kind of challenge to a country’s deepest beliefs about itself. What the US journalism scholar Michael Schudson called a country’s central moral values. For New Zealand, a good case could be made that our Watergate moment was the Thomas case. Like Watergate, it revealed ugly truths about corruption within some of our most respected institutions, and investigative journalism played a central role. Like Watergate, it was also a collective loss of innocence, and opened a very deep wound.205 - 214 (9)investigative journalismjournalistNew ZealandobituaryPat BoothWatergateJournalism as a Weapon: The Life of Patrick John BoothJournal article10.24135/pjr.v24i1.4164286372324-2035Massey_Dark1902 Film, Television and Digital Media1903 Journalism and Professional Writing2001 Communication and Media Studies