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Dan Bilefsky is a Canadian journalist and author who spent nearly 20 years as an international correspondent for The New York Times. In 2018, Bilefsky returned to his hometown of Montreal after 28 years abroad.[1] Among other things, he has covered Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the conflict in Gaza and the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban. He was part of the Times's team that investigated the assassination of the Haitian President, an investigation that won a Polk Award and was a Pulitzer finalist.

Before returning to Canada, he was a London and Paris correspondent for The Times, and covered Brexit, the European refugee crisis, the 2015 terrorist attacks at the Bataclan nightclub and the pimping trial of Dominique Strauss-Kahn.[2]

While a correspondent in London Bilefsky wrote on an audacious heist by a gang of men in their 60s and 70s, known as the "Bad Grandpas," who stole about $20 million in diamonds, gold and gems from Hatton Garden, the city's medieval jewellery district, in April 2015. It was the largest burglary in England's history. The story was optioned by Hollywood and Bilefsky has written a book on the caper, "The Last Job," which was published by Norton in April 2020.[3] The best-selling detective novelist Louise Penny called the book "a fabulous read, gripping, at times hilarious, at times, terrifying, always astonishing...Using his skills as an investigative reporter, Bilefsky pieces together a study of hubris and idiocy, of greed and camaraderie, and he does it with lyrical, moving, powerful prose. A wonderful book about an almost unbelievable crime.”

Biography

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As a roving correspondent, Bilefsky has written on many subjects, from honor killings in Turkey to bullfighting in Portugal and the hunt for the Bosnian-Serb war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic in the Balkans.[4][5][6][7] In New York, he reported on what prosecutors called the most elaborate frame-up in recent law enforcement history: the bizarre case of a Queens man who raped his girlfriend and then framed her for a series of brazen crimes that never took place.[8]

Bilefsky covered the independence of Kosovo in February 2008[9] and, six months later, the war between Russia and Georgia.[10]

In the summer of 2008, Bilefsky set out for the mountains of northern Albania to chronicle the ancient custom of "sworn virgins", women who forsake marriage, sex and children in order to become the "men of the house".[11]


References

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  1. ^ "Dan Bilefsky". The New York Times. 12 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Dan Bilefsky: Telling Counterintuitive Stories From the Edge of Europe".
  3. ^ "Home Page | W. W. Norton & Company".
  4. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (2005-12-30). "Laughing schools in Germany to teach depressed Germans how to laugh". The New York Times.
  5. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (2007-02-08). "A Viagra craze in Spain". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (July 16, 2006). "How to Avoid Honor Killing in Turkey? Honor Suicide". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (August 12, 2007). "Matador Wins. Bull Dies. The End? Not in Portugal". The New York Times.
  8. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (July 25, 2011). "A Revenge Plot So Intricate, the Prosecutors Were Pawns". The New York Times.
  9. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (2008-02-17). "Kosovo declares independence". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Chivers, C.J. (September 16, 2008). "Georgia Offers Fresh Evidence on War's Start". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Bilefsky, Dan (June 25, 2008). "Albanian Custom Fades: Woman as Family Man". The New York Times.