
“There was a bounty on my head in the form of a large amount of heroin,” he told me over the phone. “Some woman who was pissed off about a story we did on her scumbag family contacted loads of heavy guys, describing what I looked like and where to find me. She said that if they done me in they'd get the reward, but one of the guys actually told me [about the bounty] and then the police got involved. People who hate The Digger are generally scum. We expose the pond-life of Glasgow for what they are, and of course they don't like that."It’s this attitude—blanket bashing even the most minor of criminals as “scum”—that’s also earned Cruickshank a reputation among his peers. I spoke to the filmmaker David Graham Scott—who worked as a photographer for The Digger in 2007 while making a documentary about the magazine for BBC Scotland—to get his take on his former boss."In a way I'm indebted to him because he helped me make the documentary," he said. "But he is probably the most cold-hearted guy I’ve ever met. He portrays himself as righteous because of the ‘scum’ he reports on, but a lot of these people come from real poverty, with addiction, and abuse issues—but he doesn't seem to care at all."Three or four years ago he phoned me saying he wanted my film taken off the internet because he was recognizable in it and there was somebody after him. I said there was no point because it'd been out for ages, so I got this nasty text a week later. It didn't bother me because, at the end of the day, I’d rather be me than him. He’s probably looking over his shoulder all the time, paranoid out his mind."
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