Guernsey Deep Dive

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Welcome to Guernsey Deep Dive: History, Headlines & Island Life Taking you to Guernsey’s past and present — from untold stories to breaking news, and the people shaping our island. Let’s dive in.” E-Mail guernseydeepdive@gmail.com

  1. 3D AGO

    The Phantom Battalion: How a Lie Sent a Guernsey Youth to His Death

    Picture an island the size of a postcard turned into a pressure cooker: German mines in the sea, Wehrmacht patrols in the lanes, and a community where every neighbor could be a confidant — or an informant. This episode peels back the cozy myth of the "model occupation" and follows a single, ordinary life shattered by a single, extraordinary lie. We meet John Henry Ingrouille , a 20-year-old labourer who stayed in Guernsey when most fled. He is a cook and stoker at the Vale Mill, a cog in the machinery of survival, not a conspirator. Yet one ordinary morning — a glimpse of a neighbor leaving a soldier’s room — sets off a chain reaction of fear, shame, and preemptive denunciation. Nellie Brewster and her fifteen-year-old daughter Frances turn a petty scandal into a weapon, accusing John of leading an impossible 800-man battalion against the Reich. What follows reads like a Kafkaesque horror: a raid, the invention of evidence (a knife and a fork), a military trial cobbled together in Jersey, and a verdict that threads bureaucratic logic through cruelty. Transported across occupied Europe, John’s case is re-litigated in Berlin, recategorized by an indifferent system, and stamped with a five-year sentence of hard labour that will slowly break his body and spirit. Through John’s own prison letters — vivid, articulate, quietly proud — we travel from the flea-infested cells of Normandy to the tailor’s benches of Brandenburg-Görden, where he stitched uniforms for the men who occupied his home. We feel the relentless starvation, the erosion of hope, the brief mercy of a hospital bed, and the slow creep of tuberculosis that will claim him after the war has ended. Liberation arrives like a cruel punctuation: freedom from the prison gates, then a tender, fleeting letter home; then the collapse. John dies in a Brussels hospital in June 1945, a month after victory in Europe, having had just one clear joy — reading his local paper and touching the pages of the home he will never see again. The aftermath complicates closure. The British government, fearing scandal, declines prosecutions that would expose how local officials colluded to keep the islands functioning under occupation. The Brewsters avoid legal reckoning but cannot escape the island’s memory: ostracized, forced to flee, and followed by bizarre ironies — Frances later marries an Auschwitz survivor, only to die of the same disease that killed her victim. John’s parents refuse to let him vanish into the archives. They exhume and rebury him at home, commission a stained-glass window, and, decades later, a stolperstein is placed outside his house — a small brass reminder so passersby must literally stumble over the truth of what happened there. The episode ends not with tidy moralizing, but with a chilling question: how quickly can ordinary civility be weaponized into betrayal? This is not only a story about fascism; it is a study of neighbors turned judges, of rumor turned executioner, and of memory fought for against moss and time. Listen for the voices in the files — the letters, the trial notes, the parish notices — and let the slow unspooling of John  Ingrouille's life remind you that the deadliest threats are sometimes domestic, whispered over garden fences and written down with a rubber stamp. Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The content is based on historical research, publicly available sources, and creative interpretation. While we strive for accuracy, some details may be simplified or dramatized. AI-Generated Content: This podcast was produced using AI tools, including voice synthesis and content generation. Any narration or dialogue you hear may have been created or enhanced by artificial intelligence.

    31 min
  2. 5D AGO

    Anonymous Force

    Close your eyes and imagine a postcard island: wind on granite cliffs, narrow lanes, famous cows, and a way of doing politics that prefers tea and consensus to confrontation. Now open them to find that very island at war with a new, anonymous force — an online ‘small army’ critics say is working to remove the man who runs public safety. This episode walks you from the hedgerows into the bruise of modern politics, where neighbourly civility collides with the velocity and cruelty of the internet. At the center is Deputy Mark Leadbeater, president of the Committee for Home Affairs, trying to shepherd a controversial cannabis legalization reform while the institutions he oversees—prison and hospital—are in crisis. The soundtrack is part thriller, part tragedy: a whistleblower’s claim that a convicted offender was not being adequately supervised at the hospital , a death in custody and staff arrests at the prison, and a public that feels suddenly less safe. These reported failures are what give the online campaign its oxygen . But the story is not just about policy or protocol; it’s about scale and tone. Leadbeater says the attacks are coordinated—secret Facebook groups, strategic recruitment of complainers, targeted DMs designed to exhaust and intimidate. He even meets critics in person and wins two of three over with coffee and conversation, revealing how much digital rage evaporates in the face of human interaction. Yet personal diplomacy has no chance of matching the mechanical reach of a mobilized feed. Complicating everything are theatrical confrontations: the expulsion of a transparency-minded deputy from a police oversight group, explosive accusations alleging a cover-up, and the almost comic detail of the "forklift defense" when rumours about past cannabis business ties spiral into conspiracy. Each episode of conflict becomes fuel for the next, and the island’s politics—once designed to be slow and steady—starts to feel alarmingly combustible. This is also a portrait of a politician shaped by comebacks and feuds: a boomerang figure who resigned, returned, toppled senior figures and now stands accused of what he once modeled—instability as a tool. The podcast asks: was he a reformer fighting a necessary fight, or an abrasive activist who created many enemies? And when his opponents are adept at turning every operational failure into a moral emergency, how do you separate motive from message? Beyond the man, this is an investigation of systems. Guernsey’s committee model offers no party shield, leaving a single deputy exposed to what he describes as a coordinated campaign in a way that a minister in a party system rarely is. If a mobilized online minority can drive an elected official from office, what does that do to democratic norms on a small island where reputations travel faster than facts? We stitch together whistleblower testimony, procedural failures, personal meetings and political theatre into a narrative that’s as intimate as a kitchen-table conversation and as unnerving as a surveillance thriller. Listen to understand how a used forklift, a Facebook page, a patient’s wave in a hospital corridor, and a controversial reform can combine into a perfect political storm—and why the outcome will matter far beyond Guernsey’s cliffs. Pull up a chair. There will be scandal, sorrow, dark comedy, and a question that echoes long after the credits: when organized online critics learns how to govern by outrage, what kind of democracy are we left with? Disclaimers This episode examines publicly reported events and statements surrounding Deputy Mark Leadbeater and the Committee for Home Affairs. Reporting referenced includes coverage from Guernsey Press, Bailiwick Express, BBC and ITV Channel TV. Full sources are listed in the show notes. Allegations referenced are drawn from publicly available reporting and are presented in context. AI-Generated Content: This podcast was produced using AI tools, including voice synthesis and content generation. Any narration or dialogue you hear may have been created or enhanced by artificial intelligence.

    35 min
  3. FEB 10

    When Silence Fails: A Police Apology, a Family's Grief, and the New Threat of AI

    It begins like a routine press release—a short, formal note about a tragic death in custody that most of us would scroll past. But this statement from the Guernsey police cracks open. In five compressed days a quiet island community watches an institution confront its worst instincts: the fog of confusion, the failure to comfort, and, most shockingly, the admission that the information given to a grieving family was not accurate. In this episode we walk through that timeline: a death on a Monday, a family in shock, and by Friday a high‑level meeting where the chief officer, Damien Kitchen, speaks with an uncommonly human voice. He says three things that matter—he apologises for failing to give the support the family deserved, for providing inaccurate information, and for falling short of the police’s own standards. Those three lines turn a routine statement into a rare act of institutional accountability. We sit in on the scene of the apology: family members facing senior officers and the professional standards team, the barriers removed so pain can be heard directly by decision makers. The chief pledges to meet again in person, to make the apology real, and to correct the immediate failings. The legal machinery continues to turn—detectives gather evidence for His Majesty’s Procurer—while the community waits for answers. But the human work of repair begins in those first days, when truth and empathy are most fragile. Then the statement pivots into the future and delivers a chilling new plea: beware the internet’s appetite for invention. The police warn not only against rumor but against AI‑generated images that can fabricate a scene, a body, a last moment—and in doing so, inflict a second, digital wound on the living. That line reframes privacy for our era: respect is no longer merely silence; it is an active choice not to manufacture a false reality around someone’s pain. We use storytelling to trace both halves of the crisis—the analog failures of human communication, and the algorithmic threats that arrive the next second. This is a short document that does a lot: an apology, a promise of accountability, and a sobering plea about the new forms of harm technology allows. Listen as we unpack how institutions fumble and sometimes recover, and how our shared digital habits can either deepen wounds or shield the vulnerable. By the end, the question lingers: in an age of synthetic sight, what does it mean to behave decently toward the bereaved? Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only. The content is based on historical research, publicly available sources, and creative interpretation. While we strive for accuracy, some details may be simplified or dramatized. AI-Generated Content: This podcast was produced using AI tools, including voice synthesis and content generation. Any narration or dialogue you hear may have been created or enhanced by artificial intelligence.

    28 min
  4. FEB 9

    The 90‑Minute Silence: Death, Leaks and a Mother's Shock in Guernsey

    Before we begin, I want to take a moment to explain how this episode was made. This podcast is an AI-generated documentary. The voices you’ll hear belong to virtual narrators — created using artificial intelligence — but the story itself is built from real reporting, real testimony, and real events. The material that is being presented is drawn from publicly available sources and from what the family themselves chose to say in the days that followed. This episode looks at the aftermath of a death in custody at Les Nicolles Prison here in Guernsey. It’s not an easy subject, and it’s not one that is approached lightly. At the time of recording this, investigations are still ongoing, and no final findings or conclusions have been reached. This isn’t an episode about blame. It’s about what happened after. About how information was shared. Where communication broke down. And what that experience can feel like when you’re on the receiving end of news that changes everything. In a small community like Guernsey, these moments don’t just pass. They linger. And the way they’re handled matters — not just procedurally, but humanly. This episode is presented for documentary and public-interest purposes, and it’s been made with care and respect for everyone involved. Monday, February 2nd, 2026. On a grey winter morning in Guernsey, the island’s steady rhythm should have just kept beating: roll calls, headcounts, the small rituals that make a prison run. But at around 8 a.m. that rhythm stopped. An officer opened a cell and found 39‑year‑old Darren Salituri unresponsive. Paramedics rushed in; soon after, his death was declared. That is where the crisis began — not only with a life ended but with everything that followed. In the ideal script, a death in custody triggers a tight, practiced choreography: medical care, scene preservation, and an in‑person family liaison that brings not just facts but protection and compassion. What unfolded in the first 48 hours at the island prison, however, was the opposite. A 90‑minute delay before Darren’s mother, Joanne Garnham, was told. A phone call from a prison chaplain instead of a trained family liaison officer. No check to see if she was alone or safe. The institution’s checklist was done, but the human being at the end of the line was left to cope on her own. It gets darker. Information leaked from inside the prison and social media began to run ahead of the official response. Before Joanne had been properly notified, the island’s rumor mill had already painted pictures and assigned meanings. Then came the most devastating error: a police officer told the family Darren had been found hanging; a day later another officer retracted that claim. An image of a son in his last moments was given to a mother and then taken away, leaving only a raw, gnawing uncertainty. That mistake was more than a factual error. It became a wound. The wrong detail seeded invasive images, sleepless nights and a second trauma inflicted by the very authorities meant to provide truth and solace. Where verification should have been the default, assumption became the loudest voice. Where steady information should have steadied a grieving family, contradictory statements hollowed out trust. Local reporting — especially Lucy Rouget’s coverage in the Guernsey Press — shifted the story from institution to family, and with that shift came scrutiny. The island’s size magnified everything: staff and prisoners, neighbors and journalists move in overlapping circles, and the personal becomes public in minutes. Joanne found herself not only grieving but policing a narrative on social media, answering strangers, correcting rumors, and enduring abuse while her son lay in a morgue. This is the hidden harm we call secondary trauma — the damage a system does to the bereaved by failing to handle the aftermath with competence and care. As the week unfolded, the authorities’ credibility eroded and the island asked a hard question: who will investigate the investigators? The answer was to bring in an external body, the UK prison and probation ombudsman, to audit the failures — the communication breakdowns, the leaks, the notification errors — and to ask whether the system honored its legal and moral duty of care. The inquiry’s mandate reaches beyond cause of death; it must examine whether the state upheld the dignity of the dead and the rights of the living who loved them. This episode is not just a timeline of mistakes. It’s a study in what happens when procedures outrun humanity, when speed is prized over accuracy, and when a community’s closeness becomes a liability. It asks listeners to hold a difficult truth: the measure of a justice system is how it treats those inside its walls and the families left outside them. If a single, fundamental fact — how a person died — can be mishandled, what faith can we place in everything else the system claims to know? Listen as we walk through those first 48 hours, meet the people who were there, and trace how small errors compounded into a public crisis. We’ll follow the reporting, the outraged conversations online, the anguish of a mother, and the call for outside oversight. The official cause of death remained undetermined at the time of this episode; what we can examine, and what we must demand, is competency, compassion, and accountability. The lessons here are urgent: for institutions, for communities, and for any of us who might one day be on the receiving end of that terrible phone call. This episode examines the aftermath of a death in custody at Les Nicolles Prison in Guernsey. It draws on publicly available reporting, including coverage by the Guernsey Press, and on statements made by the deceased’s family. At the time of recording, formal investigations are ongoing. No final findings or determinations of responsibility have been made. This programme does not seek to assign guilt. It explores questions raised about communication, procedure, and institutional response, and the human impact those processes can have on families. The episode is produced for documentary, educational, and public-interest purposes.

    30 min
  5. FEB 4

    Henrietta's Mask: Inside Jonathan Le Tocq's Double Life

    In a place where lineage and handshakes still carry weight, a story unfolded that felt ripped from dystopian fiction — until reality swallowed it whole. This episode traces the rise and catastrophic fall of Jonathan Le Tocq, the man who embodied Guernsey’s ideal: an ancient family name, the island’s native tongue on his lips, a resume of statecraft and theology, and a pulpit that doubled as a badge of moral authority. He was, on paper, the perfect guardian of a small community — and that perfection was his camouflage. We follow the forensic trail from the first polite smiles at church to the dark archives of his devices. Investigators sifted through more than a million files to reveal an obsession: thousands of indecent images, nearly all AI-manufactured from photos of people he knew. He did not merely consume; he created. He weaponized widely available AI, nudifying everyday snapshots — school pictures, family outings, parish photos — then amplified the harm by crafting online personas like “Henrietta” to distribute the images. In the most chilling detail, he often superimposed his own face into the fabrications, inserting himself into the violations he engineered. Those betrayed were impossibly close: congregants, neighbors, children who had known him since infancy — even his own daughter. Victims described the assault as a psychological rape, a violation that tore through private life and public faith. The harm was not abstract; it landed squarely on the lives of people who had trusted him to protect them. The episode centers on those voices and the slow, painful unspooling of trust in a community of 63,000. We also chart the institutional collapse: a senior pastor who wrote safeguarding rules, a home minister who once oversaw police and prisons, a chief minister who represented the island on the world stage. The very structures set up to protect citizens were compromised by the man who led them. When arrest came in 2025 it exposed a constitutional blind spot — laws built on codes of honor that offered no mechanism to remove a jailed deputy, leaving taxpayers to pay a salary to a detained official and forcing a costly by-election. Le Tocq’s final attempt to control the story — a handwritten letter pleading stress and illness — unravels under the forensic timeline. The judge saw through the excuses; the sentence handed down in January 2026 was intended as a clear rebuke. But the legal outcome is only one chapter. The episode digs into the emotional fallout: a family shattered, a church reeling, and an island forced to confront a sociological rupture. More than a local scandal, this is a warning playbook for the digital age. It shows how accessible AI and social media can turn ordinary photos into instruments of harm, and how haloed authority can mask predation. Listen to this episode as a narrative of betrayal and a call to reimagine what safety means when the most reputable figure in the room can be the one hiding the sharpest threat.

    30 min
  6. FEB 2

    Death at Le Nicole: The Fisherman, The Flag, The Fallout

    When the mics went live on Monday morning, the plan was a gentle start — a weather note, a throwaway fact. Instead a headline landed that stopped the island in its tracks: a 39-year-old man, found unresponsive in his cell at Le Nicole. The dead man's name, Darren Salituri, meant everything to Guernsey and nothing to the rest of the world. In a place where everyone knows everyone, his death was more than a statistic; it was a sudden unspooling of decades of history, conflict and contradiction. Follow us as we move from the immediate — two intense investigations, one forensic, one internal, and a prison governor suddenly under a magnifying glass — back through the life that led here. Salituri’s public image was unmistakable: facial tattoos, a loyal dog at his side, and the hard, wind-creased hands of a fisherman. Those same hands explain why his car carried lump hammers that could be read as either tools or weapons; context in a closed community is everything. But context is also what made his worst acts so explosive. In 2011 he flew a Nazi flag from his boat — a provocation almost unspeakable in an island still defined by five years of occupation. The reaction was not legal theatre but a communal intervention: other fishermen boarded his vessel, knotted the flag, and left a message that in Guernsey memory is not a private thing. From that moment, he carried a stigma that never washed away. The years that followed traced a terrifying pattern: a 2019 episode in which he chased a man while confessing to possessing a hammer and threatening acid; a suppressed explanation that his tools were for work; a court that saw through the pretense and sentenced him. A sustained campaign of online harassment against his own family turned digital anonymity into persistent cruelty. And yet there were eerie acts of repair — Salituri spending mornings on his knees in graveyards, scrubbing moss from headstones in what looked like atonement. It was a life lived in public contradiction: menace and care braided together. Today’s death forces us to hold two questions at once. The first is procedural: what happened in that cell, and did the prison fail in its duty of care? The second is communal: how does a small island reckon with a neighbor who was simultaneously a threat and, in strange ways, a caretaker of memory? In Guernsey the state made a rare choice and directly notified his past victims — a gesture of closure in a place where you cannot hide down the road. This episode is not simply a crime story; it is an anatomy of a small island’s psyche. Through police files, court transcripts and local voices we reconstruct a life that moved between tools, weapons and finally brushes — and ask whether anyone in a tight-knit community can ever truly start again. Stay with us as we trace the facts, the fractures and the human contradictions that ended, abruptly, in a cell at Le Nicole.

    27 min
  7. JAN 31

    The Man Who Carved Victory: How One Shilling Became a Secret Rebellion

    Close your eyes and picture a silver shilling: cold, small, the king's profile staring up at you. Now imagine someone taking a file to that portrait, scrubbing the face away until nothing remains but a raised V — a tiny, defiant act that turned currency into clandestine courage. This episode follows Roy Machon, a projectionist from Guernsey, whose painstaking craft of turning coins into secret V-badges began as a delicate form of resistance and unraveled into a nightmare that almost erased him from history. We start in Guernsey, 1941: an occupied island where whistling Beethoven's Fifth and chalked gestures kept hope alive. Roy and his friend Alf pushed farther — hundreds of shillings were clipped, filed, and transformed into hidden silver emblems worn under lapels, a handshake of trust in a community under siege. Their work was brilliant, dangerous, and ridiculously intimate: each badge required patience, secrecy, and a willingness to trade monetary value for symbolic life. When betrayal came in June 1943, the glitter of metal filings on the workshop floor became a smoking gun. Arrest, solitary confinement, trial in a language he couldn’t understand — Roy’s courage collided with a brutal system that offered no mercy for small acts of defiance. A brief release, a farewell party that turned political in the eyes of occupiers, and a second arrest changed everything. What began as quiet resistance led Roy from civilian internment in Lauffin to the utter isolation of Munich’s Stadelheim Prison, where he discovered he was the only British inmate. Stadelheim is described as an engineered cruelty. Eleven-hour days splicing steel cable — the same cables that moved Messerschmitt controls — brutal beatings for perceived slowness, and a calendar of terror where selections sent men away and soup on certain days carried the whispered horror that it contained the flesh of the executed. Roy protested that it was illegal to force prisoners to work on war material; he quoted the Geneva Convention. The answer was violence. Repeated blows left him permanently deaf in one ear and maimed the other. The machinery of oppression had not only stolen his freedom but also his hearing and his faith in human decency. When his body finally collapsed in July 1944 he was sent back to camp hospital and, after liberation, home. But the war’s end was not the end of Roy’s struggle. He returned physically broken and psychologically scarred, living with deafness and a terror that freedom might be a trap. He marched publicly in Guernsey’s liberation parade wearing the V he had once carved, a public reclaiming of a symbol that had cost him so much — but privately he faced the most infuriating cruelty: bureaucracy. In the 1960s he applied for compensation and was denied. Officials split legal hairs between ‘‘brutality’’ and ‘‘persecution,’’ demanding documentary proof that didn’t exist for a lone British prisoner in an obscure Munich jail. With no fellow inmates to corroborate his experience, testimony and injury were not enough. The state that had been his home refused to acknowledge the full scale of what had been done to him. This episode is a deep dive into a story that resists tidy heroics. It’s about the power of a tiny, secret emblem and the vast, quiet cost that can follow when resistance happens without witnesses. Roy’s life asks us: what do we owe those whose suffering is lived in shadows and erased by paperwork? Listen as we trace a single shilling’s journey from palm to protest to prison, and consider how history remembers — and forgets — the silent acts that deserve to echo.

    13 min
  8. JAN 9

    Last of the String Bags: The Life and Legend of Lt. Cdr. John Barnes

    He was born into an era of canvas and wire and died in the age of nuclear submarines and stealth helicopters. Lieutenant Commander John Barnes lived 104 years, and in that span his life became a bridge between two very different navies. In this episode we trace that long arc—how a young man who climbed into an open-cockpit biplane to face the U‑boat scourge helped close the Atlantic’s darkest hour, and how that single act echoed through decades of peace and family life. The story narrows on one incandescent month: Black May, 1943. The Atlantic was a graveyard of merchant tonnage, and the Mid‑Atlantic gap had become a sanctuary for wolfpacks. From the tiny, pitching flight deck of an escort carrier, Barnes flew an anachronistic Swordfish—slow, fabric‑skinned, and brutally exposed. The plane’s very obsolescence was its secret weapon: a slow, steady platform that could operate when faster aircraft could not, and a fragile skin that sometimes let shells pass harmlessly through. Against that dangerous paradox Barnes found the rhythm of survival. On May 12th, flying from HMS Biter, Barnes visualised a Type VI C U‑boat, U‑89. With sea spray freezing on the struts and heavy flak shredding the sky, he committed to a run that demanded concentration and courage beyond the ordinary. He skimmed waves, released depth charges that bracketed the submarine, and watched as the underwater shock finished what the strike began. The crippled U‑boat could not submerge and was finished by surface forces—one pilot’s precision becoming a strategic instrument in a larger, desperate game. That single action sits inside a larger mosaic of innovation—centimetric radar, huff‑duff, Ultra intercepts, and the newfound reach of escort carriers—that together turned May 1943 into a decisive rupture. Barnes and his fellow aircrews did not merely seek kills; they robbed submarines of sanctuary. Forcing a U‑boat to dive was often victory enough: a drained battery, a silent menace made harmless. Their work cleared the lanes that would later carry the men and material to open the way for D‑Day. But Barnes’s life is not only a wartime vignette. After the service he made his home in Guernsey, married for 76 years, fathered three sons, and taught his family to read the sea in leisure rather than combat. The irony is rich: a hunter of U‑boats chose as his retirement the only part of Britain occupied during the war, and spent decades reclaiming those waters with a sail and a helm. Longevity and devotion turned a life of violence into a long season of ordinary love and navigation. Even in old age the Navy came calling. In 2025, a modern Merlin helicopter—an instrument of anti‑submarine warfare far beyond anything Barnes could have imagined—traveled to Guernsey so a new generation of aviators could salute an old one. They presented his wings, heard his stories, and felt a living link to an ethos that survives in ritual even as its original practitioners fade away. When Barnes died peacefully at Samarez Park Manor, the notice in the local paper was brief and stoic—typical of a generation whose lives were shaped by extremes of danger and stability. Yet behind those few lines lay a life stitched into the grander fabric of twentieth‑century history: technological paradoxes that produced strategic victory, the quiet payoff of a 76‑year marriage, and a family that carried forward the fruits of the peace he helped secure. This episode listens closely to that human voice between the logs and the technical diagrams. It asks what the loss of such living memory means for us: how do we carry the tactile lessons of seamanship, endurance, and improvisation into an age of sensors and guided weapons? John Barnes’s legacy is not only a tale of a cryptic airplane and a decisive kill; it is a meditation on continuity—how courage, craft, and calm at the controls have guided navies and families across a turbulent century. Fore More Stories Visit http://www.guernseydeepdive.co.uk

    35 min

About

Welcome to Guernsey Deep Dive: History, Headlines & Island Life Taking you to Guernsey’s past and present — from untold stories to breaking news, and the people shaping our island. Let’s dive in.” E-Mail guernseydeepdive@gmail.com