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So reads the first line of Craig’s bombshell, co-written with David Barstow, Russ Buettner and Megan Twohey, after an anonymous manila envelope containing Trump’s tax return was delivered to Craig’s mailbox at the New York Times.

The repercussions for Trump are huge, and his campaign has so far responded with allegations of conspiracy.

“The only news here is that the more than 20-year-old alleged tax document was illegally obtained, a further demonstration that the New York Times, like establishment media in general, is an extension of the Clinton Campaign, the Democratic Party and their global special interests,” the Trump campaign said in a written statement.

The repercussions for Craig have included sudden celebrity and requests for interviews from around the world.

She admits the spotlight makes her uneasy.

“It’s actually uncomfortable — if I’d wanted to be in front of the camera, I would have gone for a job in network news,” says Craig.

“I’m more into solitary work. I like pushing words around on a page. This is not a comfortable feeling.”

While working at the Herald, Craig covered stories such as bicycle path speed limits, CTrain derailments and the career of Stan Waters, Canada’s first elected senator.

She said the experience in Calgary convinced her reporting was her calling, but it was a rocky start landing a full-time job.

“I was a political science major, and without (a journalism degree), it made it very difficult to get a job,” says Craig.

Finally, the Star took a chance. From there, Craig’s natural tenacity and talent took her to The Globe and Mail, and then the Wall Street Journal, where she was lead reporter on Pulitzer-nominated coverage of the fall of the Lehman Brothers and the financial crisis.

And in 2010, she joined the New York Times, with her coverage of Trump starting with a single story early in the campaign. “But then he kept winning. I fell into this by happenstance,” she says.