by antiaristo » Sun Mar 26, 2006 1:31 am
It's a circle-jerk.<br>Everyone is investigating everybody else!<br>And we've John Stevens in reserve.<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="font-size:small;">The ghost of Lloyd George's bagman should haunt all party treasurers</span><!--EZCODE FONT END--> <br><br>Nick Cohen<br>Sunday March 26, 2006<br>The Observer <br><br><br>The potentially explosive consequences of the Metropolitan Police's decision to investigate the sale of peerages are passing many by. The political columnist of the Independent spoke for the Westminster village last week when he wrote: 'The loans-for-peerages imbroglio' may be distasteful, but 'it will probably have little effect on the date of Tony Blair's departure'.<br><br>Meanwhile, the Prime Minister's supporters argued that it was time to 'move on' and have a 'serious' debate about different sources of political financing, while lobby journalists assured me that Sir Ian Blair, the chief commissioner of the Met, would never dare take on Downing Street. 'Everyone does it,' said everyone in the know, so there is no reason to get excited.<br><br>Maybe. But the cynical are just as likely as the politically naïve to miss what is going on under their noses. Those who assume the fix is always in can on occasion be flummoxed by events. Perhaps an overdue bout of flummoxing is on the way, for much of what is coming out of Westminster is close to disgraceful.<br><br><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>No one bothers to deny that Britain is the only democracy in the developed world where seats in the legislature are for sale</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->. Not for sale indirectly - there are many countries where you can't run for election without substantial resources behind you - but openly for sale like luxury cars on a showroom forecourt which any rich buyer can take away. They don't deny it because the corruption of parliament is undeniable. The correlation between the honours lists and those who give money to Labour and the Tories or Blair's pet projects is too strong.<br><br>Westminster's insouciance is perhaps forgivable because Britain has no history of police investigations into dirty money in politics. It is impossible to imagine a similar scandal in the US or Europe because they have democratic second chambers.<br><br>If they didn't and George W Bush or Silvio Berlusconi were selling places in their respective senates, then a special prosecutor in the case of the US, or independent prosecutors of the sort who have so embarrassed Tessa Jowell's abandoned husband in the case of Italy, would have got to work years ago.<br><br>The novelty of the present situation is that the British police are taking political corruption seriously for the first time in living memory. Angus MacNeil, the Scottish Nationalist MP whose complaint began the inquiry, is certainly impressed. <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>He met John Yates, the deputy assistant commissioner who is heading the investigation, last week and said he did not strike him as anyone's stooge.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br><br>It seemed to MacNeil that the Met has grasped a basic point that has eluded many at Westminster: the sale of honours is a crime and has been since 1925. If the police aren't going to allow themselves to be nobbled, and I've no reason to think that they are, then New Labour may be in deep trouble.<br><br>Honest officers who know the law and want to enforce it tend not to let off a burglar if he protests that 'everyone does it'. Nor are they impressed by cries that 'it is time to move on'. A crime is a crime and the question becomes whether detectives can get the evidence to make the charges stand up in court.<br><br>The case of Maundy Gregory, the only other political operator to be convicted of selling honours, may help them with their inquiries. Gregory was a spy and blackmailer who worked as Lloyd George's bagman. He raised £150m at today's prices for his master and made a small fortune for himself.<br><br>The 1925 act was meant to stop him, but it had no effect whatsoever. Gregory had too much dirt on how Lloyd George's Liberals and their Tory allies had sold peerages to profiteers from the First World War to be caught by new laws. The fate of Victor Grayson, a brave and flamboyant Labour politician, was a warning to those who wished to challenge him.<br><br>Grayson threatened to expose Gregory in 1920 when he announced: 'This sale of honours is a national scandal. It can be traced right down to 10 Downing Street and to a monocled dandy with offices in Whitehall. I know this man and one day I will name him.' Grayson disappeared soon after that. He was last seen being taken into a house owned by Gregory. His body was never found, but most historians reasonably conclude that Gregory had him murdered.<br><br>What did for Gregory in the end was that he tried to corrupt an honest man. He offered Lt-Cmdr EW Billyard-Leake a knighthood for £10,000. Unlike most of the spivs who bought honours from the Lloyd George government, Billyard-Leake had served with distinction in the war. He was disgusted and turned Gregory in.<br><br>Perhaps I am the one who is being naïve, but if the modern equivalents of Billyard-Leake are out there, then New Labour may not be as in control of events as Westminster believes and the ghost of Victor Grayson may yet enjoy a belated vindication as it watches on from an unmarked grave.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://observer.guardian.co.uk/politics/story/0,,1739936,00.html">observer.guardian.co.uk/p...36,00.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="font-size:small;">'A senior police officer was called at the Lord's Test match and told: you have shot the shot the wrong guy'</span><!--EZCODE FONT END--><br><br>By Ben Leapman, Home Affairs Correspondent<br>(Filed: 26/03/2006)<br><br>A senior Scotland Yard officer was allegedly telephoned at the Ashes Test match at Lord's to be told that police had just shot dead an innocent man in the aftermath of the failed 21/7 terrorist bombings, according to documents seen by the Sunday Telegraph.<br><br>Deputy Assistant Commissioner <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>John Yates</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--> was said to have been told on Friday, July 22 - within hours of the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes in London - that the Brazilian man had no connection with terrorism.<br><br>John Yates was on leave at the Ashes Test match <br>If the account is true, it increases the pressure on Sir Ian Blair, the embattled Metropolitan Police Commissioner, who insists that he did not know until the following day - Saturday, July 23 - that the wrong man had been shot.<br><br>At the centre of the row is the controversial officer Brian Paddick, also a deputy assistant commissioner at the Met. Internal force documents describe how Mr Paddick said to a broadcast journalist last month: <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>"An officer of the same rank as me was rung off-duty at the cricket match and told, 'You have shot the wrong guy'."</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br><br>Now facing an investigation into alleged unauthorised disclosure of confidential information, Mr Paddick insists he was merely passing on a rumour, not stating fact. <br><br>But the row over events following the de Menezes shooting, focusing on who knew what and when, threatens to tear Scotland Yard apart and undermine Sir Ian's leadership irreparably. He stands to lose his job if an inquiry by the Independent Police Complaints Commission finds that he knew the same day that the wrong man had been killed.<br><br>Yesterday, Scotland Yard confirmed that a senior officer had attended day two of the England v Australia match on Friday, July 22 and named him as Mr Yates, of the Met's specialist crime directorate. <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>He was on leave, despite the terrorist emergency.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br> <br>Mr Yates, 48, is regarded as a rising star of Scotland Yard. His previous role on the Met's SCD6 team - dubbed <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>the Celebrity Squad</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->, for its investigations into the rich and famous - pitched him into high profile cases, including <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>briefing the Royal Family on the prosecution of Paul Burrell, the former butler of Diana, Princess of Wales.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br><br><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>A Met spokesman said that Mr Yates, who has visited the de Menezes family in Brazil, had testified to the IPCC that he was unaware on the Friday that the man shot at Stockwell had been innocent</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->. However, the documents show that Mr Paddick still suspects that senior Met officers knew on Friday that the mistake had been made. <br><br>Mr Paddick, 47, Britain's most senior openly gay police officer, sprang to prominence when, as borough commander for Lambeth, he pioneered a "softly-softly" approach to cannabis that became a blueprint for national policy. It marked him out as a rising star, but it also made him enemies. <br><br>Now in charge of the Met's territorial policing division, he stood alongside Sir Ian after the July 7 bombings to appeal for calm. Two weeks later came the failed bombing attempt of July 21. <br><br>Police marksmen hunting the failed bombers followed Mr de Menezes, 27, and shot him dead at about 10am on July 22. That afternoon at 4pm, Sir Ian told the media that the shooting was "directly linked" to the anti-terrorist operation. <br><br>However, the following day at 5pm, Scotland Yard admitted that its officers had made a terrible mistake. After a complaint from the de Menezes family, the IPCC - already investigating the shooting - opened a separate inquiry into the commissioner's conduct.<br><br>According to the documents, Mr Paddick was telephoned by a journalist on St Valentine's Day this year while on duty. Snippets of the conversation were overheard by a junior colleague who, fearing that rules had been broken, reported the matter to the Met's internal affairs division.<br><br>During the conversation on his mobile phone, Mr Paddick let slip two key pieces of information that could land him, as well as his boss, in trouble. He revealed for the first time that he had recently made a statement to the IPCC's inquiry into the commissioner's conduct. And, without naming Mr Yates, he gave an account of the alleged call to the cricket match.<br><br>It was not until March 16 that the public learnt that Mr Paddick had given evidence to the IPCC. The news emerged when the BBC home affairs correspondent, Margaret Gilmore, told viewers that an unnamed senior Met officer had told investigators that a member of staff in the commissioner's private office believed that the wrong man had been killed within six hours of the shooting. <br><br>Later, it was suggested that Mr Paddick had given the IPCC the names of two senior officers who were said to have known on the day. Both are understood to have been called before the IPCC: <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>one denied the charge while the other gave equivocal evidence.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--><br><br>The response from Scotland Yard was swift and brutal: "We are satisfied that whatever the reasons for this suggestion being made, it is simply not true." The rebuttal was so damning that Mr Paddick went to his lawyers to discuss the possibility of suing his employer for libel.<br><br>In a statement defending the charge of making an unauthorised disclosure, Mr Paddick does not claim he was misquoted but maintains his only mistake was in being too open with the journalist. <br><br>He defends his decision to pass on the cricket match information by describing it as a "rumour", of which some in the media were already aware, in order to deflect the journalist away from the content of his statement to the IPCC. "I should perhaps have merely stated that I was unaware that any other senior officers knew on the Friday - but this was untrue." <br><br>Scotland Yard said of the cricket allegation: <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>"John Yates made a statement to the IPCC making it clear that he did not know an innocent person had been shot at Stockwell Tube station on that day</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->."<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=4SS4CY3B1G0YPQFIQMGCFFWAVCBQUIV0?xml=/news/2006/03/26/nmenez26.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/03/26/ixnewstop.html">www.telegraph.co.uk/news/...wstop.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>So Brian Paddick asserts it, John Yates denies it, and the third man "gave equivocal evidence".<br><br>And John Yates is in charge of an investigation into the prime minister?<br><br><br><br> <p></p><i></i>