Sunday, August 8, 2010

Blackfriars Bridge - Robert Calvi - Worshipful Company of Launderers - media spin - sheltering the guilty

Source: Hawks Cafe; Captain Sherlock; Abel Danger

August 08, 2010

Dear Lord Pearson and Mr. Farage:


Did Crown Launderers tie Calvi Neck to Bodkin Dope?

Hawks CAFE is asking UKIP to investigate Crown Agents’ Sisters use of The Worshipful Company of Launderers for the spoliation of evidence which allegedly ties the crime scene under Blackfriars Bridge where Robert Calvi was hanged by the neck in 1982 to the 163+ victims of heroin (Dope Inc.) injections by John Bodkin Adams during the '50s.

Our KSM agents have evidence that Crown Agents’ Sisters use The Launderers (see crest) and other City of London Livery Companies to hire actors for sexual-entrapment or wife-servant-nurse roles where women are paid to extort lovers, husbands, clean up murder scenes, launder money, accuse the innocent (media spin) and shelter the guilty.


“The Company of Launderers owes its existence to a group of men who met on a sticky humid day at the height of summer at a meeting room which had been double booked and the distinguished guest speaker failing to appear! The meeting took place in 1957 [The year in which John Bodkin Adams was prosecuted after having been arrested the previous year for the murder of two elderly widows, Gertrude Hullett and Edith Alice Morrell] and in 1960 the Company of Launderers was formally constituted. In 1963 a charitable and education trust was formed which aims to gives scholarships for the further education of people pursing studies of benefit to the laundry industry. The Company acquired both its Coat of Arms and Mace in 1964” .. “In 1964 the Royal College of Heralds made a ‘Grant of Arms’ to the Company and this armorial crest brings together several symbolic as well as real elements of the Livery’s history. Central to the design is Henry Sidgier’s patented washing machine of 1782, as well as symbolic depictions of a domestic cat – the cleanest of all animals - surrounded by lilies and sunflowers – symbols of the launderer’s ambition to provide purity, warmth and brightness to their customers. Also depicted are: Princess Nausicaa from Homer’s Odyssey and an eighteenth century washerwoman carrying a washing dolly; both these representing the practices and ancient status of the Laundrycraft. Beneath the symbolic references on the crest is the Livery motto ‘Cleanliness is next to Godliness’, which neatly combines a saying from the Jewish Holy Talmud with the frequent quotation of that phrase in his sermons by the renowned Methodist Preacher, John Wesley.”

Roberto Calvi was an Italian banker who was found by a postman hanging from the scaffolding underneath Blackfriars Bridge in June 1982. He was weighed down by bricks and had £15,000 in different currencies in his pockets. Calvi was dubbed by the press as ‘God's banker’ because of his close ties to the Vatican. The day before his body was found, he had been stripped of his position as chairman of Italy's second largest private bank, Banco Ambrosiano, due to a massive financial scandal that led to the bank going under with a then staggering $1.4 billion debt. He had been due to appear in an Italian court of appeal, having previously been sentenced to four years’ imprisonment for his role in the disappearance of several billion lire from the bank. It has been claimed that Calvi used Banco Ambrosiano to launder heroin money for the mafia [The Worshipful Company of Apothecaries?] and that he siphoned off money via the Vatican Bank, which was Banco Ambrosiano's main shareholder. In 1984, the Vatican Bank agreed to pay US$224 million to the 120 creditors of the failed Banco Ambrosiano as a “recognition of moral involvement” in the bank's collapse.”

“Pharmacy in History 12th May 2009, Apothecaries Hall, Blackfriars Lane, London The second speaker was Dr Anna Simmons (The Open University), who spoke on “Extracts, Experiments and Education: Chemistry at the Society of Apothecaries in the Nineteenth Century”. Dr Simmons gave a brief account of the foundation and expansion of the Society of Apothecaries which, by the 19th century, was one of the largest manufacturers of pharmaceutical substances. Despite its long history of chemical activity, the Society is most familiar for its role in medical licensing in the nineteenth century and its activities as a livery company. This emphasis led to the importance of chemistry for the institution being overlooked. Chemistry was essential to the operation of the pharmaceutical trade at Apothecaries’ Hall. This had developed out of a laboratory founded in 1672 to manufacture chemical medicines and at the beginning of the nineteenth century the Society was one of the largest drug [Heroin - Dope] manufacturers in Britain, holding valuable monopolies with the Navy and the East India Company. The centre of chemical activity at Apothecaries’ Hall in the nineteenth century was the Great Laboratory. Constructed in 1822 to expand the Hall trade’s manufacturing capacity, this was an impressive building fifty feet long by thirty feet wide by thirty feet tall where all of the chemical operations requiring intense heat were performed.”

“Arthur Henry Douthwaite was a British doctor, Vice President of the Royal College of Physicians Ockham's Razor - 23 July 2006 - The Strange Case of Dr John Bodkin Adams and a prolific medical textbook writer. He was the foremost expert on heroin in Britain in the 1950s Cullen, Pamela V., A Stranger in Blood: The Case Files on Dr John Bodkin Adams, London, Elliott & Thompson, 2006, ISBN 1-904027-19-9Devlin, Patrick. Easing the passing: The trial of Doctor John Bodkin Adams, London, The Bodley Head, 1985., leading to him being called as an expert witness in the trial of suspected serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams. Bodkin Adams trial In 1957 Douthwaite gave evidence at the Dr John Bodkin Adams murder trial, one of the first in Britain to be based on the testimony of expert witnesses. As Lord Justice Patrick Devlin explained: "It is a most curious situation, perhaps unique in these courts, that the act of murder has to be proved by expert evidence". Adams had been arrested the previous year for the murder of two elderly widows, Gertrude Hullett and Edith Alice Morrell. He was tried for the murder of the latter and the prosecution, led by Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller, alleged that he had killed her with excessive doses of heroin and morphine. Douthwaite and Michael Ashby were the prosecution's key witnesses. But while Ashby was more hesitant as to whether Adams had meant to kill Morrell, Douthwaite was adamant that Adams had intended her death. He could think of "no legitimate reason" for Adams' drug prescribing, and could only surmise that it suggested "a desire to terminate life". At times however, his testimony seemed over-confident and even arrogant, and only succeeded in putting off the jury and the judge. He was also criticised for what seemed to be a change in his hypothesis half-way through the trial, when he selected a different date for when Adams had begun his attempt to kill Morrell. Defence counsel, Frederick Geoffrey Lawrence, put it to him thus: "The truth of all this matter is this, Dr Douthwaite, that you first of all gave evidence on one basis to support a charge of murder and then thought of something else after you had started?" Douthwaite replied: "That is quite likely. In fact, I think it is probable. I had been turning it over in my mind but at what time it crystallised and became clear I do not know." Historian Pamela Cullen defends Douthwaite, however, saying that Manningham-Buller had intentionally lost vital evidence - nurses' notebooks - which detailed Adams' treatment of the patient. Douthwaite was therefore not able to examine these to prepare his theory of events. Cullen adds furthermore, that Manningham-Buller actually gave them to the defence, which allowed defence counsel Frederick Geoffrey Lawrence QC to present them on the second day of the trial. Douthwaite, caught unawares, was then forced to quickly adjust his hypothesis to take into account the new evidence, which gave the impression that he was being inconsistent and speculating on the hoof. Douthwaite's evidence's underwhelming impact, coupled with defence witness John B. Harman's evidence in favour of Adams, helped ensure Adams' acquittal. Douthwaite's performance at the trial however did not endear him to his fellow doctors, who resented his attempt to convict one of their peers. Douthwaite had previously been greatly respected within the profession, but his involvement is widely considered to have cost him the presidency of the Royal College of Physicians. As Devlin later wrote in his account of the trial, the case was "a very important one for the medical profession, which was naturally worried by the thought that the prescription of drugs might lead to a charge of murder". According to Scotland Yard's files on Adams, the police believed that 163 of Adams' patients died in highly suspicious circumstances. Reporter Rodney Hallworth and historian Pamela Cullen also identify another patient, Annie Sharpe, as a possible victim not included in this number Hallworth, Rodney and Mark Williams, Where there's a will... The sensational life of Dr John Bodkin Adams, Capstan Press, Jersey, 1983. ISBN 0946797005, and Cullen further identifies Edward Cavendish, 10th Duke of Devonshire as a probable victim. Adams was only ever convicted on 13 counts of prescription fraud, lying on cremation forms, obstructing a police search and failing to keep a dangerous drugs register. He was removed from the Medical Register in 1957 and reinstated in 1961.”

“In 1957 Dilhorne prosecuted suspected serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams for the murder of two elderly widows in Eastbourne, Edith Alice Morrell and Gertrude Hullett. Adams was acquitted on the Morrell charge but Manningham-Buller controversially entered a nolle prosequi regarding Hullett. Not only was there seemingly little reason to enter it (Adams wasn't suffering from ill health), but the Hullett charge was deemed by many to be the stronger of the two cases. Mr Justice Patrick Devlin, the presiding judge, in his post-trial book termed Manningham-Buller's act "an abuse of power". Devlin also criticised Manningham-Buller for his uncharacteristic weakness at a crucial moment in the Morrell case: evidence (some nurses' notebooks) that had gone missing from the Director of Public Prosecutions's files, turned up in the hands of the defence on the second day of the trial. Manningham-Buller claimed he had not seen them before but failed to halt their admission as evidence, or ask for time to acquaint himself with their contents. They were subsequently used by the defence to throw doubt on the accuracy of the testimony of various nurses who had worked with Adams and who had questioned his methods and intentions. This damaged the prosecution tremendously, fatally scuppering the case. Manningham-Buller's handling of the case later provoked questions in the House of Commons. Detective Superintendent Herbert Hannam of Scotland Yard, the chief investigator, suspected political interference due to Manningham-Buller's membership of a government, which had no interest in seeing a doctor hang. Indeed, on 8 November 1956, Manningham-Buller himself had handed a copy of Hannam's 187-page report to the President of the British Medical Association (BMA), effectively the doctors' trade union in Britain. This document - the prosecution's most valuable document - was in the hands of the defence, a situation that led the Home Secretary, Gwilym Lloyd-George, to reprimand Manningham-Buller, stating that such documents should not even be shown to "Parliament or to individual Members". "I can only hope that no harm will result" since "the disclosure of this document is likely to cause me considerable embarrassment". Subsequently, on 28 November 1956, Labour MPs Stephen Swingler and Hugh Delargy gave notice of two questions to be answered in the House of Commons on 3 December regarding Manningham-Buller's contacts with the General Medical Council (GMC) and BMA regarding the Adams case in the previous six months. Manningham-Buller was absent on the day in question but gave a written reply stating he had "had no communications with the General Medical Council within the last six months." He avoided referring to the BMA directly (despite it being named in the questions) and therefore avoided lying, though it could be argued, still deliberately misled the House. Manningham-Buller then proceeded to launch an investigation into how his contact with the BMA had come to be known by the MPs. A leak from Scotland Yard was suspected and Hannam was reprimanded. Charles Hewett, Hannam's assistant in the investigation, has described how both officers were astounded at Manningham-Buller's decision to charge John Bodkin Adams with the murder of Mrs. Morrell, whose body had been cremated. He believed that there were other cases against the doctor, where traces of drugs had been found in exhumed remains, which were more capable of proof. He also considered that a charge of manslaughter would have been more appropriate in the circumstances. He questioned the decision not to proceed further after Adams' acquittal and he believed that a calculating killer escaped justice as a result. Home Office pathologist Francis Camps suspected Adams of killing 163 patients.”

“Edward William Spencer Cavendish, 10th Duke of Devonshire, KG, MBE, TD (6 May 1895 – 26 November 1950), known as Marquess of Hartington (1908–1938), was the head of the Devonshire branch of the Cavendish family. Born in the Parish of St George in the East, Stepney, he was the owner of Chatsworth House, and one of the largest private landowners in both the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. He was also Member of Parliament for West Derbyshire from 1923 to 1938 and a minister in Winston Churchill's wartime government. He was Chancellor of the University of Leeds from 1938 until 1950. He was a freemason and was Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England from 1947 to 1950. On 26 November 1950, he suffered a heart attack and died in Eastbourne in the presence of his general practitioner, Dr John Bodkin Adams, the suspected serial killer. Despite the fact that the duke had not seen a doctor in the 14 days before his death, the coroner was not notified as he should have been. Adams signed the death certificate stating that the Duke died of natural causes. 13 days earlier, Edith Alice Morrell — another patient of Adams — had also died. Historian Pamela Cullen speculates that as the Duke was head of the freemasons, Adams - a member of the fundamentalist Plymouth Brethren - would have been motivated to withhold the necessary vital treatment, since the "Grandmaster of England would have been seen by some of the Plymouth Brethren as Satan incarnate". No proper police investigation was ever conducted into the death but his son, Andrew, later said "it should perhaps be noted that this doctor was not appointed to look after the health of my two younger sisters, who were then in their teens"; Adams had a reputation for grooming older patients in order to extract bequests. Adams was tried in 1957 for Morrell's murder but controversially acquitted. The prosecutor was Attorney-General Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller, a distant cousin of the Duke (via their shared ancestor, George Cavendish). Cullen has questioned why Manningham-Buller failed to question Adams regarding the Duke's death, and suggests that he was wary of drawing attention to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (the Duke's brother-in-law) and specifically to his wife who was having an extramarital affair with Robert Boothby at the time Home Office pathologist Francis Camps linked Adams to 163 suspicious deaths in total, which would make him a precursor to Harold Shipman.”

KSM suggests that Crown Agents’ Sisters have been using Launderers sleeper cells and snuff films to entrap Livery Company insiders and political, business and military leaders who are then blackmailed into the spoliation of evidence at crime scenes, for example ...

Launderers (Nurses' notebooks for Bodkin defence, dirty money in Calvi’s pockets)

Apothecaries (Production of Bodkin heroin (Dope) near Calvi Blackfriars Bridge)

Security Professionals (with ADT at U.S. Embassies ’98, Logan Airport 9/11),
Stationers and Newspapermakers (DVD camera crews for Embassies and WTC),

Butchers (B.C. pig farm chain-saw snuff film, MDA MindBox mortgage)

Air Pilots and Air Navigators (QRS11, engines Pentagon Wedge 1)
Clothworkers (United 93 crash site strangler’s scarf)

Armourers and Brasiers (Molten metal incendiary demolition of WTC#7)

World Traders (Naked shorting of DJIA in Chicago on 9/11)

Fuellers (Murder on 9/11 of Carlton Bartels, the founder of CO2e.com)

We name below 13 Crown Agents’ Sisters and affiliated City Livery Company networks which allegedly use Oracle Partner networks for sexual entrapment, murder-for-hire and the laundering of receivables through Lloyd’s of London and FCC bordereaux frauds.

“1. Eliza Manningham-Buller [Oracle-MI5-CIA Serco, Promis, K-Branch, IRA, Pan Am 103, NetJets 9/12, Amec 7/7, RAF Brize Norton, Anna Chapman, Rendition, Waterboarding, Daughter of Reginald Manningham-Buller who allegedly ‘laundered’ Bodkin’s Dope Inc. case] 2. Jamie Gorelick [Oracle-Fannie Mae, David Emerson, MindBox, DOJ Pride, Vince Foster, Waco, Promis, 9/11 Wall, Schlumberger, Transocean, BP Cancelled Cement Job, Sabotage] 3. Samantha Cameron [Oracle-Menzies Aviation and Distribution, Smythson Stationery, Boston Brakes, Princess Di, wife of Jardine Jump-Ship Dave Cameron, great grandfather was chairman of Reuters] 4. Hillary Clinton [Oracle USAID-SBA liquidations, Crown Agents Gyroscope QRS11 Patent on NetJets Boeing and Gulfstream V on 9/11] 5. Cherie Blair [Oracle-LSE For You, Matrix Terrorists, Law of the European Union, European Convention on Human Rights] 6. Michelle Obama [Oracle-CIA Henry Bienen, Princeton, Union Carbide Bhopal AT&T] 7. Miriam Clegg [Oracle DLA Piper head of international [EU/FCC] trade law practice, clients include Standard Chartered Bank, wife of Lord President of the Council Nick Clegg, worked with late Robin Cook on passports for ‘al-Qaeda’ illegals, BBC Royal Charter, exclusive alliance in corporate finance, tax, ICT, telecommunications, public private partnerships, infrastructure, energy and aviation with Nairobi law firm, Iseme Kamau & Maema Advocates] 8. Bernardine Dohrn [Oracle-Northwestern University, Unabomb, Weather Underground Rwanda Genocide, Torture Paradigm and Practice] 9. Mary Harron [Oracle-Netflix DVD American Psycho, Weather Underground, Bondage S&M, SCUM, Former girlfriend of Tony Blair at Oxford University] 10. Charlotte Bryan [Oracle-Serco FAA Contract Towers FC-KU crime scenes of 9/11] 11. Lucy Adams [Oracle-Serco BBC snuff film sites 9/11, 7/7] 12. Kristine Marcy [Oracle-Serco, Promis, SBA DOJ Pride USIS DNS, ICE, U.S. Marshals, Reduction in Recruitment (RIR) for illegals in preparation for 9/11, Obama CUKC Passport JPATS Femme Comp Inc Unabombs 'Mindless breathers - Useless Breeders' comment] 13. Vicky Huhne [nee Pryce, UK Government Economic Service, Greek, LSE Fabian, KPMG tax shelter, Exxon Valdez, Williams & Glyn's Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, Department for Trade and Industry, FTI, married to but cuckolded by Chris Huhne Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change for the bisexual Carina Trimngham] .. Guild of Air Pilots and Air Navigators .. Honourable Company of Master Mariners .. Worshipful Company of Security Professionals .. City of London Solicitors' Company .. Worshipful Companies of Butchers, Stationers and Newspaper Makers, Insurers, International Bankers, World Traders, Information Technologists and Weavers [Livery Company heraldry - Torse-fillet strangler scarf at United 93 Crash]”

"Report Automation and Compilation Creates Flexibility “We had been struggling for some time to automate the reporting process for the Lloyd’s of London bordereau,” Klotz commented. Klotz was, therefore, eager to participate in a vendor-driven test project to develop a new reporting tool for Oracle Documaker. Continental’s personnel were able to easily extract data residing within the smart archive of Oracle Documaker to create the Lloyd’s bordereau and other reports.” .. “Back in 1988, France was the first European civil law country to enact a securitisation law .. created the fonds commun de créances or FCC .. (the French securitisation vehicle) .. has ... attracted French and foreign (mostly London based) arrangers who are now willing to set-up French ABS, RMBS or CMBS transactions. This favorable trend has nurtured the interest in certain classes of assets such as future receivables, mortgage backed receivables, export receivables (in the context of pan-European transactions) or collateralised debt obligations (CDO) and the need for specific regulations. In order to capitalise this growing interest and to attract investors, the Securitisation Law has been amended in order to facilitate the transfer of certain categories of receivables, to issue new financing instruments and to secure the applicable cash flow mechanisms. These amendments will also clarify some practical issues raised over the years. Thanks to these amendments, France contemplates to recover the leadership it had acquired in 1988 (today fifth European securitisation market, ranking behind Italy and Germany).”

“Crown Agents is exactly what its name implies, an agent of Her Majesty the Queen. It was founded in 1833 as Crown Agents for the Colonies, and historically played a vital role in the creation and management of what British historians call the Third Empire .. Crown Agents printed the stamps and banknotes of the colonies; provided technical, engineering, and financial services; served as private bankers to the colonial monetary authorities, government officials, and heads of state; served as arms procurers, quartermasters, and paymasters for the colonial armies .. Her Majesty's Murder, Inc. .. Crown Agents' range of ``services''--arms procurement, border controls, offshore banking--also nicely fit the ``administrative requirements'' of the world's organized crime cartels .. review of some of the more sordid aspects of the recent history of Crown Agents, suggests that the firm has been at the center of the British Crown's highly sensitive patronage of global organized crime--what EIR long ago dubbed Dope, Inc.”

Please browse the links and do what is right.
http://www.hawkscafe.com/107.html
http://www.abeldanger.net/
http://www.captainsherlock.com/

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