Monday, May 16, 2011

City Livery Companies - Licenses To Kill - Coalition’s Lord President of the Council - Jack the Ripper - 21st century SAS

May 15, 2011

Dear Nigel Farage:

Do Jack the Ripper Livery Companies use Coalition's license to kill?

Abel Danger asks if City Livery Companies are using licenses to kill issued by Crown Agents’ Sisters Miriam Clegg and Cressida Dick through the Coalition’s Lord President of the Council Nick Clegg, the custodian of records of alleged livery-company contract hits fraudulently attributed to the likes of a Jack the Ripper or a 21st century SAS.



Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

“The Telegraph Scotland Yard fights to keep Jack the Ripper files secret By David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent 9:15AM BST 15 May 2011 Four thick ledgers compiled by Special Branch officers have been kept under lock and key since the Whitechapel murders in 1888. Scotland Yard is battling to keep 123-year-old files on Jack the Ripper secret. Trevor Marriott, a Ripper investigator and former murder squad detective, has spent three years attempting to obtain uncensored versions of the documents. But he has been repeatedly refused because the ledgers contain the identities of police informants – and the Metropolitan Police insist that revealing the information could compromise their attempts to gather information from “supergrasses” and other modern-day informants .. The legal case has cost the taxpayer thousands of pounds and has even involved a senior Scotland Yard officer giving evidence anonymously from behind a screen. The ledgers provide details of the police’s dealings with thousands of informants from 1888 to 1912, including some who provided information during the original Ripper investigation. A sample of about 40 pages from the Scotland Yard ledgers was released to last week’s tribunal, but with the names of informants and other key details blacked out. According to Mr Marriott, the files contain the names of at least four new suspects, as well as other pieces of evidence .. Jack the Ripper slaughtered at least five women between August and November 1888 in the slums of Whitechapel, east London, but various experts have claimed other murders may have been committed by the killer on earlier and later dates. The police made several mistakes in the inquiry and detection techniques of the time were basic – with no fingerprinting and science unable even to distinguish between animal and human blood. As a result, there is no conclusive evidence to point to the true identity of Jack the Ripper and the case remains one of the world’s great unsolved mysteries. Among a long list of possible suspects are Queen Victoria’s grandson the Duke of Clarence, who died in an asylum in 1892, and the painter Walter Sickert. Mr Marriott, who joined Bedfordshire Police in 1970 and worked as a detective constable until the mid-1980s, began researching the Jack the Ripper case in 2003. He has previously published one book on the subject which put forward the name of Carl Feigenbaum, a German merchant executed for the murder of a woman in New York, as a new suspect .. The three-day hearing involved a detective inspector, identified only as 'D’, speaking to the court from behind a screen because of his sensitive role running the force’s intelligence-gathering operation from informants .. “Confidence in the system is maintaining the safety of informants, regardless of age.” Det Insp 'D’ said the passage of time did not make publication of informants’ identities less sensitive because their descendants could be targeted by criminals with a grudge. “Look at one of the world’s best-known informants, Judas Iscariot. If someone could draw a bloodline from Judas Iscariot [or King Charles II Mistress of the Revels] to a present day person then that person would face a risk, although I know that seems an extreme example,” the officer said.”

Nigel Churton joined the [Worshipful] Company [of Security Professionals] at the beginning believing that the then Guild was an important step for our profession to take to gain its rightful place in the City of London and to start to play a part in helping to support education and charitable activities. He has been connected to the Security world first through 11 years in HM Forces and latterly 29 years with the Control Risks Group where he was CEO for 18 years and latterly Vice Chairman and today a Non Executive Director. He is also a Director of The Security Institute, a Past President of The International Security Management Association (ISMA) and is a member of the American Society for Industrial Security (ASIS). He also served on the ill fated Advisory Board to The Security Industry Authority (SIA). Outside of the Security Profession he has followed many other interests and is Chairman of The Chester Race Company, a Director of British Expertise Ltd and The Hook Norton Brewery Company. He was Master of the Worshipful Company of Distillers in 2003.”

“Control Risks Group (CRG) is a private security company, based out of London, that was founded in 1975 as a subsidiary of the Hogg Robinson insurance and travel group, becoming the first company to provide advice to clients involved in kidnap situations. CRG began with the hiring of three SAS officers: Maj. David Walker, Arish Turle, and Simon Adams-Dale. Walker would go on to co-found Saladin Security and Keenie Meenie Services of Iran/Contra noteriety. Turle would go on to co-found the Risk Advisory Group after a stint at Kroll, Inc.'s office in London. According to their website, in 1980-81, five members of the management team negotiated a buyout of the company and became an independent employee majority-owned company. Currently, the company is 82% owned by its employees. In 1995, CRG added an investigative division, and by 2003 they had become an international company with more than 600 employees and 18 offices around the world. CRG's four main operating areas are: Political and security risk analysis, confidential investigations, security consultancy, and crisis reponse. The majority of their clients are large multi-nationals; they state that more than 90 per cent of the FTSE 100 use one or more of their services. CRG has a long history of working with the energy sector, covering ground in Algeria, Angola, Congo, Nigeria, Russia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Dubai (United Arab Emirates), Sudan and Yemen. The main services they provide include political and security risk assessments, supplying site security managers for dangerous projects and kidnap and evacuation consultancy. In Iraq the UK Department for International Development (DfID) and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) have used CRG to provide armed guards for staff in Baghdad, Basra and elsewhere. CRG is a member of the British Association of Private Security Companies and the Private Security Company Association of Iraq. Jonathan Fry: Chairman Nigel Churton: Vice-Chairman Richard Fenning: Chief Executive Officer Michael Martin: Chief Financial Officer Alison Crosland: Director Information Services Eric Westropp: Board Director John Conyngham: Global director of investigations Mike Horner: Director Asia-Pacific Robin Baillie: Non-executive Director Christopher Kemball: Non-executive Director Sir Michael Rose (former SAS commander): Non-executive Director Jim Drinkhall: Associate Director of Investigations”

“[A 3.5 times double tap is the signature of an SAS wannabe!] By Richard Edwards, Crime Correspondent 7:00AM BST 01 Jul 2009 The 48-year-old has been appointed assistant commissioner - her second promotion since the shooting of the innocent Brazilian four years ago - and is now one of the most senior officers at the Metropolitan police. Her new job, equivalent in rank to a provincial chief constable, carries a salary of £180,000 and covers the Met's murder and rape commands, as well as the complex political investigations. She will immediately inherit the inquiry into MPs expenses after disclosures by The Daily Telegraph, as detectives continue to consider criminal investigations into a small number of people. Since Mr de Menezes was shot seven times in the head in 2005 having been mistaken for a suicide bomber, Miss Dick has given evidence at an Old Bailey trial and the inquest last year. She came close to tears as she described the "horrible'' and "terrible'' tragedy. The control room she was in charge of at New Scotland Yard was said to be "very noisy and quite chaotic" by one witness. She denied that she gave an order that Mr de Menezes must be stopped from getting on to a train at Stockwell "at all costs" and also denied instructing the firearms teams to use lethal force to stop him. Sir Paul Stephenson, the Met Commissioner, said: "Cressida Dick is a first-class police officer who brings with her over 25 years of policing experience both in London and other parts of the country. "Cressida is known amongst colleagues for her leadership and professional resilience even in the most testing of circumstances." But the move will anger relatives of Mr de Menezes, who believe that officers should have faced criminal charges over the shooting.”

Our readers share values recognized by the U.S. Constitution and King Ethelred the Unready (c. 968 – 23 April 1016); a reputed founder of the Grand Jury system.

“Delegated powers cannot be subdelegated. The U.S. Constitution vests all legislative powers in Congress, and all judicial powers in the Supreme Court and inferior courts, except as specifically expressed. Executive branch officials may subdelegate but must remain responsible for the actions of their subordinates. There can be no authority exercised that is not accountable through constitutional officials. Delegata potestas non potest delegari. A delegated power cannot be delegated. 9 Inst. 597.”

“Accuse no innocent; shelter no guilty”

http://www.abeldanger.net/
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