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Tout exposed Mark 'Stone/Kennedy' exposed as undercover police officer

In situations like these it's probably very useful to have as Chief Inspector at HM CPS Inspectorate, which operates as an internal watchdog for the CPS, a man of the calibre of ex-Kent Police Chief Constable Michael Fuller.
Without wanting to bore anyone too much about the mechanics of the Civil Service, HMCPSI doesn't have any influence over the CPS's charging decisions or the conduct of prosecutions. It looks at broad issues, like how the CPS handles disclosure, advocacy quality, etc, and occasionally examines why a particular prosecution has crashed and burned.
 
IIRC, the protest groups travelled to other European countries.

From the Assange / Sweden matter, we know that different countries define rape in different ways.

If the undercover cops shaggged their duped "girlfriends" in other countries, would there be grounds for bringing a rape / indecent assault complaint in a country where the authorities are less disposed than the UK CPS to covering up for plod?
 
IIRC, the protest groups travelled to other European countries.

From the Assange / Sweden matter, we know that different countries define rape in different ways.

If the undercover cops shaggged their duped "girlfriends" in other countries, would there be grounds for bringing a rape / indecent assault complaint in a country where the authorities are less disposed than the UK CPS to covering up for plod?
The mechanics of that would no doubt be difficult, and further complicated by the various (secret) multi- and bilateral agreements in place between various countries and the UK facilitating the sharing of the work product of the spycops - both British and non-British.

See:

http://www.statewatch.org/subscriber/protected/sw21n2.pdf (pp4-13)
http://euro-police.noblogs.org/2011/02/cross-border-spying-on-euro-anarchists/
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmselect/cmhaff/837/837we04.htm
http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-78602546.html
http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-76397376.html

In practice, such agreements have included exchange programmes for spycops, so it's not a one-way street - five from the Berlin State Police alone were working in the UK for the 2005 Gleneagles G8 summit. Typically Country A's spycop working in Country B will share work product with the host country's police/intelligence agency, which will ‘sanitise’ any intelligence as having come from a common or garden informer, ie not a professional police officer.

In addition host countries have assisted visiting spycops in the building up of ‘activist credibility’, including by way of the commission of serious crimes - and then ensuring there are no serious consequences. This has meant keeping the prosecuting authorities in the dark, and allowing spycops to be processed under their false identities.

So you can imagine there may be as much or even less appetite for airing British spycop laundry in these other countries, given that most of them had reciprocal arrangements - and most of the other countries' spycop programmes have not yet been exposed.
 
Case starts tomorrow in London

Demo in Cardiff tonight at 6pm and tomorrow outside court in London
http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/police-being-sued-over-alleged-8905129
JS59770936.jpg

https://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2015/03/13/solidarity-against-spycops/
It has been over five years since we learned that Mark “Marco” Jacobs was not just another anarchist in the south Wales activist scene, but was actually an undercover police officer. We made all the relevant political points about the matter in our statement at the time: “They come at us because we are strong

Since then a number of activists are taking legal action against South Wales Police and the Metropolitan Police in an attempt to hold the system to account.

Since we first filed an application in court, both sets of Police lawyers have attempted to obstruct justice, giving a “Neither Confirm Nor Deny” defence of all aspects of Officer Jacobs (and all other undercover police) deployment.

On Wednesday 25th March we will be in the Royal Courts of Justice in London attempting to strike out this non-defence.

The night before we are in London we will be holding a protest outside Cardiff Central Police Station to draw attention to the case and the problem of undercover political policing in general.

Protest outside Cardiff Central Police Station, King Edward VIII Avenue, CF10
Tuesday 24th March, 6pm – 8pm (facebook event)


Then please join us if you can in a Solidarity picket of the court before the case starts.

Picket outside Royal Courts of Justice, The Strand, London, WC2 (Holborn or Temple tube)
Wednesday 25th March, 9am – 10am (facebook event)

It was recently announced that there will be a full public inquiry into political undercover policing. Though this is welcome, providing it is transparent, robust and independent, such exercises are unlikely to ever offer any path to justice. It is particularly unlikely that the truth about the role of undercover police in suppressing political activism in the UK will come to light whilst would-be whistleblowers have the threat of prosecution hanging over them.
 
A bunch of muppets behaving like cunts.
Which might be justifiable if they were saving the world as we know it 24 hour style.:rolleyes:

But the terrifying terrorists acts of terror involved being annoying and irritating:(
Irritatorists or annoyinists dont need 7 years of undercover work.:mad:
 
http://undercoverresearch.net/2015/03/26/558/

Breakthrough ruling: #spycops defence down the drain!
Posted on March 26, 2015 by admin


A breakthrough ruling in the Marco Jacobs case: The police will not contest that Jacobs was an undercover officer, nor require the claimants to prove he was. If the claimants are awarded damages then the Met, South Wales Police & the Association of Chief Police Officers will be liable.

The ruling was made on 25 March 2015 in the High Court case of Welsh activists who were spied on by Jacobs to get the Met’s obstructive ‘Neither Confirm Nor Deny’ tactic struck out. Here’s the full order from the #spycops hearing (stretching the English language to it’s limits, as @tombfowler said). Text agreed by both sides.
 
Would that it were so. I am getting more than a little sick seeing them spend our money attempting to defend the indefensible.
 
do people see this development as a step forward?

There was a simillar decision last year in the case of the women who had had relationships with undercover filth.

Today, in a devastating blow to the Metropolitan Police’s attempts to cover up gross abuses of women by undercover police, the High Court ruled that the Met could not use ‘Neither Confirm Nor Deny’ as a blanket response to all the fully pleaded claims of women affected.

Mr Justice Bean handed down judgment in the pre-trial hearing concerning five of the women who were deceived into long term intimate relationships with undercover policemen who were infiltrating environmental and social justice campaigns.

He held that there was no legitimate public interest in the Met Police asserting NCND in respect of the general allegations that undercover officers had engaged in long term intimate sexual relationships with those whose activities the MPS were monitoring; and that this was authorised or acquiesced in by senior management.

http://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk...s-of-intimate-relationships-while-undercover/
 
Some of the arguments the police lawyers came out with in that case were hilariously absurd. Basically it was numerous variation on the theme of, 'we shouldn't have to reveal any information because any information we reveal will make us look really bad.'
 
It's worth pointing out that the boss of Global Open, Rod Leeming, had previously been the boss of the pre-NPOIU 'Animal Rights National Index', a spy unit under the purview of Metropolitan Police Special Branch set up in the mid-80s around the efforts of an Essex Constabulary intelligence collator.

It is not unreasonable to imagine that Leeming and his Global Open chums (and those who have contracted specialist services from them) have spent the past few years preparing for this particular shitstorm, both in a personal and a business sense; it will be interesting to see how much paperwork and electronic files have survived such preparations.
 
Met statement:

Claimants in civil cases receive MPS apology
News • Nov 20, 2015 10:00 GMT
The Metropolitan Police Service and seven women have now concluded a mediation process in relation to claims arising from long term intimate sexual relationships.

As part of the settlement, the details of which are confidential, the MPS agreed to publish the full apology that has been given personally to those seven women.
The following is attributable to Assistant Commissioner Martin Hewitt:

“The Metropolitan Police has recently settled seven claims arising out of the totally unacceptable behaviour of a number of undercover police officers working for the now disbanded Special Demonstration Squad, an undercover unit within Special Branch that existed until 2008 and for the National Public Order Intelligence Unit (NPOIU) an undercover unit which was operational until 2011.

"Thanks in large part to the courage and tenacity of these women in bringing these matters to light it has become apparent that some officers, acting undercover whilst seeking to infiltrate protest groups, entered into long-term intimate sexual relationships with women which were abusive, deceitful, manipulative and wrong.

"I acknowledge that these relationships were a violation of the women’s human rights, an abuse of police power and caused significant trauma. I unreservedly apologise on behalf of the Metropolitan Police Service. I am aware that money alone cannot compensate the loss of time, their hurt or the feelings of abuse caused by these relationships.

"This settlement follows a mediation process in which I heard directly from the women concerned.
"I wish to make a number of matters absolutely clear.

"Most importantly, relationships like these should never have happened. They were wrong and were a gross violation of personal dignity and integrity.

"Let me add these points:

"Firstly, none of the women with whom the undercover officers had a relationship brought it on themselves. They were deceived pure and simple. I want to make it clear that the Metropolitan Police does not suggest that any of these women could be in any way criticized for the way in which these relationships developed.

"Second, at the mediation process the women spoke of the way in which their privacy had been violated by these relationships. I entirely agree that it was a gross violation and also accept that it may well have reflected attitudes towards women that should have no part in the culture of the Metropolitan Police.

"Third, it is apparent that some officers may have preyed on the women’s good nature and had manipulated their emotions to a gratuitous extent. This was distressing to hear about and must have been very hard to bear.

"Fourth, I recognise that these relationships, the subsequent trauma and the secrecy around them left these women at risk of further abuse and deception by these officers after the deployment had ended.

"Fifth, I recognize that these legal proceedings have been painful distressing and intrusive and added to the damage and distress. Let me make clear that whether or not genuine feelings were involved on the part of any officers is entirely irrelevant and does not make the conduct acceptable.

"One of the concerns which the women strongly expressed was that they wished to ensure that such relationships would not happen in future. They referred to the risks that children could be conceived through and into such relationships and I understand that.

"These matters are already the subject of several investigations including a criminal and misconduct enquiry called Operation Herne; undercover policing is also now subject to a judge-led Public Inquiry which commenced on 28th July 2015. Even before those bodies report, I can state that sexual relationships between undercover police officers and members of the public should not happen. The forming of a sexual relationship by an undercover officer would never be authorized in advance nor indeed used as a tactic of a deployment. If an officer did have a sexual relationship despite this (for example if it was a matter of life or death) then he would be required to report this in order that the circumstances could be investigated for potential criminality and/or misconduct. I can say as a very senior officer of the Metropolitan Police Service that I and the Metropolitan Police are committed to ensuring that this policy is followed by every officer who is deployed in an undercover role.

"Finally, the Metropolitan Police recognises that these cases demonstrate that there have been failures of supervision and management. The more we have learned from what the Claimants themselves have told us, from the Operation Herne investigation and from the recent HM Inspectorate of Constabulary report the more we accept that appropriate oversight was lacking. By any standards the level of oversight did not offer protection to the women concerned against abuse. It is of particular concern that abuses were not prevented by the introduction of more stringent supervisory arrangements made by and pursuant to the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000. The Metropolitan Police recognizes that this should never happen again and the necessary steps must be taken to ensure that it does not.

"Undercover policing is a lawful and important tactic but it must never be abused.

"In light of this settlement, it is hoped that the Claimants will now feel able to move on with their lives. The Metropolitan Police believes that they can now do so with their heads held high. The women have conducted themselves throughout this process with integrity and absolute dignity.”

From: Claimants in civil cases receive MPS apology
 
This bit looks likely to encourage the various former undercover police officers who have been granted core participant status at the Pitchford Inquiry - who previously might have been willing to support their bosses' policy of omerta - to have interesting things to say about their managers and the spycop programmes in which they were working:

...it has become apparent that some officers, acting undercover whilst seeking to infiltrate protest groups, entered into long-term intimate sexual relationships with women which were abusive, deceitful, manipulative and wrong.

No one likes being thrown under a bus, after all.
 
Still cant see how they justified this program :hmm:

Resources are a thing and somebody somewhere had to ask what results are we getting.
That couldnt be got by reading schnews urban and the alternative media and turning up at meetings and staying awake. Your not exactly facing the mafia or PIRA:facepalm:.
Being told by someone that they are wary of state inflitrators when your locking a social centre up in TA uniform:rolleyes: admittidly I had removed my berat:D so that was probably being underhand:hmm:.
 
So, it looks as if you subversive malcontents have a pretty effective weapon against infiltrators now; anyone who refuses a shag has outed themselves as police. A conspirator whose commitment is genuine should be prepared to prove themselves thus, whatever their normal preferences would dictate. Perhaps the onerous task of demanding sex from activists under suspicion should be rotated around the group.
 
So, it looks as if you subversive malcontents have a pretty effective weapon against infiltrators now; anyone who refuses a shag has outed themselves as police. A conspirator whose commitment is genuine should be prepared to prove themselves thus, whatever their normal preferences would dictate. Perhaps the onerous task of demanding sex from activists under suspicion should be rotated around the group.

I'm hoping this is an attempt at a joke, but really it's not that funny.
 
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