Thursday, 7 July 2011

Incesstuous, immoral and illegal

The moral issues in London are not new, but are as poignant today in Blackpool.

Let us not forget that the Met POLICE have investigated several strands of illegality and found nothing whilst sitting on sack loads of potential evidence, OR, they passed their investigations on to the Crown Prosecution Services and they refused to prosecute?

The relationship between the CPS and the police should also be one of concern to Blackpool residents who are awaiting the outcome of severe criminal inquiries into semi-political activities of theft and fraud whilst the CPS deny all knowledge of any such investigation.

Is this a pre-cursor to allowing criminals to continue their insidious activities? I am afraid London is showing the way and it is not that of honest and decent people. Readers of this blog will be familiar of the contempt shown at Yates of the Yard and his inept investigations. Could his reluctance to do his job properly be more sinister?

Why are key witnesses in Blackpool not being interviewed and why are organisations getting away with deliberate transgressions of the sub judice rules? Westminster's non-adherence to the Rules of Law have percolated all the way down to the 'rotten' boroughs and Labour managed to reverse the progressive nature of true politics back to the realms of a Taliban. The Conservatives are proving incapable of distinguishing Right from wrong let alone left from right.

Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

Dead soldiers' families 'hacked by newspaper'

News of the World sign
The News of the World is carrying out its own investigation into hacking claims

David Cameron is under growing pressure to act now to set up a judge-led public inquiry into allegations of phone hacking by the News of the World.

The PM has said a probe must wait until police investigations are completed.

But Conservative London Mayor Boris Johnson said it should be "immediate" and "no holds barred".

Labour MP Chris Bryant also said an inquiry could be set up now and given the power to summon evidence "before somebody starts shredding it".

The clamour for immediate action came as reports emerged that relatives of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan may have been the victims of hacking.

Read more at www.bbc.co.uk

3 comments:

  1. Who investigates the investigators?

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  2. Chris Bryant MP for the Rhondda, wouldn't believe anything he says even if he told me I was signed in as the flanker. This is a youngish MP wishing to climb the greasy pole and will make his opinions known to bolster his standing. No different to any other MP I hasten to add. Whenever there is something distateful brough out into the public domain, these types of elected representatives can't wait to get on the bandwagon.So as Bryant is a member of the party whose leader 'shredded all his expenses' pinch of salt required.

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