Friday, 3 February 2012

MoJ Captain jumps ship, and she's not Italian

Online news: MoJ policy head joins Rossendales 30 January 2012

Christine Sharples has joined enforcement firm Rossendales as compliance manager.
Sharples has joined the firm from the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), where she was best known to the enforcement industry for her tenure as head of the criminal enforcement team.
Since 2004, Sharples worked at the MoJ headquarters on the enforcement of court fines and confiscation orders in the Magistrates Courts.
This was followed by a secondment to the policy team which implemented the Tribunals Courts and Enforcement (TCE) Act 2007, where she headed the bailiff fees review.
Sharples has spent her entire working life at the MoJ and its previous incarnations as the department for Constitutional Affairs and, before that, the Lord Chancellor’s department. She has also worked on the department’s behalf in crown and county courts.
“I am delighted to be continuing my career within the enforcement industry and particularly with such a prestigious firm as Rossendales,” Sharples said. “It will be a different experience working with government departments from the other side of the table, but one I am looking forward to.”
Julie Green-Jones, chairman of Rossendales, added: “I have personally worked with Christine for many years on the TCE Act and have a great respect for her work ethic, her integrity and her knowledge and understanding of the enforcement profession.”

So the worm has turned. Not only was Ms Sharples the principle conduit for the victims into the poorly named Ministry of Justice, she was secretly negotiating her future with the same industry that has to date not been made accountable for the murder of a former Veteran, Andy Miller.

What, why, where and when did this public servant take her forty pieces of silver and move into the cesspit with a billion pound industry that is accountable to no-one except themselves?

Can we expect outrage from MP's?  Wait and see.  I doubt very much if any of them will even reply to missives of despair from victims of a viscous and nefarious industry.

What can be said without contradiction or equivocation is that it highlights the possibility of duplicity within the very offices of the MoJ if their main spokeswoman whilst heading the conversation with the innocent victims of abuse and illegality, simultaneously negotiated a lucrative future for herself in the very industry she was charged with regulating.  Can we expect universal outrage from a profession that gave near sanctuary to their own colleagues and opposition members who were stripping the nation of it very moral fibre?  We will watch and renew the struggle for JUSTICE, even if it has become so debased within society.

1 comment:

  1. Well on a plan of attack we now have a idea how far behind the lines they are entrenched.It seems a attack straight at the top may be a better tactic .Nowt mp s like better than pointing the finger at the bad guys just a thought.

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