In Brown's Britain, officials act with near impunity, no matter how much they misuse the laws created by NuLab.
One of the fundamental freedoms of this land is being able to confront your accuser in a court of law.
Why then are people making accusations about a man who has served his time for his crime, but still finds himself in prison, and those accusations are being withheld, misuse of the Terrorism laws, and the details kept secret from the man and his solicitor.
This is Brown's Britain - and its wrong.
Police raid Harry Roberts's cell in inquiry over leaked documents
By Andy McSmith
Published: 29 September 2007 11:25AM
Police
have raided the cell of the notorious police killer, Harry Roberts, as
part of an inquiry ordered by the Home Office into how secret documents
were leaked to the multiple murderer.
Confidential letters and statements containing damaging and sensitive allegations against Roberts, 71, were sent to him in jail.
Several
of the people who made the allegations against Roberts are understood
to be considering legal action against the Government, and have claimed
their safety is now under threat because of the unlawful disclosure.
The Home Office ordered a police inquiry into the leak earlier this
summer.
Roberts is seeking parole after spending 40 years behind
bars for the murder of three unarmed, plainclothes officers in
Shepherd's Bush, West London, in 1966.
At the Old Bailey, the
trial judge described the murders as "the most heinous crime for a
generation or more" and told Roberts he would serve at least 30 years.
Despite
serving 10 years more than his 30 year tariff Roberts has been refused
parole following a series of undisclosed allegations that he carried
out illegal activities while on day releases.
The Home Office
made unprecedented use of anti-terrorist laws to ensure the allegations
remained secret, despite repeated legal challenges by Roberts' lawyers.
The Parole Board argued that sources would be at risk if Roberts was
allowed to view the evidence.
But, earlier this year, the
confidential parole documents were leaked and distributed to a number
of people, including to Roberts at the low security Category C prison
at Littlehey in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire.
Prison officers at
Littlehey HMP told Roberts in June, that although he could not keep the
documents, he was permitted to look at them several hours a day. A
large number of the documents were also photocopied for Roberts at the
prison and sent to his solicitor, Simon Creighton.
Mr Creighton,
a partner in the firm Bhatt Murphy, having obtained permission from the
Parole Board and Ministry of Justice, was then able to read for the
first time some of the allegations made against his client. That
resulted in the case being referred back to the Parole Board for
consideration.
Once news of the disclosure reached the Attorney
General's Office, Derbyshire Police were ordered to investigate the
source of the leak by the Home Secretary. The documents, contained on a
computer disc, were held by a number of organisations including the
Parole Board, the police, the Home Office, and the Court of Appeal.
As
part of the leaks inquiry, detectives from Derbyshire Police raided
Roberts' prison cell and removed all his papers and documents at the
beginning of August. They also arrested the man alleged to have sent
them to Roberts at the prison and seized documents, and a computer from
his home. The Treasury Solicitor has obtained a gagging order
prohibiting the media from publishing any details contained in the
letters and statements.
The Government and its legal advisers
are due to decide later this year whether the secret material should be
officially disclosed to Roberts as part of his new parole review.
Home
Office lawyers, the Treasury solicitor, and ministers from the Justice
department are expected to consider three options: to make public the
papers; to keep some of the material restricted, but allow Roberts'
lawyers to see it; or to refuse disclosure and have a special advocate
re-examine the case.
Mr Creighton said: "The case demonstrates
quite how dangerous it is to rely on secret evidence. The underlying
principle for everyone, is a right to know the case against them. This
is essential to achieve justice."
But some of the people who
have made the allegations against Roberts are understood to be
considering taking legal action to try and prevent the public
disclosure of the information.
(HatTip jailhouselawyer)
--
This therefore is Brown's Britain, where your freedom and rights mean nothing.
NuLab - Destroying Britain from the inside out.
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In a dictatorship, the rights and laws protect the government from the people. The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws. - Tacitus
The minute the FBI begins making recommendations on what should be done with its information, it becomes a Gestapo. --- J. Edgar Hoover ![]() Recent Articles
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