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originally posted by: bastion
His wrongful conviction was overturned after three years and was granted just under £1m compensation.
He chose to work in the arms export business but wasn't paid anything for his role giving intel to SIS - it was all very cloak and dagger stuff and the MI6 guy telling them what to do never said 'I'm a spy, I work for such and such' or offered them money he just let himself into their office one day made it clear he knew everything about the company/contract tender and told them how important it was to national security to go ahead.
"John Paul Grecian, Bryan Mason, Stuart Blackledge and Colin Phillips were codefendants wrongly convicted in February 1992 in London of illegal arms sales to Iraq. The four businessmen pled guilty, and were given a suspended prison sentence. The convictions of Grecian, Mason, Blackledge, Phillips were overturned in October 1995 by England's Court of Appeals after it was learned that the British government knew about the arns sales in advance and did nothing to prevent them. It was reported on June 8, 1996 in the Independent (London) that at the times of the arms sales Grecian was working as an informant for the U.S.'s Central Intelligence Agency. In May 1996 Grecian announced he was seeking compensation from the British government for his wrongful conviction. In November 2010 the British government announced that Grecian and another businessman acquitted of engaging in business dealings and who provided information to the British government about Iraq's nuclear weapons program in the 1990s, were awarded a total of £1m pounds."
originally posted by: Freeborn
a reply to: UKTruth
You know and I know this is not going to happen.
Its a very vocal and small minority that are shouting for this and similar things.
They think they'll get popular support but the exact opposite will happen.
The vast majority think they're being idiots and are vastly over-reaching.
The only support it may get is from the predictable neo-liberal, champagne socialist wokerati imbeciles.
“Probably wise to for me to limit movements to countries where free speech is constitutionally protected,” Musk posted on X
originally posted by: UKTruth
Musk himself has now said that he will be limiting his travel due to the risk of arrest.
“Probably wise to for me to limit movements to countries where free speech is constitutionally protected,” Musk posted on X
originally posted by: UKTruth
There is a concerted effort to police the public square - will a small number of people deciding what can and cannot be discussed.
originally posted by: BrucellaOrchitis
originally posted by: bastion
His wrongful conviction was overturned after three years and was granted just under £1m compensation.
He chose to work in the arms export business but wasn't paid anything for his role giving intel to SIS - it was all very cloak and dagger stuff and the MI6 guy telling them what to do never said 'I'm a spy, I work for such and such' or offered them money he just let himself into their office one day made it clear he knew everything about the company/contract tender and told them how important it was to national security to go ahead.
"John Paul Grecian, Bryan Mason, Stuart Blackledge and Colin Phillips were codefendants wrongly convicted in February 1992 in London of illegal arms sales to Iraq. The four businessmen pled guilty, and were given a suspended prison sentence. The convictions of Grecian, Mason, Blackledge, Phillips were overturned in October 1995 by England's Court of Appeals after it was learned that the British government knew about the arns sales in advance and did nothing to prevent them. It was reported on June 8, 1996 in the Independent (London) that at the times of the arms sales Grecian was working as an informant for the U.S.'s Central Intelligence Agency. In May 1996 Grecian announced he was seeking compensation from the British government for his wrongful conviction. In November 2010 the British government announced that Grecian and another businessman acquitted of engaging in business dealings and who provided information to the British government about Iraq's nuclear weapons program in the 1990s, were awarded a total of £1m pounds."
forejustice.org...
Did Grecian's colleagues know, at the time, that he was passing information to the CIA? Or did that come out after the fact?
originally posted by: BrucellaOrchitis
originally posted by: UKTruth
Musk himself has now said that he will be limiting his travel due to the risk of arrest.
“Probably wise to for me to limit movements to countries where free speech is constitutionally protected,” Musk posted on X
Particularly, if he cannot support the statements that he has made utilising his freedom of speech in a court of law. If he can, then he shouldn't have any concerns.
originally posted by: UKTruth
There is a concerted effort to police the public square - will a small number of people deciding what can and cannot be discussed.
I am sure Julian Assange would like to point out that with great power comes great responsibility and that it is wise to chose your battles carefully - the "powers that be" are far less keen to take you to court that way because you have the evidence to support the courage of your convictions.
originally posted by: BrucellaOrchitis
a reply to: bastion
Thanks for getting back to me on that.
The reason I asked was because, MI6 like the CIA isn't able to spy on it's own people, that's MI5's job and it seems apparent that MI5 were by-passed.
I would hazard that when the MI6-like chap turned up at the office that first time that Grecian was already on-board as a CIA asset.
originally posted by: bastion
Herald Scotland - The spy who took his revenge.
The view from the dock of Henderson's prosecution, and of the government's attempt to hide behind Public Interest Immunity Certificates, is usefully given here. The defence's undermining of the Crown was a spectacular forensic success for Geoffrey Robertson QC. He hijacked the prosecution witnesses so successfully that after only five days (following Alan Clark's admissions under cross-examination about his economies 'with the actualite') the Crown had to throw in the towel.
This thoroughly good, plain book answers many lurking questions about the Matrix Churchill affair. But the big one is left begging. We still do not know why. Men like Henderson were stooges in the greater game, of course. One cannot expect him to know the truth. Yet the fact remains that, for whatever reason, the Thatcher administration sucked up to a vicious dictator hated by almost all other Arab governments, publicly denouncing him while secretly fuelling his monstrous ambitions and massaging his self- esteem. Knowing he used gas and starvation against his own people, and was developing a nuclear bomb, the British government chose to sell him a selection-box of lethal toys. Finally, by squandering billions of pounds in loan guarantees to his bellicose, bankrupt, egregious economy, it effectively invested in him.
So why? Was it so that a very few, well-placed countrymen of ours could grow extremely rich? We must now look to Lord Justice Scott for the answer.