The “law” in Jersey:
In truth – just who does it protect?
And why?
Lenny Harper’s expanded affidavit.
“I started enquiries and found that her story was corroborated by over a dozen officers. One male officer told how one night shift he was sitting in the Station Office with the Sergeant when the latter produced a 9mm semi automatic pistol. The Sergeant dismantled the firearm and cleaned it. When finished, he assembled it, put the magazine in and cocked the weapon. He then pointed it directly at the male officer’s head for several seconds before lowering it and saying “No, not tonight.””
Lenny Harper.
Imagine: - you live and work in Jersey; you’re just one amongst the great majority of ordinary decent people who make up this community. Perhaps you’re just starting out in life – you may have a husband or a wife; perhaps you’re working very hard to pay a mortgage; you’re a law-abiding citizen, who pays your taxes; you might even have a business that you’re determined to make a success of in what is a hard and competitive environment; you may have little children, who you want to provide for, and you want – and expect them to be - safe.You may expect all of those reasonable features of a decent, respectable life – all of those obligations and protections – to be maintained objectively and fairly by the rule of law in Jersey.
You don’t break the law – but if you did, you would expect to be apprehended and punished for it – just like everyone else. You expect those who do break the law to be punished for it – quite regardless of whom they are or who they know. You expect to work, and to run your business in a fair environment – on a level playing-field. You don’t expect to gain improper business advantage through having the ‘right’ connections – and nor do you expect your competitors, who may well not work hard, and offer an inferior service, to be given business contracts and deals they don’t deserve simply because they know a few politicians, civil servants or honorary police officers.
You confidently believe that policing, of all kinds, in Jersey is ethical and effective and carried out with probity. You are confident that no elements of policing in Jersey resemble that which you might expect to find in Naples or Baltimore - just as you wouldn’t imagine your family to be at risk of the kind of gun crime and massed shootings that occur in those cities.
If you’re a reasonably intelligent person – you’re going to have to re-assess those views and expectations – after reading the document I publish below – an affidavit of the former Deputy Chief Constable of the States of Jersey Police Force.
Originally written by Lenny Harper at my request in late 2008, some parts of this affidavit have been published before, but he has recently expanded and added to the document for use in the legal cases I am fighting.
It is a long document – but any thinking person will want to read it.
Read it – think about what it says – and then revise what may have been a hitherto naive view of the “rule of law” in Jersey.
But as it is a long document – I reproduce a few quotes here, so that readers may get a quick understanding of the seriousness of these issues:
From paragraph 125:
“I went to Jersey in 2002 full of expectation of the challenge that lay ahead. I soon learnt that it was like nowhere else in the British Isles. I was puzzled at first by the hostile reaction from politicians to our efforts to stop the few bullies in the force from making the lives of their colleagues miserable. This turned to anger at the complete obstruction to all our efforts to regulate the possession of high velocity weapons on the island. I began to then see the close links and the way in which the various arms of Jersey society worked in order to stop any modernisation. I saw the law being enforced by the Honorary forces, not on the basis of right and wrong, but simply on who was known to each other, or who went to school with each other. When we tried to tackle police corruption, we again ran into a wall of hostility. This time it was organised, as politicians and government ministers gave open support to the corrupt cops and their associates. Prominent politicians met openly with disgraced corrupt former officers and made excuses for them.”
From paragraph 10:
“The first serious test of who decided our operational strategies came over the question of firearms on the island. This was also where I began to discover that the normal rules of law enforcement did not apply in many areas of Jersey life.”
From paragraph 10:
“During the questioning of a man in connection with the unlawful possession of firearms he told officers that the SOJ Police Firearms Clerk, Norman Woods, had given him information about police activities in relation to himself. Accordingly I arrested Woods and searched his home address. At his address I recovered a huge number of firearms lying insecure in a bedroom. These included an RPG7 Rocket Launcher which was later found to have only a minor fault. Among the dozens of other firearms found at his address were some which had been handed into the police for destruction. Lying around the room on the floor next to weapons such as 7.62 rifles, machine guns, and magnum revolvers, was a large quantity of ammunition for these and other weapons. A ‘SEACAT’ Missile Launcher was also taken from his home.”
From paragraph 11:
“Because civilian staff working for the police in Jersey are not Police employees, but are employed by the States, it was the States Human Resources Department who heard the evidence and decided the punishment. They did not dismiss him and we were forced to take him back although we severely curtailed his access to confidential information.”
From paragraph 16:
“This also caused a furore with one politician in government saying to me “This is not Dunblane sonny.” However, what we discovered made me fear, and I still do, that some day in the future Jersey will fall victim to the type of gun tragedy seen so often in the USA, the UK and elsewhere.”
From paragraph 20:
“Another family in an outlying parish were known to have twenty high powered and semi automatic weapons in a cellar on their property. They also had thousands of rounds of ammunition. When visited by SOJ Police officers they were also found to have six months supply of tinned food and bottled water. They said they were waiting for word from God. The Connetable refused to revoke the certificate.”
From paragraph 25:
“A detective officer was found to be selling intelligence to a female informant in return for sex. He admitted the offences. No prosecution was authorised. He resigned before discipline proceedings.”
From Paragraph 26:
“Evidence was found linking one officer with the importation of half a million pounds worth of cannabis onto the island. Amongst other things, a map of the drop site with the location marked was found in his car. Other evidence was found linking him and a female colleague with supplying and possession of drugs. No proceedings were instigated.”
From paragraph 64:
“For some time, Legal Advisor Laurence O’Donnell and I had been concerned at the difficulty in prosecuting paedophiles in cases of historic abuse. This had been exacerbated by difficulties over the case of Paul Every, who was the commanding officer of the Jersey Sea Cadets and who was also a senior civil servant in the Chief Minister’s office. He was arrested as part of the national “Operation Ore” where the FBI had netted thousands of suspects who had used their credit cards to pay for internet sites involving child pornography. He was one of a number of senior Sea Cadet officers arrested for serious sexual crimes against children. After his arrest he had not been suspended from Sea Cadet activities and because of my concerns for the safety of the children involved, I disclosed the information about his arrest to the Sea Cadet authorities. Among the sites he had searched on his computer were a number involving “naked sea cadets” and other child pornography sites. The Sea Cadet authorities in Jersey were not responsive, telling me that a man “is innocent until proven guilty.” I eventually had to go to London and threaten to stand at the gates of the Sea Cadet HQ and disclose to individual parents before they took action.”
From paragraph 65:
“The concerns led us in 2006 to start looking at cases which had been brought. Early on I became worried about one case where a retired senior police officer (Chief Inspector de la Haye) was implicated in passing information to paedophiles about a police investigation but did not appear to have been interviewed. It appeared that billing had been carried out on his telephones but had revealed nothing further. I was still uneasy and asked the investigating officer why de la Haye had not even been interviewed. She told me that she had been instructed not to by the then head of CID, Chief Inspector Bonjour. This was even more of a concern than it would have normally been as the Head of CID was also an officer in the Jersey Sea Cadets.”
From paragraph 72:
“The report was submitted to CI Bonjour who was also the officer who had prevented de la Haye from being interviewed as mentioned earlier. However, nothing ever materialised from Mr Bonjour and the officer had heard nothing. Eventually an enquiry was carried out by South Yorkshire Police into the allegations against the Head of CID but it was still pending when I retired.”
From paragraph 126:
“There are no checks and balances on power and the abuse of it. This is obvious each time one tries to make a complaint against any member of the government. One such example arose after a Daily Mail journalist telephoned the Chief Officer of Police, Graham Power, and told him that Senator James Perchard, the Health Minister, had given him a confidential police e mail. The conversation was taped on the publicly declared recording system at Police Headquarters. The force made an official complaint which was totally ignored by the Chief Minister’s office. The Minister denied the allegation; the journalist even denied making the admission, despite the recording.”
From paragraph 128:
“There is one other incident to illustrate the situation. A UK lawyer now in Jersey who has vast experience in Child Abuse offered their services to the AG to assist with the enquiry. They did so on the basis that there was no one with sufficient experience to be of use. The AG refused. The lawyer told him that Simon Thomas, for all his capabilities and talent, was not a child abuse specialist and this was what was needed. The AG’s response was that this person ought not to worry – there would be no prosecutions anyway.”
From paragraph 129:
“With such an absence of controls, such an absence of accountability, the ordinary decent people of Jersey are helpless. Intentionally or not, the system has allowed corruption to flourish to such an extent that those seeking to combat it are the ones open to scorn.”
Many deeply concerning questions arise from the affidavit of the former Deputy Chief Officer of the Police.
But to any thinking person, certain stark and central questions will stand above all others – especially in light of the wholly extraordinary and lawless conduct of Jersey’s public authorities during the last four years.
Given just how many attempts by members of the political and Law Officer establishment to cover-over foul corruption are revealed here – just how much concealing of serious crimes occurred in past years and decades - and just what kind of crimes were concealed in that way?
Could it be that there are several generations of Jersey politicians, Crown Officers, journalists and police officers – who routinely co-operated to cover-up the most serious corruption and despicable of crimes? Crimes committed by their friends, political allies and supporters – or even themselves?
Perhaps, amongst the general corruption – even crimes of child abuse?
And that isn’t an unreasonable question – as we have to also ask just why there should have been such fear and insane panic amongst the Jersey establishment in their ill-judged attempt to sabotage and obstruct the historic child abuse investigation?
There has to be some rational explanation for their lunatic conduct? Perhaps the Jersey oligarchy were in terror – that the lid was going to come off their entire, ancient, criminal enterprise?
Just how many crimes - including crimes of child abuse – over the decades – were not investigated - and the criminals not charged – because they had the “right” political connections?
In truth – do the ordinary decent people of Jersey really enjoy the proper rule of law at all?
Or – in reality – is protection by the law – or punishment under the law – merely a political ‘gift’ – or weapon – used by the Jersey oligarchy?
Think about it.
As you read this affidavit.
Stuart.
Affidavit of Lenny Harper,
Former Deputy Chief Officer of the States of Jersey Police Force.
1. In May 2002 I joined the States of Jersey Police as the Head of Operations in the rank of Chief Superintendent. Within a few weeks I realised that local politicians expected a degree of control over day to day operations which no police force in the United Kingdom would have tolerated. My earliest experience of this was finding that the Custody Sergeants of the States Police had no right of charging suspects but had to call in a Centenier of the Parish where the crime was committed, explain the facts to him or her, and ask them to charge the suspect. Centeniers were elected officials in their parishes and members of the Parish Honorary Police. The head of the Honorary Police in each Parish was the Constable or “Connetable” who was also a member of the States by virtue of his position. The titular head of the Island’s Honorary Police forces was the Attorney General. Several times early on in my post I had to protest to the Legal Advisors about a refusal to charge in cases where the evidence was overwhelming.
2. In those early days I also had a number of differences of opinion with the then Deputy Chairman of the Home Affairs Committee who was the Connetable of one of the country parishes. He objected to States of Jersey Police Vehicles driving through his parish on training duties and complained several times that they had answered emergency calls without asking his prior authority to go enter his parish. This was an early foretaste of many battles to come where politicians would seek to control our day to day operational activities.
3. During my time as a senior officer in the United Kingdom I had become known as someone who, whilst critical of the damage that over- zealous political correctness could do, would not tolerate bullying which caused people to feel uncomfortable at work and in some cases made them ill. I became aware that a small number of officers in the SOJP were making life difficult for others through bullying. A number of the victims came to me personally and I took firm action against the bullies. I will describe a few such examples in order to put into context the response our actions brought from the Jersey establishment.
4. Shortly after I arrived I held a ‘forum’ for the Constables of the force. I did this in response to complaints from officers that they had never been listened to. Towards the end of the meeting I asked if anyone had anything else to ask. A female officer asked how I would deal with bullying. “Ruthlessly,” I replied.
5. The woman officer left it at that and I forgot about the exchange until about six weeks later when I was about to fly out from Jersey Airport to the UK. The officer approached me and asked if I remembered her asking the question. We spoke for some time and she relayed a horrific tale of abuse, assault and bullying by a Sergeant in the force against her, which was witnessed on a number of occasions by other senior officers who did nothing. When she complained to one Inspector he told her he understood her situation but if he did anything the Sergeant would “turn on him.” The female officer had eventually gone to a very senior officer who had told her to forget it or her job would be at risk.
6. I started enquiries and found that her story was corroborated by over a dozen officers. One male officer told how one night shift he was sitting in the Station Office with the Sergeant when the latter produced a 9mm semi automatic pistol. The Sergeant dismantled the firearm and cleaned it. When finished, he assembled it, put the magazine in and cocked the weapon. He then pointed it directly at the male officer’s head for several seconds before lowering it and saying “No, not tonight.” That male officer is still suffering the effects of the bullying by the Sergeant. The female officer concerned has a civil action pending against the force which I do not believe is being contested.
7. On another occasion, I was approached on behalf of a vulnerable member of staff who had reported a domestic assault on herself. The investigating officer, a long serving detective, had asked her for her mobile phone number and had given her his “in case they needed to contact each other.” A couple of evenings later she received a lengthy series of text messages spread over several hours which started with comments about her physical appearance and what she looked like bending over the photo copier to extremely explicit texts about what the sender would like to do to her. These messages all came from the phone of the investigating officer. After I obtained the transcripts of these messages I challenged the officer. He at first denied it but changed his story. I returned him to uniform but did not discipline him as the victims vulnerable state would have meant that she would have suffered even more from a prolonged drawn out saga.
8. In another incident, a young Detective Sergeant reported a member of staff for carrying out particularly nasty racial bullying of a Portuguese woman officer. A short time later property belonging to him was vandalised in the CID office. We were told the suspect’s name in confidence by several detectives but had nothing we could use in evidence and no one was forthcoming. The Head of CID, who had also just come from the UK, and myself gathered every detective in the force together and warned them that if there was any repeat of this all of them would be returned to Uniform and we would re-build the CID from scratch. We never did have a repeat despite only using local officers in a number of high profile anti corruption investigations which started off as covert operations.
9. It was clear however, that many Jersey politicians did not approve of our efforts to tackle bullying. We were openly criticised in the media by these people and on one occasion were referred to as the “politically correct KGB stalking the corridors of Police Headquarters.” At the same time however, it was clear that we had the support of the vast majority of the force as was illustrated by what Her Majesty’s Inspector of Constabulary found when they carried out their first inspection during my time there. They found that Graham Power, myself, and John Pearson, had already made many changes which had transformed the force and the morale of its officers. The fact that the leadership style was supported by the rank and file was one of the findings. A second Inspection a few years later was to single out the work that had been done on Professional Standards and the strong leadership which had played a part in turning the force into a professional and innovative organisation.
10. The first serious test of who decided our operational strategies came over the question of firearms on the island. This was also where I began to discover that the normal rules of law enforcement did not apply in many areas of Jersey life. During the questioning of a man in connection with the unlawful possession of firearms he told officers that the SOJ Police Firearms Clerk, Norman Woods, had given him information about police activities in relation to himself. Accordingly I arrested Woods and searched his home address. At his address I recovered a huge number of firearms lying insecure in a bedroom. These included an RPG7 Rocket Launcher which was later found to have only a minor fault. Among the dozens of other firearms found at his address were some which had been handed into the police for destruction. Lying around the room on the floor next to weapons such as 7.62 rifles, machine guns, and magnum revolvers, was a large quantity of ammunition for these and other weapons. A ‘SEACAT’ Missile Launcher was also taken from his home. Wood was eventually convicted of Unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition. Other charges were discontinued following these guilty pleas. He was however convicted at a Discipline Hearing of offences including falsifying police records to show that weapons handed in by the public had been destroyed when in fact they had been retained and sometimes passed to others by him.
11. Because civilian staff working for the police in Jersey are not Police employees, but are employed by the States, it was the States Human Resources Department who heard the evidence and decided the punishment. They did not dismiss him and we were forced to take him back although we severely curtailed his access to confidential information. Sometime later we received further information that he was again mis-using police information systems. When I challenged him about it he resigned. However, he then started a campaign backed by several prominent members of the Home Affairs Committee (now replaced by Ministers under Ministerial Government) alleging that he had been unfairly dealt with. In 2006 I learnt that he was twenty four hours away from being sworn in as an Honorary Police Officer and I disclosed all of the above to the Attorney General. His swearing in was postponed but I believe took place at a later stage.
12. As a result of Wood’s arrest I ordered a review of his office and the records kept by him. At this stage I should explain that in Jersey the professional States of Jersey Police are not the firearms licensing authority. This lies with the Head of the Honorary Police in each Parish – the Connetable. The Police Firearms Clerk had the role of carrying out the necessary checks such as Criminal Records to advise the Connetables of any factors which might impact on the granting of firearms certificates. As I will discuss and show later, the Connetable did not have to take these matters into account and in many shocking instances, did not.
13. It became apparent from the examination of the records that there were hundreds of people in Jersey who were in possession of powerful firearms who had not bothered to renew their firearms certificates. Many of these people where in possession of weapons which were illegal in the United Kingdom. These included High Velocity semi automatic rifles and semi automatic pistols. Faced with the level of law breaking we decided that we would not arrest immediately but instead gave a widely publicised period of several months for people to license their weapons with the warning of strict action if they did not do so.
14. This was met with a political storm and bitter criticism of our arrogance and of acting at odds with the wishes of the politicians to whom “we were accountable”, including from some members of the Home Affairs Committee. Strenuous attempts were made to intimidate us into not taking action with allegations that we were ‘Brits’ who did not understand the Jersey way of life. I was accused of “trying to turn Jersey into Basingstoke.”
15. After the period had passed, astonishingly, a large number of people had not bothered to renew their licenses. We started arresting them. Included among them were Police officers, States and Honorary, politicians, lawyers and other prominent members of the Jersey community. Most pleaded guilty and were given small fines by the Magistrate who was to state recently that the States Police had been “out of control for several years now, acting as if they thought they were a politically independent organisation.” He is now the Home Affairs Minister.
16. At the same time as we were trying to enforce the law, we were trying to discover the extent of the possession of high velocity and semi automatic weapons on the island, as well as to discover the thoroughness or otherwise of the checks and background enquiries made before a certificate was granted for someone to possess weapons such as those. This also caused a furore with one politician in government saying to me “This is not Dunblane sonny.” However, what we discovered made me fear, and I still do, that some day in the future Jersey will fall victim to the type of gun tragedy seen so often in the USA, the UK and elsewhere.
17. We discovered that over 10,000 firearms were probably held on certificate in Jersey for a population of around 80,000. Six and a half million rounds of ammunition could be held on certificate at any one time. This did not include the stock of firearms dealers. From 2001 to 2006 of 1843 certificates granted, only three had been revoked and only six applications refused. Of the ten registered dealers in Jersey, three of them operated out of private houses.
18. Four parishes were failing to comply with the law by holding firearms certificate documentation from the States of Jersey Police despite being requested to do so. Disturbingly, no risk assessment process was in place for assessing the applications received for possessing firearms. Home visits were a rarity and arrangements for storing firearms were rarely checked. Three particular cases stand out in my mind.
19. One man applied for a firearm and ammunition for the purpose of ‘pest control.’ The firearm in question is classified as for the purpose of hunting large game such as elk.
20. Another family in an outlying parish were known to have twenty high powered and semi automatic weapons in a cellar on their property. They also had thousands of rounds of ammunition. When visited by SOJ Police officers they were also found to have six months supply of tinned food and bottled water. They said they were waiting for word from God. The Connetable refused to revoke the certificate.
21. One man whom we had found had built up an arsenal of weapons was first granted a certificate in 1985. In 1992 he was convicted of Possessing a Prohibited weapon, supplying controlled drugs and other crimes. In 1993 he tried to purchase a shotgun whilst prohibited by the law. In 1995 intelligence was received that he was supplying controlled drugs. In 1996 he applied for and was granted a new firearms certificate by the Connetable. In 2006 he held the following weapons:
a. 1 x .30 semi automatic carbine*
b. 2 x 7.62 semi automatic rifles*
c. 1 x 7.62 bolt action rifle
d. 1 x .303 bolt action rifle
e. 1 x 5.56 semi automatic rifle* – as used the British Army
f. 5 x .357 Magnum handguns
g. 2 x 9x21 self loading pistol
h. 1 x 9x19 semi automatic carbine* - similar to that used by the Police
i. 1 x Pump action shotgun
j. 2 x Semi automatic shotguns*
k. 1 x .50 revolver **; and
l. 1 x .50 rifle **
m. 183,000 rounds of ammunition for the above weapons
(*a semi automatic function allows repeat firing, e.g. over 20 rounds every 10 seconds)
(** This calibre would require military support to challenge in any criminal use as it is so powerful)
22. Throughout all of this, the States of Jersey Police and we, the senior management team in particular, were being heavily criticised in the States for trying to interfere in the Jersey way of life and its culture. Politicians and Parish officials were blocking every attempt to try and introduce some control over the possession of firearms which were illegal everywhere else in the British Isles.
23. The most serious difficulties with the Criminal Justice system however (before the Historic Abuse Enquiry) arose when we started to deal with the small number of corrupt police officers and staff in the force. It proved impossible to get any prosecutions even when the evidence appeared overwhelming. Things got so bad that I eventually charged one officer with less serious offences which did not need the Attorney General’s authority. Even our efforts here led to constant criticism in the States of wasted money and of not understanding Jersey’s culture. Politicians even met with and assisted corrupt police officers and their dishonest associates to mount high profile campaigns alleging that they had been wrongly treated. There were a number of particularly high profile cases in which the Jersey establishment seemed to treat police corruption as a minor matter which should be left alone. I can enlarge on them all but here will only illustrate with examples.
24. We arrested the Head of the Information Technology Department and his two most senior members of staff, including the Information Security Officer, following a tip off from within the department that they had used police funds to purchase expensive IT equipment for home use. When we investigated we found that this was correct. They had purchased the equipment with police funds, had it delivered to Police Headquarters, and then taken it home. Enquiries established that they had used the illegally bought equipment to download hundreds of sexually explicit images at home as well as illegal software. Two of them stored nude photos of their wives on the computers. One had lent a computer purchased with police money to a family member to go to University in the UK. Another had also purchased expensive computer audio studio equipment with police funds and had taken it home to further his music hobby. The three were suspended on full pay. We immediately came under attack from politicians who alleged a waste of money and that we were infringing their human rights. No action was taken against them by the Attorney General’s department. Two were eventually disciplined and sacked, the third resigned. However, with the support of politicians they continued to complain that they had been unfairly treated.
25. A detective officer was found to be selling intelligence to a female informant in return for sex. He admitted the offences. No prosecution was authorised. He resigned before discipline proceedings.
26. Evidence was found linking one officer with the importation of half a million pounds worth of cannabis onto the island. Amongst other things, a map of the drop site with the location marked was found in his car. Other evidence was found linking him and a female colleague with supplying and possession of drugs. No proceedings were instigated.
27. There were two cases however which starkly illustrated the problems in dealing with corruption within Jersey, the links between corrupt police officers and politicians, and the organised manner in which efforts to counter corruption where being obstructed. Both of these cases were to impact on the later Historic Abuse Enquiry.
28. The first was the case of a Special Branch Detective Nigel Gregory.
29. In late 2004 and early 2005 intelligence was received that Gregory, a Detective Constable in Special Branch, was linked to the criminal fraternity and may have passed information from police systems to criminal gangs operating in Jersey. This was in addition to numerous informal reports that, over a period of years in Special Branch and other departments, Gregory had indulged in a number of sexual relationships outside of his marriage, some of them in police time and some of them with females linked to crime. What was of particular concern about his extra marital activities was that his post in Special Branch gave him access to ‘Secret’ and ‘Top Secret’ material relating to domestic and international terrorism. He was also a member and a trainer in our covert surveillance team. This caused some concern in respect of the company he was keeping and his vulnerability to pressure.
30. Early investigations through telephone billing showed that Gregory was linked to a woman with serious crime connections by the name of Susan Carre. Consequently I authorised a series of evidential covert surveillance, both intrusive and non intrusive as part of the operation. Among the measures I authorised were video surveillance in the hall just outside the SB office, and then in the office itself. I authorised listening devices in his private vehicle, in the Special Branch vehicle, and in the SB offices at the Harbour and Airport.
31. It soon became apparent that Gregory was involved in extra marital affairs with a number of women, two of which became the subject of criminal and Discipline investigations. These were his relationships with Susan Carre, and Estelle Calvez (a foreign national). It emerged during the investigation that he had passed secret information to Carre about a terrorist investigation, revealing to her that three people were in custody when no one knew about the arrests. This could have had severe consequences for the operation and indeed, for the security of the island. It also transpired during the investigation that he had allowed Calvez into a restricted Special Branch Office on more than one occasion and that during one of these visits she gave him a massage. He and she were also seen on camera kissing and embracing before she was seen to spend some time examining confidential police files, some of which related to international terrorism. He was also recorded on another occasion divulging almost the whole of a Confidential Criminal Intelligence Report on a local criminal to his wife and brother, with the intention of having it revealed to the subject of the report. This was obtained from the listening device in his car and was evidential.
32. A criminal file was submitted to the Attorney General. Despite the evidence he refused to prosecute. One of the reasons given was that police officers did not come within the Official Secrets Act. This seems strange when one considers the enquiry, which I will refer to later, about the leaking of a memo from me (critical of the AG) and which witnesses have been told is an Official Secrets Act enquiry. (A number of UK journalists and a prominent Jersey politician have approached me and told me that they have been asked to implicate me in the leaking of the document.) The Attorney General’s decision caused consternation throughout the force as Gregory’s activities were well known and it was recognised that this would make the job of tackling corruption even more difficult. There was to be a further dimension later when Gregory actively tried to discredit the Historic Abuse Enquiry, but I will cover that in more detail later. Gregory was disciplined and on 20th April 2006. He appeared before the Chief Officer, pleading Guilty to the following eleven discipline charges:
a. Breach of Confidentiality – where he passed secret information on by text to Carre about the detention of three terrorist suspects in Jersey. Carre was not only having a sexual relationship with Gregory but was a convicted criminal and a close associate of drug dealing gangs. This was an ongoing investigation and these suspects were in custody when he revealed details to her. The consequences of that could have been far reaching for the investigation and the island.
b. Breach of Confidentiality – caught on a recording device passing on the content of a confidential Police intelligence report to his brother and wife with the intention of it being passed to the subject of the report.
c. General Conduct - having an improper relationship with a woman (Carre) with close criminal contacts - they were both seen by officers in the same locations. She admitted the sexual relationship, and in six months there were a total of fifty calls between them on their mobile phones. Examination of text messages between the two showed the use of pet names such as “hun” and “kisses” on some messages.
d. Breach of Confidentiality - allowing a member of the public (Estelle Calves) into the Restricted Special Branch office. They were caught on a camera which was placed outside the office.
e. As Number 4. On this occasion the video was inside the office and she was seen to give him a massage, they were seen to kiss and embrace, and she was seen wandering around the office reading notices, documents on walls and notice boards and to examine documents in trays and on desks. These documents related to police and security matters, among them documents on domestic and international terrorism. She spent over half an hour in the office.
f. General Conduct – this relates to them kissing and embracing in the SB office.
g. General Conduct – relating to him being in possession of a number of police documents, some considered “secret” at his home address. One such document contained the full personal details of a man he had contact with who was a potential agent for the police or British Intelligence in Northern Ireland. If this document had fallen into the wrong hands it could have had fatal consequences for the subject.
h. Having at home, a copy of a custody record relating to a friend of his who had been arrested. Gregory was not involved in the case. He refused to give any explanation.
i. Mis-handling of exhibits which were found in his possession.
j. Performance of Duties – various unauthorised absences from work.
k. Using States of Jersey Police information systems for his own personal business on frequent occasions.
33. He was ordered to resign as an alternative to dismissal.
34. In June 2006 Gregory approached the Jersey Evening Post and told them that he had voluntarily resigned because he had been badly treated over ‘procedural mistakes.” The paper, which has well known and established links with the Government and in particular the Chief Minister at the time, published a joint article with Roy Gallichan, an ex officer who resigned when he was facing a catalogue of discipline offences relating to his use of drugs, the making of pornographic videos featuring him and a serving female officer (which he left for his wife to see,) his involvement in the importation by air of half a million pounds worth of cannabis (a crime which was solved by the Professional Standards Department) and falsely claiming to be sick when in fact he was drinking in a pub. Two politicians who were to be instrumental in persuading the Attorney General to prevent us later charging a corrupt businessman (Roy Boschat) in another police corruption enquiry were among those who gave very public support to him. In a further display of the links between all of these matters, the businessman mentioned above and his sister were extremely active in trying to discredit the Historic Abuse Enquiry and smear the officers involved. They became involved in another Professional Standards Investigation in respect of corrupt activities surrounding towing services.
35. The first intelligence in respect of this came from a member of the Fire Brigade Staff who told police that two police officers were in a corrupt relationship with Roy Boschat, a local towing contractor.
36. On 30th March 2005, Edward Pippon of No 1 Recovery Company told Professional Standards that two police officers were getting petrol free of charge or cheaply from Boschat. He identified one of them as “Osmand” (Constable Sean Osmand). He alleged that this was in return for corrupt manipulation of the breakdown call out rota system.
37. The enquiry was stepped up a day later --on 31 March 2005 when information was received from two local members of the public, one of them a member of the legal profession, and another who worked for one of the other Vehicle Recovery Companies. The former alleged to Professional Standards that she had seen Constable Sean Osmand drawing diesel for his vehicle from the petrol pumps at Roy Boschat’s place of business. She was aware that Boschat was one of the Towing contractors who provided a service to the police, and that he was not licensed to sell diesel. The witness was suspicious of the fact that a police officer was obtaining fuel for his private vehicle from Boschat’s pumps.
38. The second witness supplied information to the effect that calls from the police which should have gone to the other recovery firms were in fact going to Boschat.
39. On 31 March, police spoke to another witness called LE Claire, who had been at an accident where a driver wanted to call another breakdown firm, but the police officers had tried to insist on Boschat being called. He told police that he knew of other people who had been told by police officers that they used Roy Boschat even when they didn’t have to.
40. A check was made of the record of call outs and it was found that whereas there were three main operators looking for police business, Boschat was at times, getting nearly 90% of that business. An instruction was made that the rota should be adhered to and each of the three contractors called out in turn.
41. In October 2005, allegations were received from the two other main contractors on the island that they were being unfairly disadvantaged by virtue of the fact that they were getting little business from the States of Jersey Police. They again alleged that this was due to a corrupt relationship between two police officers and Mr Boschat. They again named one of the two police officers as Constable Sean Osmand. They alleged that the officers received cheap or free diesel for their private vehicles, were given the use of four digit number plates, and that both officers had been to Boschat’s villa in Spain free of charge.
42. The investigation was recommenced, and the records of who police called out in respect of breakdowns were checked once more. It was found that despite the previous warning, Boschat still received over 90% of the call outs. An instruction was issued ordering officers to adhere to the strict rotation policy which was in place. A covert investigation was launched but was curtailed shortly afterwards when the member of the public referred to in para. 2, fell out with her employer and went to work for Roy Boschat. Shortly after that, police were told by her ex-employer, Edward Pippon of No. 1 Recovery, that she had warned Boschat the police were looking at him and his police friends.
43. In November 2005, a further complaint was received from the two contractors stating that they were being driven out of business by virtue of the fact that Boschat was still getting almost all of the calls. Police records confirmed this, and investigations revealed that the system was being manipulated by some officers going to accidents and breakdowns and calling Boschat on their private mobile phones. They were then falsely entering on official records that the member of the public had called Boschat themselves. The most regular offender was Constable Sean Osmand.
44. Enquiries continued, and it became clear that Boschat was friendly with a number of police officers. Information was also received that many officers had received free services from him in clear breach of integrity guidelines and policies. These services included free holidays at his villa in Spain, the towing of vehicles, and on a couple of occasions, the towing of boats back from France. I took a decision however, that because of the different attitudes to this behaviour by previous senior officers now retired, and where officers might have had no corrupt intent, they should be given the opportunity to reveal such transgressions without fear of penalty. Accordingly, DI Alan Aubert, Head of PSD, sent out an e mail to all personnel requesting that any person who had been in receipt of items such as free holidays, use of his Spanish Villa, or towing services should declare them. This was sent out on 24th May 2006. It was followed by the same declaration in force orders on 7th June, and the deadline was set for the 18th June.
45. All in all, sixteen or more officers came forward, including one of the officers who was a suspect along with Boschat. They were all offered immunity from discipline, although not from criminal proceedings. The officer who was an initial suspect with Boschat made full admissions and gave a statement of his knowledge of other officers’ dealings with Boschat. There was no evidence of criminal offences in relation to him. Osmand did not come forward.
46. Officers who had worked with Osmand gave statements saying that Osmand and Boschat had enjoyed a close relationship, with Boschat giving free loan of various vehicles to Osmand, together with the supply of various services. They had also exchanged vehicle plates and registrations, some of which were later to be the subject of criminal proceedings as Osmand had checked these on the police systems. Osmand had bought vehicles off Boschat which had been recovered in the course of their work and joint misuse of the police systems and procedures.
47. In an attempt to make the breakdown call out system fairer and to reduce our vulnerability to allegations of corruption, I gave orders that in future all tow companies were to be called out in strict rotation and that it had to be through the Force Control Room. I then found out that in order to circumvent this instruction, Osmand was using his mobile phone to call Boschat. I ordered that this was to cease.
48. On a number of occasions we were able to see from billing on Osmand’s mobile phone that he had contravened this instruction and had called Boschat to the scene of incidents on his mobile. This included instances where he did not tell the FCR that there was a need for a tow away, and even occasions where he told lies to the Control Room by stating that no tow truck was called when he had brought Boschat out by means of his mobile phone. Members of the public gave evidence confirming this. On occasions he made false entries in police documents to this effect.
49. On one occasion Osmand was recorded telling Boschat to submit “f---ing silly bills.” This was on an evidential audio source.
50. A file was submitted to the Attorney General seeking the prosecution of Osmand and Boschat for Bribery and Corruption. However, the new corruption laws, which would have made a prosecution much easier, were not in place, and no case was brought. I however, then decided to prosecute Osmand for a number of less serious offences for which the Attorney General’s authority was not needed. Osmand was charged with offences of Misuse of Computers, and was convicted of five such charges in the Magistrates court, including one where he publicly labelled an innocent member of the public as a drink driver in order to try and escape the charge. A police officer who gave evidence on his behalf but who was forced to retract her evidence in court as “an error” was given words of advice for poor judgement. Osmand is now a convicted ex police officer.
51. A post script to this is that a female police employee whom Osmand was having an extra marital affair with pleaded guilty at a Discipline Hearing to carrying out unauthorised and improper checks on the police computers at the request of Osmand.
52. Boschat gave evidence on behalf of Osmand but admitted in the witness box, under oath, that he had asked his friend Osmand to carry out illegal checks of vehicles on the police computer systems. A few days later he approached another police officer and made admissions of a similar nature.
53. Authority was sought to charge Boschat with inciting a police officer (Osmand) to carry out improper checks and disclose information from the police intelligence systems. This authority was granted by Mr Laurence O’Donnell, a Legal Advisor working at Police Headquarters, although one of the Attorney General’s staff. Arrangements were made to do so.
54. Thirty minutes before Boschat was due to be charged, the Attorney General ordered that he should not be. It emerged that he had been visited by two politicians who had connections with the case who asked him to stop the charging. These were Deputy Sarah Ferguson and Deputy Colin Egre. Both of these politicians were associates of Boschat and both had served in the Honorary Police with him. Both had met with him, Gregory, and other corrupt ex officers frequently and with them had conducted a high profile media campaign to stop the Professional Standards anti corruption enquiries. Ferguson and Egre have recently publicly admitted their roles in this saga.
55. I challenged the Law Officers Department about this turn around and the effect it would have on our efforts to combat corruption. I was told by Laurence O’Donnell that the Attorney General merely wanted to review the evidence and would come back to me in a few days. I questioned the need for the AG to take this unusual step when one of his most senior lawyers had already given authority to charge. The days turned into weeks without word from the Attorney General.
56. Several weeks later, at the beginning of March 2008 I e-mailed Laurence O’Donnell and asked him what the current situation was with the AG’s considerations in respect of Boschat. I know that Laurence immediately forwarded my e mail to the AG. I did not even receive an acknowledgement.
57. On Saturday -29th March 2008 I sent another e mail to Laurence O’Donnell in which I told him that I had received a query from the Guernsey Press about Boschat. I told Laurence that the media were asking about the charges against Boschat and the fact that politicians had intervened in his charging. I said that I had confirmed that he had admitted under oath in open court that he had instigated a search of police systems by a convicted cop and that we had the transcript. I confirmed that following advice from the Law Officers we were within a short time of charging him. I told Laurence that I had confirmed to the media that Boschat was not charged on the instructions of the Attorney General and that this followed a visit from two politicians who were close to Boschat. I confirmed that the AG had not been back to us. I told Laurence that the media were preparing a story and were linking it to the allegations of interference with police operations. I told him I felt I had no choice but to confirm what I did or I would have been misleading them.
58. On the morning of Monday 31st March 2008 I received instructions from Laurence O’Donnell that the AG had given us the authority to charge Boschat. At a meeting with the AG in the presence of my Chief Officer, I asked the AG why he had not got back to us until the media intervened. He replied, “I forgot about it.” From charge until August 2008, Boschat was granted a number of adjournments at court for rather unusual and surprising reasons. As widely predicted, a few days after I left the island on retirement all charges were dropped against him and he was awarded costs.
59. During this enquiry, Boschat wrote dozens and dozens of abusive letters which he has sent either to me or to others about me. They were sent to the media, to politicians, and included mention of my home and car being firebombed, and many letters circulated widely by him accusing me of lying and of having “a sick and twisted mind.” Throughout this he continued to be strongly supported by a number of Jersey politicians. I was accused of breaching his human rights. He, Gregory, and three other corrupt ex officers made formal complaints which have all so far been found to be vexatious or unsubstantiated. The one exception is the complaint by Boschat which because of the drawn out legal action has not finished yet.
60. It was sometime around this period, that the Chief Officer Graham Power, so alarmed at the overt attempts to control our operational activities, took advice from HMIC, and, I believe, another Chief Constable of one of the off shore islands.
61. An interesting postscript to this was the overwhelming support of many involved in that commercial area in Jersey. One example was a letter from the Managing Director of ‘Bel Royal Motors’ who thanked me for the action I had taken over the accident recovery services. He said that the system was now much fairer and that because it was now done on customer satisfaction and quality, companies like his could benefit.
62. Another one of the group who complained about me and who was active in the meetings with Boschat, Gregory, and the politicians above, is a former police officer and civilian member of staff by the name of Robert Roscouet. He is a man who was forced to resign from the service for making Racist remarks to a Portuguese police officer, having already had a record of inappropriate comments to colleagues. At the time this occurred I was Head of Operations and had no part whatsoever in the discipline proceedings which followed. These were dealt with by my predecessor. The only connection that I had to this case came about because the detective officer who had the courage to report him had his property vandalized in the CID office. I, together with the then Superintendent Pearson, gathered the whole of the CID together and warned them that if there was one more incident of this nature we would send every one of them back to uniform and rebuild the CID from scratch. Other than that I had only one further connection with this man. This was when he went to the Jersey Evening Post at the time when Boschat and Gregory, together with Deputies Ferguson and Egre were trying to drum up publicity for their malicious complaints. Roscouet, for some bizarre reason told the JEP that I was involved in his “unjustified sacking.” He then handed over the whole file of his case to the newspaper, including, inadvertently I presume, the record of his previous discipline matters which contained details of his previous inappropriate behaviour. I think that I issued a press statement of a fairly bland nature which drew attention to the fact that he himself had delivered documents describing his record of racist behaviour to the press. Other than this, I was not involved with in any way with the case of Roscouet.
63. Although I will cover the Abuse enquiry in detail below, it is worth noting that shortly after we went public with it, the sister of Roy Boschat sent letters and e mails to most of the news desks of British newspapers rubbishing the investigation and trying to smear me, stating that I was “guilty of abuse.”
64. For some time, Legal Advisor Laurence O’Donnell and I had been concerned at the difficulty in prosecuting paedophiles in cases of historic abuse. This had been exacerbated by difficulties over the case of Paul Every, who was the commanding officer of the Jersey Sea Cadets and who was also a senior civil servant in the Chief Minister’s office. He was arrested as part of the national “Operation Ore” where the FBI had netted thousands of suspects who had used their credit cards to pay for internet sites involving child pornography. He was one of a number of senior Sea Cadet officers arrested for serious sexual crimes against children. After his arrest he had not been suspended from Sea Cadet activities and because of my concerns for the safety of the children involved, I disclosed the information about his arrest to the Sea Cadet authorities. Among the sites he had searched on his computer were a number involving “naked sea cadets” and other child pornography sites. The Sea Cadet authorities in Jersey were not responsive, telling me that a man “is innocent until proven guilty.” I eventually had to go to London and threaten to stand at the gates of the Sea Cadet HQ and disclose to individual parents before they took action.
65. The concerns led us in 2006 to start looking at cases which had been brought. Early on I became worried about one case where a retired senior police officer (Chief Inspector de la Haye) was implicated in passing information to paedophiles about a police investigation but did not appear to have been interviewed. It appeared that billing had been carried out on his telephones but had revealed nothing further. I was still uneasy and asked the investigating officer why de la Haye had not even been interviewed. She told me that she had been instructed not to by the then head of CID, Chief Inspector Bonjour. This was even more of a concern than it would have normally been as the Head of CID was also an officer in the Jersey Sea Cadets. That concern was heightened even more when I discovered that the suspect’s phone that had been billed was actually his wife’s phone. There was no mention of this fact anywhere in the police documentation. The investigating officers denied knowledge of that fact. I was told by the senior officer concerned that no phone could be found for de la Haye. Within twenty minutes of starting enquiries I had traced a phone to him and found that it was the phone he had when he left the force and in fact it had been given to him as a retirement present.
66. Word was seeping out around the force of our interest and two officers came to see me. One of them told me of problems he had with the same senior officer (de la Haye) in an enquiry he was carrying out at Victoria College. I received a report from him in which he stated that he was one of the investigating officers in the case against a man called Jervis Dykes who was a teacher at Victoria College. Allegations were being made against Dykes that he abused children whilst on outings of the Combined Cadet Force (Naval Section) or on sailing trips around Jersey and to Greece. Dykes was later convicted of a number of indecency offences.
67. The officer told me that he tried to make enquiries at St Helier Yacht Club as it was alleged that Dykes took the boys there. However, he was prevented from doing so by the then CI de la Haye, who told the detective that he was not to attend the club without de la Haye going with him. When the detective went to the club with de la Haye he was not allowed to see the club register but had dates read out to him by the Chief Inspector.
68. The Club Secretary however arranged for the detective to see the register without CI de la Haye being present and the detective discovered that a group of senior officers including de la Haye attended the club frequently when Dykes was there with students.
69. The officer remembers being under great pressure to drop the case involving Victoria College as it was doing harm to the reputation of the institution. He remembers receiving threats that his career would be damaged. He recalls also that exhibits were going missing, resulting in them having to be locked away in the Detective Inspector’s safe.
70. The Detective also remembered interviewing the Deputy Headmaster and being told by the Deputy Head that Dykes had assaulted the boys as “payment for the time he provided in taking the boys sailing.” The officer also revealed that one of his supervisors was a close personal friend of the Deputy Head. Another officer remembers that this supervisor had at least one child at the college.
71. Despite the fact that the investigation was escalating, the Detective was removed from the team and returned to normal duties.
72. A second officer came to see me and informed me that a year before he had submitted a report to the Head of CID, CI Andre Bonjour in which he had requested that a historic abuse enquiry should be launched into the former care home at Haut de la Garenne. This was in response to the large number of allegations which had been made to him by former residents that they had been abused whilst in the home. The report was submitted to CI Bonjour who was also the officer who had prevented de la Haye from being interviewed as mentioned earlier. However, nothing ever materialised from Mr Bonjour and the officer had heard nothing. Eventually an enquiry was carried out by South Yorkshire Police into the allegations against the Head of CID but it was still pending when I retired.
73. Eventually it was decided that we should go public with the enquiry and we did so in mid November 2007. For some time before that there had been a political controversy raging on the island over the fact that the Health Minister, Senator Stuart Syvret, was trying to draw attention to abuse of children within the Jersey Care System. He was eventually dismissed from the government as a direct result of his efforts. Although we were aware that we had evidence which supported what he was saying, we could not disclose to him. However the day before we were due to go public we heard that a BBC television crew were on way to the island to make a documentary in which they would be speaking to Senator Syvret and some victims. We decided to brief him on the enquiry, both to make him aware of the need not to say anything which might endanger our investigation, but also to seek his assistance.
74. The next morning we issued our press release, informing the public of our investigation and appealing for victims and witnesses to come forward. I sent both Senator Syvret and the Chief Minister a copy of our Press Release in advance. A few hours after the Press Conference I was summoned to the Chief Minister’s Office. He attempted to admonish me for talking to Senator Syvret. I explained my reasons. He instructed me to remove the word ‘victims’ from my press releases as they were not victims “until someone was convicted.” I refused to do so and was supported in this by the Home Affairs Minister who was present at the meeting. I was then asked by either the Chief Minister or Bill Ogley, his Chief Executive, if I realised that this investigation “could bring down the government.” I replied that his was not my problem - it was a police investigation and “it would have to remain as such.”
75. The response to the initial press appeal was overwhelming. We had enlisted the aid of the NSPCC in the UK as victims had made it clear they would not co-operate with the enquiry if there was any involvement of the Jersey “caring agencies.” The NSPCC said it was the largest response they had ever had to one of these appeals. However, it became clear that there were people in Jersey who did not want the enquiry. A few days following the summons to the Chief Minister’s office, I was contacted by several journalists in London, and told that they and others had received letters or e mails from a woman who turned out to be the sister of Roy Boschat, the corrupt towing contractor mentioned earlier in this document. She warned the recipients not to trust me and that I was “guilty of abuse.” At the same time Senator Stuart Syvret, contacted me to tell me that Nigel Gregory, the former Special Branch Detective, had telephoned him with a similar message.
76. As regards the enquiry, we were getting some disturbing information from some of the victims. Two said they had knowledge of human remains at the site but could not be specific. Several said they had witnessed children being dragged from their beds and who were not seen again. One witness described seeing a resident being chased along a top floor and then saw the girl leap out of the window. The children were all ushered away at that point.
77. A local advocate came to us and told us that he had a client who had seen a body at the home, although he did not want to be identified at that time.
78. All of this information gave us a dilemma. There was not enough concrete evidence to go into Haut de la Garenne and start digging the location up. However, there was just enough to make it impossible for us to ignore. If we did, and something was discovered later, it is easy to imagine the criticism we would face. Furthermore, it was just not conceivable that we should ignore what the victims were telling us. Accordingly, I arranged to go to the United Kingdom where I met with a number of experts to discuss the way forward. I also went to London and consulted with the Head of the National Policing Improvement who agreed to provide assistance.
79. On 5th February 2008, I went to the offices of LGC Forensics in Oxford. I was accompanied by our Head of Forensic Services and our Operational Security Officer. Also at the meeting were a Forensic Archaeologist who had once been a Scenes of Crime Officer, an Anthropologist, Homicide Search Experts and advisors from the National Policing Improvement Agency, and a canine consultancy agency. A briefing was distributed which had been prepared by Karl Harrison, lead scientist at LGC, and was a desk based study of the HDLG site.
80. After discussion the meeting decided that the way forward would be for a screening of the site to be carried out. This would establish whether or not there was any justification for further work or excavation at the location. It was envisaged this would take three to four days.
81. On 19th February this screening process started with a team attending HDLG. Present were myself, the Forensic Services Manager, NPIA Homicide Search Advisors, and LGC Forensic staff representing Forensic Anthropology and Archaeology.
82. What happened next is well documented. I have attached at the end of this affidavit, a document prepared by myself and my team which describes in great detail actions taken and the reasons and justification for them. It is important because it puts in context what we did and shows the step by step evidence based approach we adopted. It gives the lie to the allegations widely circulated by Jersey Government Ministers that our enquiry team simply went in and dug up HDLG at massive cost with no justification and on the word of “a few unreliable people.” This was a phrase used by a Jersey Government Minister (another government minister described them as “disturbed people with criminal records”) and, astonishingly, by a senior Metropolitan Police Officer who was asked by the current leadership of the force to provide a report on the enquiry. He used this phrase when he eventually came to interview me. I will deal with this in more detail below.
83. At the same time as we were working at HDLG evidence was building up from victims of the volume of sexual and physical abuse which went on at the former home. I now felt that we had sufficient evidence to charge the first suspect and I received the go ahead to do so from the Legal Advisors. However, as in the Boschat case, shortly before the man was due to be charged, the Attorney General instructed Laurence O’Donnell to tell me not to charge. Unfortunately, there was a “misunderstanding” between Laurence and myself and the charge went ahead. The man was subsequently convicted.
84. The Attorney General had appointed lawyers to work on the case and advise us. The two lawyers concerned were one who had worked for many years at the AG’s office, and another who carried out much of the Attorney General’s financial crime work. After negotiation, I agreed that before charging any suspects I would let them have the completed file. They undertook to get the file back to us in a matter of a few days. It did not evolve in that way.
85. Some months later, the Attorney General tried to force me to have a lawyer appointed by him actually based in our incident room. I refused, as this would have meant him having access to all our raw intelligence and information. Whilst I was happy to work closely with lawyers I felt that in these circumstances where we were frequently receiving allegations of cover up and failure to deal properly with cases by the authorities, having one of the AG’s lawyers actually sitting in our incident room looking at all our information and intelligence before it got anywhere near a prosecution file, would seriously undermine our credibility with the victims, and gave rise to fears that they would be let down again. We reached a compromise where I agreed that the AG would supply an “independent, specialist child abuse lawyer” from the UK who would be based in an office in Police Headquarters and who would have access to officers in cases and vice versa. All files would go to him and he would turn them around quickly with advice on charging. Again, the reality was different.
86. The lawyer appointed was a man called Simon Thomas from London. He came from the chambers which did a lot of the Attorney General’s financial crime work. It transpired later that the chambers he worked from had earned millions of pounds from the Jersey Attorney General’s office for fraud work, and that the AG and other senior Jersey legal figures had close links with the chamber. Mr Thomas was not a specialist child abuse lawyer although he said one of the female lawyers who worked with him was. On a personal basis I related well with him but the delays in even simple matters and the difficulty in reaching him was to cause great frustration to my team as he seemed to spend most of his time in the UK. This was to come to a head later in the ‘Bonner’ case.
87. Complaints were coming to us from victims all over the world. A number of victims who had previously reported abuse and who felt that the system had let them down by failing to prosecute also contacted us. One such case was that of the Maguire’s.
88. In 1997 allegations of sexual and physical abuse were made against Alan and Jane Maguire by a number of young men and women who had been children in their care at a Jersey home in the 1980’s. The Maguire’s were interviewed in January 1998 although no questions about the allegations of sexual abuse were put to them. They were both charged with a number of assault charges including Grave and Criminal Assault on children. They pleaded not guilty.
89. At a subsequent stage it was agreed between the Legal Advisors and the defence that documents going to the court would have all references to sexual abuse removed from them. (Consequently when we started examining the file we knew nothing of any allegations of sexual abuse.)
90. The committal took place in June 1998. Evidence was given by a number of victims. During the evidence of one of them, Alan Maguire apparently took ill. The Magistrate decided that there was a case to answer and committed the case to the Royal Court. At about this time a member of the Jersey Caring Agencies gave a statement to police saying she had reported her concerns about the child care practices of the Maguires in the early 1990’s.
91. Four months after the committal to the Royal Court by the Magistrate, the Police Legal Advisor sent a memo to the Attorney General expressing his concern over the way the Magistrate had handled the Committal and mentions that Maguire may be terminally ill. He states in the memo that compassion might be a reason to abandon the prosecution. The Attorney General then in November declares he is discontinuing the case because of insufficient evidence, despite the Magistrate’s committal to the Royal Court.
92. In February 1999, Jersey’s Mental Health Manager completed an internal enquiry into the behaviour of Mrs Maguire. He concluded that on his own investigation and that of the police there was sufficient evidence to show that Mrs Maguire whilst employed at the care home had inflicted and allowed severe physical punishment on children, had inflicted and allowed physical abuse, and had inflicted and allowed psychological abuse on the children in her care. He recommended her dismissal. In June 1999, the Maguires moved to France.
93. I had a pair of officers look at the Maguire file again and they started to re-interview witnesses. During that process, we discovered the fact that allegations of sexual abuse had also been made in 1997, but had not been proceeded with as part of the investigation. The officers also obtained new evidence of sexual abuse and eventually in April 2008, a file was submitted to Simon Taylor the lawyer acting on the Attorney General’s behalf in our investigation.
94. Meanwhile at the end of March 2008, Panorama broadcast a programme in which they ‘door stepped ‘Alan Maguire in France and put allegations of abuse to them. He reacted quite aggressively and appeared in good health with no obvious signs of the terminal illness he apparently was suffering from ten years before. It is a fact that when I left we had not managed to trace the source of the information about him being terminally ill.
95. On 20th May the investigating officers and their supervisor attended a meeting with Simon Thomas to discuss the evidence. I was told by one of the original two lawyers that he was working with Simon Thomas on the case and they had about one and a half days work left before they would raise indictments to begin the extradition process.
96. Several days later I was told by Simon Thomas that there were problems surrounding the process of the intended extradition in respect of whether we could extradite for the old matters as well as the new. To quicken things up I spoke to the lawyer in Jersey who had drafted the law as well as a CPS lawyer in London who was their expert on extradition. I passed the information onto Simon Thomas.
97. Meantime, the investigating officers were having some difficulty in getting replies to e mails they were sending Simon Thomas, on one occasion having to send three requests for information.
98. In the middle of June we were informed that the Attorney General had asked for a full report on the “constitutional and legal implications” of extraditing the Maguires from France. I challenged the lawyers on the need for this as extradition from France was not new and it would cause further delay and consternation for our victims. On 18th June I received an e mail from the Crown Advocate undertaking to furnish the Attorney General with the requested report within seven days. I passed this e mail to the detective investigating.
99. On the 26th June, eight days later, the Investigating Officer asked the lawyer what the AG’s advice was. The following day Simon Thomas telephoned to say that it had not gone to the AG yet but it would be going soon. He also said that the investigators would not get a copy of the advice to the AG.
100. The Investigating Officers then came into possession of more documentation from an advocate asked by the AG to review the Maguire case following the committal to the Royal Court. He gave a number of reasons why the case should be discontinued including the fact that Maguire was terminally ill. I am aware that the Attorney General has stated several times that the only reason was evidential and that this was supported by the Advocate concerned. However, I know this is not entirely accurate. That advocate on at least three of the charges either said that there was a prima facie case or that there was evidence to discredit the defendant. Furthermore, the reason for ‘lack of evidence’ on most of the others was either that it was on eye-witness account of witnesses as opposed to victims, or the victims were uncorroborated. The Magistrates ruling seems to have been summarily dismissed. The Advocate, like the Attorney General’s Legal Advisor makes a firm mention of Maguire’s apparent terminal illness. As I have said however, the AG denies that the decision was based on anything other than the evidence.
101. On the 29th July the Investigating detective met with Simon Thomas. Simon stated that the AG wanted to clarify that the decision to drop the charges against the Maguires was based purely on evidential standards. Police criticism of the fact that too much weight was placed on the purported terminal illness of Maguire was ill founded. Documents held by the Enquiry Team giving this impression were “badly worded,” and the Attorney General wanted to confirm that the decision was not public interest based. He also said that criticism from the police that there was no meeting between the police, Childrens’ services and the lawyers before the decision was made was incorrect. The AG said a meeting did take place. (However, the recollection of police officers and social workers concerned was that they were only told after the decision was made.) There was still no update on a decision from the Attorney General.
102. A week or so before I retired in August, the Attorney General informed us that he wanted to take the advice of a QC in the United Kingdom, but that particular person was unavailable and would not be so for some time. I heard nothing else after that. As far as I am aware, no further action has occurred in respect of the Maguires.
103. Another case which led to problems with the lawyers was that of the Bonners. We had firm evidence from a number of victims and witnesses that they had beaten children about the head with cricket bats. In accordance with agreed procedure we sent the file to Simon Thomas. After a delay, he told four of my officers that we should charge the Bonners with Grave and Criminal Assault– not the Jersey equivalent of Common Assault as first mooted, subject of course to any dramatic developments in interview. The Bonners were accordingly arrested early morning of the 24th June.
104. Nothing untoward happened during the period of custody. The female suspect feigned illness but the doctor saw through it and declared her fit for interview. At 5pm Simon Thomas telephoned the officers and told them he had changed his mind – they should not now be charged. The officers were extremely frustrated. I spoke to Simon who was sitting on a railway station platform in the North of England. The conversation was interrupted every few minutes because of trains going past. Simon said he had revised his opinion because of new evidence. I asked what that was and he gave me three things.
105. Firstly, the woman was unwell. I explained that this was not the case and that the doctor was happy for us to continue.
106. Secondly, he said that he was aware a witness by the name of Drake had telephoned the Custody Sergeant and told him that we had made a mistake. I pointed out that Drake had already made a statement which Simon had seen and read. Drake had added nothing new.
107. Thirdly, the Bonners’ children had telephoned and said that their parents were good people and that they, (the children) were flying to Jersey. I asked Simon how that was new evidence as opposed to character evidence. Simon replied that they might have evidence relevant to the allegation.
108. Simon then said that he needed to speak to his two colleagues in Jersey. He did so and telephoned back to say they agreed with him and that they wanted to see the interviews before we charged. I then said that it all made our arrangement pretty worthless, as he was supposed to tell us the charges. He then said he could not do that as things might change on interview. I pointed out that he had met my Deputy and other officers and that he had discussed the charges with them and told them to charge with Grave and Criminal Assault. He denied this. I said that this was not their recollection. I told him the effect that this would have on the victims and said I was not having the Enquiry team blamed for this. He finished by saying that operationally he could not tell me whether to ask the Honorary Police to charge or not.
109. In the circumstances I decided to call the Centenier into Police Headquarters to charge the couple. The Centenier came, spent over an hour reading the evidence then declared that although there was sufficient evidence to charge he could not go against the lawyer’s advice.
110. Accordingly I issued a Press Release in which I stated that following consultation with the lawyer appointed by the Attorney General, two people were arrested by the enquiry team in respect of three Grave and Criminal Assaults. I went on to say that” at 5pm, the lawyer revised his advice. Following discussion a Centenier was asked to attend and charge the suspects. Despite stating that the evidence was present, the Centenier declined to charge. The States of Jersey Police have no alternative but to release the suspects without charge.”
111. Immediately on their release, victims started to ring the NSPCC staff working with us. A typical comment was, “it is happening all over again. It is a cover up.”
112. The following day, the Attorney General ordered us to say nothing further to the media and demanded a report from me as to why I had released the press statement. I submitted the report detailing the chain of what I saw as shortcomings in the service we had received from his office. This report has already been served on the court but I attach a copy of it as Appendix 2.
113. There have been other aspects surrounding this enquiry which I have found extremely disturbing. Shortly after the investigation went public, Senator Syvret warned me that I should beware of the activities of the Honorary Police and stated that he feared they might instigate some form of retaliation on him. Prior to this, I had been stopped once by them in five years. Within a month of the enquiry going public I had been stopped four times. On no occasion did I produce my warrant card or state who I was, as the HP made it clear they wanted to check if I had been drinking and to examine my brakes and lights. I did however become wary of the frequency with which this was occurring, and started using my wife’s car for a week or so. I was not stopped in it. The next time I used my own car I was again stopped. This time, I was told by the Honorary Officer that it was “their usual checks.” On this occasion there was no mention of drinking or lights, so I assumed it was an identity and vehicle ownership check. Accordingly, I produced my warrant card, although the honorary Officer did not use a torch and could not have read it or seen the photo, only the badge. He said, “Ah, right. But I would still like to check your lights, indicators, and brake lights.” I immediately pocketed my warrant card and told him that was no problem at all. The checks were carried out, there was an exchange of polite pleasantries and I went on my way. There was no indication that he recognised me and in the darkness I did not see his face.
114. On the 27th December I received a letter from the Attorney General (the Titular Head of the HP), to say that a member of the Honorary force had written to make a complaint about my inappropriate use of my warrant card. The AG went on to say that it was alleged that I was told that the HP wanted to check my lights. I then produced a warrant card with my name on it. The AG said that police rules laid out the proper use of a warrant card. However, he went on to say that he was not treating it as a complaint against the police because the Honorary Officer was on duty. The AG added that this had caused a sufficient stir within the lower ranks of the Honorary Police, so much so that a formal complaint was made. He added that for the purpose of securing good relations with the Honorary Force I might be willing to write to him appropriately and he would copy it to the complainant.
115. I did respond to him, by letter and e mail. I outlined the facts as above, including the impossibility of him seeing my name on the warrant card. I told him that he was being misled and that I was well aware of the rules regarding warrant card use, and that a means of identity was one of those uses. I told him of the series of stops, and the lack of them when I used my wife’s car. I told him this could not have been a mistake, this was a deliberate attempt to smear me. I also questioned his statement that this had caused a stir among the lower ranks of the Honorary Police and asked why details of my stop were being bandied about. I pointed out although the HP officer was on duty, I was not, and therefore would like to ask about making a formal complaint. I also requested the record of the stop, the reasons for him discussing it with others, and why he should suddenly have had a problem after I left.
116. To this day I have not had an acknowledgement from the Attorney General.
117. In November 2008, three months after my retirement, the new SIO, Superintendent Michael Gradwell and my replacement as Deputy Chief, David Warcup, gave a press conference in which they totally misrepresented what I had been saying for some months. They stated that contrary to the impression I had given to the media, there was no evidence of murder, no suspects for murder, and no murder enquiry. They ‘apologised’ for the false impression I had given. This was despite the fact that they were saying nothing different from what I had been saying for some months. A number of journalists from the BBC and elsewhere telephoned me to ask what was going on, as they all remembered me saying just this. There are many, many records of me saying that I did not have sufficient evidence to mount a homicide enquiry. One of the most prominent is the BBC News website of 31st July which quotes me as saying that “unless the evidence changes, it is obvious that there will be no murder enquiry.”
118. Gradwell also said that I had misled the public about bones being identified as human and that only three bones had been identified as possibly human. He made no mention at that time of a statement by Andrew Chamberlain, an Anthropologist in the UK, who was given sixteen pieces of bone found in the same place by our onsite Anthropologist and identified the largest of them as human juvenile, burnt shortly after death, and buried shortly afterwards. Mr Chamberlain actually used the words “when burnt and buried the bones were fleshed and fresh.” This was recorded in her log by our onsite Anthropologist Julie Roberts. Neither Gradwell nor Warcup ever mentioned this. He stated that the bones were no more than a few decades old. The onsite Anthropologist logged the fact that these sixteen bones were positively human. Gradwell made no mention of that either.
119. Another allegation levelled at me and the abuse victims was that we had misled the public about the so called “cellars.” According to Gradwell and Warcup, there were no cellars, just floor voids “no deeper than three feet.” This was carried widely by the Jersey media, whom many members of the Jersey government have, and had, interests in. This was despite the fact that Robert Hall of the BBC’s Panorama programme had been filmed standing in the cellars and clearly showed they were in excess of six feet. This was shown even more clearly last year when Deputy Bob Hill, a Jersey politician, filmed himself in the cellars and showed that they are in excess of seven feet in some places. This film is available on ‘You Tube.’
120. Gradwell also briefed journalists that I had not kept the Policy Books correctly. This is despite the verdict of the ACPO Homicide Working Group Review Team, who carried out several reviews of the investigation and mentored myself and other officers. They concluded that the books were kept properly.
121. At the press conference Gradwell and Warcup also criticised me for “whipping up a media frenzy” about so called shackles that had been found. Gradwell told the press conference that there were no shackles, just rusty pieces of metal. He produced items which he said were these pieces of metal. He accused me of introducing the term shackles and thereby creating a media frenzy over nothing. However, he and Warcup both knew that it was not I who introduced the term ‘shackles’, but builders who had found the items five years before we did. They left them were they found them but when it became public that we were searching the building, one of the builders told the media, including the Jersey Evening Post, that the police would “find the shackles we found five years ago.” When I emerged from the building that afternoon I was asked by the media if we had found “shackles.” Despite my refusal to confirm, a journalist called Diane Simon, ran a story in the JEP the following day saying that we had found shackles although “Deputy Chief Officer Lenny Harper refused to confirm this.” Notwithstanding this, the same journalist ran another story after my retirement in which she accused me of introducing the term shackles and supported the Gradwell/Warcup assertion that I had whipped up the media frenzy.
122. At the same time as the Press Conference mentioned above, the Chief Officer of the States of Jersey Police was suspended. One of the reasons given was his failure to control my spending on the enquiry. This is despite the fact that when I told the media that financial considerations would be one of the factors I took into account on deciding my action, I received a severe admonishment from the Chief Minister’s office for mentioning finance. “It is irrelevant”, I was told. I was instructed that justice was the important aspect, not the cost. This was in an e mail, a copy of which I retain.
123. Some time ago I read that the Home Affairs Accounting Officer had said that much of the spending on the enquiry was ‘illegal’ and could not be justified. This was despite the fact that I had frequent meetings with him and exchanged e mails with him in which he acknowledged the operational need. He never concluded that anything I spent was unjustified. On the contrary, he concurred with my decisions on each occasion I explained them to him. One such example was when I sent two officers to Australia to obtain statements from victims in a case which is now going through the courts. The officers had to take statements from victims on the opposite ends of Australia. During their time there they had no days off- postponing rest days until their return to save money. They commenced work the day after they landed from each flight. On their return they were exhausted, but I received grateful messages from the victims to say that talking to the officers had a dramatic beneficial effect on them. Anticipating the demands on the officers, and in accordance with States of Jersey policy on long haul flights, I authorised travel by business class. This decision was supported by the Accounting Officer, the Home Affairs Minister, and the Chief Minister, following the submission of a report by me in answer to criticism by two Ministers, who themselves had availed of the same policy but did take days off. Despite the agreement, some weeks after my retirement, the same two ministers accused me of wasting money in a letter to the media over this incident. Bizarrely, the Home Affairs Minister and the Chief Minister joined in the criticism.
124. Since my retirement further evidence of the lengths to which the Jersey government have gone to try and discredit myself and abuse victims has come to light. I found out in May 2011 that after my retirement the Home Affairs Minister had commissioned an enquiry by a firm of Jersey Accountants into the way that resources had been used during the Historical Abuse Enquiry. Despite the fact that I had been the person responsible for the decisions on how resources would be used, the company, BDO, never at any time approached me to speak to me. Their report contained many incorrect assumptions and factual inaccuracies when if asked, I could have given them information which would have avoided these errors. Despite making no attempt to interview me, they were critical of my decision making. The Home Affairs Minister published the report to the media in Jersey who headlined allegations about the manner in which I had used financial resources. The BDO report also quoted (incorrectly) from a confidential witness statement I had made to Wiltshire police who had been asked by the Jersey Government to report on another matter involving a senior Jersey Police Officer. When I e mailed the Jersey Home Affairs Minister to ask why I had not been interviewed when I was the main decision maker in the use of resources, what the BDO terms of reference were, and who had leaked my statement made to Wiltshire, he e mailed me to say that he had remained independent of the BDO report and had nothing to do with it at all. When I pressed him on the fact that he must have delegated the drawing up of the terms of reference and asked him to who he had done so, he replied to me that he would need to look up records as he expected he might have been involved in the drawing up of terms of reference. I have kept copies of these replies.
125. I went to Jersey in 2002 full of expectation of the challenge that lay ahead. I soon learnt that it was like nowhere else in the British Isles. I was puzzled at first by the hostile reaction from politicians to our efforts to stop the few bullies in the force from making the lives of their colleagues miserable. This turned to anger at the complete obstruction to all our efforts to regulate the possession of high velocity weapons on the island. I began to then see the close links and the way in which the various arms of Jersey society worked in order to stop any modernisation. I saw the law being enforced by the Honorary forces, not on the basis of right and wrong, but simply on who was known to each other, or who went to school with each other. When we tried to tackle police corruption, we again ran into a wall of hostility. This time it was organised, as politicians and government ministers gave open support to the corrupt cops and their associates. Prominent politicians met openly with disgraced corrupt former officers and made excuses for them. One government minister spoke out on behalf of Nigel Gregory, the Special Branch Detective, stating that he had been hounded because of “administrative irregularities.” In respect of Boschat, the businessman who was paying off almost ten percent of the force, I met with one high profile long time politician who first told me that I did not understand the culture of Jersey and that a little corruption did no one any harm. The female Minister of Home Affairs was at another meeting with me and he told her to tone down, that everyone knew she only got the job because she was “a little girlie.”
126. There are no checks and balances on power and the abuse of it. This is obvious each time one tries to make a complaint against any member of the government. One such example arose after a Daily Mail journalist telephoned the Chief Officer of Police, Graham Power, and told him that Senator James Perchard, the Health Minister, had given him a confidential police e mail. The conversation was taped on the publicly declared recording system at Police Headquarters. The force made an official complaint which was totally ignored by the Chief Minister’s office. The Minister denied the allegation; the journalist even denied making the admission, despite the recording. A second attempt was made to complain, again it was ignored. Yet, after a report which I compiled and forwarded to the Attorney General became public, the AG reacted furiously. Despite the fact that the media only obtained it after it was served on the High Court in London, and indeed, various media reports mentioned that fact, a UK police force was appointed at huge expense to investigate who ‘leaked’ the matter. I was warned by five UK journalists and Senator Stuart Syvret that they had been approached ‘cold’ by these officers and asked to implicate me in the passing of documents to them. Senator Syvret was told it was an “Official Secrets Act” investigation despite the fact that the AG had told us in the Gregory case that police officers did not come within the Law.
127. What amazed me was the total arrogance of the corrupt – their willingness to go to the media and tell their stories and claim that they were hard done by. This could only happen in an environment where they knew that they would be sympathetic. During the Abuse enquiry I was totally humbled by the number of ordinary Jersey people who stopped me daily, on many occasions with my family, and thanked me for standing up to those who had abused their power and not listened to them for so long. My family still talk about it in disbelief. Trying to get independence in the system is nigh on impossible. An example of this is the so called “independent specialist” lawyers appointed by the Attorney General to the Abuse enquiry. They were neither independent nor specialists in child abuse. Two of them were lawyers who for some time have been carrying out the financial crime work of the AG. The other worked for the AG for years and had only recently left.
128. There is one other incident to illustrate the situation. A UK lawyer now in Jersey who has vast experience in Child Abuse offered their services to the AG to assist with the enquiry. They did so on the basis that there was no one with sufficient experience to be of use. The AG refused. The lawyer told him that Simon Thomas, for all his capabilities and talent, was not a child abuse specialist and this was what was needed. The AG’s response was that this person ought not to worry – there would be no prosecutions anyway. This lawyer does not want to be named because of fears for the future. The lawyer did however, confide this in the former Home Affairs Minister, who resigned from the government because they refused to update the Sexual Offences law – Jersey is still a society where the judge has to tell the jury about the fact that women have on occasions made stories of sexual assault up.
129. With such an absence of controls, such an absence of accountability, the ordinary decent people of Jersey are helpless. Intentionally or not, the system has allowed corruption to flourish to such an extent that those seeking to combat it are the ones open to scorn. In what other society in the British Isles and beyond, are the police criticised for trying to professionalise themselves? No matter what efforts are made, ultimately they run into a brick wall. This will not be rectified until some sort of independent element is inserted.
130. At Ayr, Scotland, on 20th May 2011 Appeared Leonard Harper who being solemnly sworn declares that this and the thirty two preceding (printed) pages, all as initialled by him and me are true and are signed by him on this page in the presence of me John Andrew Hay, Notary Public, Ayr.
L. Harper
John Hay
Notary Public, Ayr
582 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 1 – 200 of 582 Newer› Newest»Wonder if Advocate Baker has read this affadavit?
Two words: holy shit.
Goodbye William - don't bother closing the door on your way out.
This should be spread far and wide so all can see what a corrupt cess pit the island of jersey is. Bonjour, Ferguson, Egre, de la haye, the AG, Simon Thomas all have some explaining to do.
Andre Bonjour is part of the Jersey Child Protection Committee. If This affidavit is correct then Bonjour should be making a public statement to clear his name or that of the JCPC.
I have read every single word of this and would invite others to do so. For the love of God these people have to be stopped.
'In truth – do the ordinary decent people of Jersey really enjoy the proper rule of law at all?
Or – in reality – is protection by the law – or punishment under the law – merely a political ‘gift’ – or weapon – used by the Jersey oligarchy?'
Or indeed Stuart, until they are faced with issues that bring them into conflict with the 'law', and indeed as you know only too well do not get the justice which is so blatantly, obviously theirs, do they really care??
Then, and only then do they realise that it is used as either a weapon or a gift as you put it. Rock 'their' boat and it is a powerful weapon - go with the flow and the rewards are immense.
I have read Lenny's affidavit many times, and now it has been added to it makes an even bigger impact, and should send shockwaves through this whole Island.
Will it? - probably not, because the 'I'm all right Jack' attitude still pervades, and if you are a decent, honest person who wishes this deep and inherent corruption to be exposed and eradicated you are branded as a trouble-maker.
One day, and probably not in my lifetime change will come about. It will be a long, hard haul, but it will be thanks to the courage and honesty of people like yourself Stuart.
Stuart.
What can one say? There it is in a sworn Affidavit just how sick this ghastly regime is.
The Youtube video Lenny mentions is part of THIS BLOG
I've read the Affidavit in its entirety and it clearly spells out the sickness and corruption that this place is built on, what chance have we, or our children got?
Terrible, what sick people we have in our island the Law officers the Attorney General, Inspectors in the Police Force, a whole rotten stinking corrupt bunch, I feel sick realising from reading the above that attempts by honest police officers to bring JUSTICE and INTEGRITY to our police force failed because of the in built corruption in JERSEY, The politician now in charge of the police force publicly stated that WE NEED TO BRING THE POLICE FORCE UNDER POLITICAL CONTROL. He is now the Minister in charge of the States Jersey Police Force just sick !!!!
"129. With such an absence of controls, such an absence of accountability, the ordinary decent people of Jersey are helpless. Intentionally or not, the system has allowed corruption to flourish to such an extent that those seeking to combat it are the ones open to scorn. In what other society in the British Isles and beyond, are the police criticised for trying to professionalise themselves? No matter what efforts are made, ultimately they run into a brick wall. This will not be rectified until some sort of independent element is inserted."
In a nutshell Mr Harper.
What chance did we stand as children given the seriousness of LH evidence? Many of us have been labelled as criminals, yet the real crimainality lay with those who were supposed to be looking after our interests!
No wonder so many of us who were incaserated at HDLG because of our anti social behaviour ended up ther. After all, we had great role models didn't we!
This is both so damning and so sad, not only for us old men now, but also for Jersey society.
The Frog
God bless you Lenny Harper.
what a document. Though much of it is familiar it is interesting to see it catalogued into one document.The good thing is,that it can all be checked for accuracy from official archives.
Seems to me that there is a strong case for a civil action against Diane Simon ,and Gradwell.The only way that the JEP will publish this avidavit is if they were to be sued.Then the population would get to know the depth of corruption around this whole affair
In the time it took me to read through this utterly damning document, more than 50 unique site viewers were added and 10 comments appeared here. People do pay attention and want to know the truth.
Is this exact same affidavit which Baker accepted as true in court yesterday?
Stunning in its entirety!
Elle
Stuart
Finally, reading all this in one document, your use of the term "Mafia" makes complete sense to describe the Jersey system. It is run as a criminal syndicate, so much so that criminals react, not in shame or fear, but in purely self righteous indignation to criticism. There is no hope for change from within unless allied with outside publicity and prosecution.
Were Polermo's innocent children ever so easily thrown to the mercy of pedophiles?
Leigh
I would like to ask the question, is it legal or lawful to blanket the internet with this blog..... If so we should all be doing this without delay in the UK..... This is NOT GOOD GOVERNANCE..... it is corruption corruption corruption......
"Then the population would get to know the depth of corruption around this whole affair"
Get printing & become publishers
pass them around it will make excellent weekend reading
Leigh
I do not in any way endorse violence or vigilantism.
But one doesn't need a great knowledge of basic criminal 'codes' - to imagination what happens to those who the mafia caught abusing little children in Palermo.
Stuart
Jimmy Perchard named by Lenny as the David Rose stooge and up for election this year.
What the fick is Jimmy Perchard doing leaking confidential emails to David Rose?
Has Graham Power's affidavit been accepted as evidence in your trial and will you be submitting this affidavit of Lenny's?
Graham Power's affidavit has been accepted as evidence in my criminal appeal; that's the case being heard by Christopher Pitchers.
And - yes - Lenny Harper's affidavit has been submitted as well - though though we haven't yet got around to discussing its inclusion in my appeal.
As far as the civil action is concerned - the case before Jonathan Sumption QC - yes, both affidavits were submitted by me - but if the case gets struck-out - then we won't get around to considering their evidential merit.
Not in that particular case, anyway.
But don't worry - I'm quite sure that - one way or another - we're getting these matters into court.
Stuart
Man, this just cracks me up,
'These included an RPG7 Rocket Launcher which was later found to have only a minor fault. Among the dozens of other firearms found at his address were some which had been handed into the police for destruction. Lying around the room on the floor next to weapons such as 7.62 rifles, machine guns, and magnum revolvers, was a large quantity of ammunition for these and other weapons. A ‘SEACAT’ Missile Launcher was also taken from his home.'
This stuff could be from our 'finest' right here in New Jersey. Even them folks waiting for the word from God could be found living 5o mile from the turnpike.
The court this matter needs to be in THIS WEEKEND is the international court of public opinion. We all must get word out everywhere we can. It is time for regular local political issues and topics to take a back seat to exposing this criminally run enterprise. How could the progressive Jersey politicians and bloggers concentrate on anything else?
For some reason, this latest blog is not showing as updated on the other great Jersey blogs. This is too important to allow anybody to miss it. Can anyone fix that problem quickly?
Yep, the guns and religious nuts sound like the American West, where I live. But the rest of the criminal activity cited in the affidavit would be huge national news here.
Speaking of Gregory the ex-police officer engaged in disgraceful corruption, i think his father was / is an honorary police officer in st. Peter. Keep it in the family, it's the jersey way!
Surely it is time that a UK police force was brought to the island to replace the current officers.
The Honarary police need to be disbanded and the constables removed from the the States
As for the the Former AG who is currently employed at tax payers expense - It is about time he faced public scrutiny. Perhaps this document should be sent to the Ministry of Justice in the Uk
Could we have the names of the connetables who allowed these stand-up citizens to amass private arsenals?
some pretty serious weaponry on the rock.
that was news to me
"owned by hundreds of people"....
"including police officers,states and honorary,politicians,lawyers and other prominent members of the jersey community"
well, who else could afford a 'seacat'
Stuart, you are 100% correct, mafioso dont take kindly to paedophiles and child abusers
our criminal syndicate are wealthier,have more power,more weapons and have zero morals
the mafia don't even get close
This just isn't going to go away Bailhache, Birt & Bailhache.
How much longer can a few devious, deluded clowns be propped up by the greater UK establishment?
Every word of Lenny Harper's statement should scream to those who have doubted hitherto.
The good people of Jersey told you so and will continue to do so, ad mortem, ad infinitum.
PS Shenton you are pondlife.
Given the entirely credible accounts from two highly believable senior distinguished policemen, why do the Jersey public not rise up and protest? How much more would it take?!
Is it legal to have a missile launcher in your property in Jersey?
FACAW may not care about Jersey corruption just yet, but eventually UK questions will shift to whether it is easier to oversee it and fix it than to continue ignoring it. Whether it is more scandalous now than if covered up even more, and how much bad publicity will Jersey bring to Whitehall either way. With the internet, there is no going back to secrecy. It must be full exposure now or later. Not if, but when.
How on earth did all this weaponary get into Jersey.
Yes - the FACAWS are going to have to deal with this - one way or another.
Shortly, the UK Justice Department - which is responsible, in the name of the British Crown - for good governance, the proper rule of law, and good administration of justice in Jersey - is going to receive some detailed complaints.
Certainly, they've had a stream of complaints in the past - even a failed judicial review attempt - in efforts to make them comply with their legal duties.
But as I said in the recent interview for Voice for Children - this time, things are going to be different.
This time - the UK Justice Department voluntarily intervenes to clean-up the mafia that has been permitted to run amok in Jersey - or - they're going to have to defend against every single microscopic detail of the Jersey oligarchy corruption - the kind of thing in the affidavits of these senior police officers - in public - through the open courts of London.
Stuart
Excellent compilation of evidence in the affadavit. Very helpful for understanding the way things work, or don't, on Jersey.
Hi Stuart, if your posting wasn't damning enough you had better check this out
BDO 11
It ties in nicely with the Senator Perchard part
rs
No wonder they gave Ogley a golden handshake. Hush money - he knows where the "bodies" are buried. God, bet he is so glad to be out of it although hopefully if a proper independent review takes place he can be called back as a witness under oath.
Shocking, shocking, shocking. As you have said less morals than a Bangkok pimp, that about sums it all up.
No wonder they're having so much trouble getting new honouries to join up. Why would the ordinary honest folk of Jersey rush to join a system so stinking at the top? The only way forward is a well regulated paid police force subject to frequent impartial inspection from the UK, an end to the Jersey Way Plastic Police as it stands (possibly a system of volunteering to support the real police as in the UK), removal of the judiciary from the States chamber, and a prosecution service broken away from The Mob and subject to UK inspection.
I'd rather the CI were a new 'county' of England than remain the lousy cesspit of filth it has been for centuries. I love this place for its natural beauty and the good islanders but the administration is rotten to the core.
That probably goes some way to explain the Jersey rush to digital police radio. It makes it easier to keep things covered up if people can't listen in on what the police are up to (compare with the USA where it's open and legal to listen!) and if the head of The Mob - the AG - wants to cover something up and not prosecute One Of Theirs, then the public won't know.
Back in the 80s and 90s it was funny just how many people had scanners and listened in to the old "M2JY to Delta 1". It even made us feel an empathy towards the police, knowing how busy they were and what they were dealing with. Now they have a private digital network we can't decode, they are a faceless Them v. Us and the trust is less immediate.
Jersey was the first place in the British Isles to move to such a system (from an analogue one which was still perfectly useful) and I always wondered why we had to be the guinea pigs. This amount of corruption helps to explain it!
WOW WOW and THRISE WOW - THIS IS HOT HOT HOT !
Thank you so much Lenny for all your hard work and honesty and dogged determination to help us poor souls who have had to contend with such unlawfullness.
I have to send links to all I know.
Thank you Lenny.
The Beano is not the Rag
Stuart
Do you know if Lenny established any connections with regard to the Zandvoort 'stash' which was a mountain of abuse photographs believed to have been taken in the cellars at Haute De La Garenne?
I ask because this is a recurring theme which links HDLG to the top child predators and networks in Europe.
Zandvoort
Well! I wonder how many doubting Thomas's there are now!
As for the person asking how long will it take for the population of Jersey to wake up and do something about the corruption - I suspect once the cutbacks begin to really take effect and people actually start feeling the pain economically that is when the general mood of dissatisfaction regarding our political and judicial regime may lead to our very own, hopefully non-violent 'spring'.
This islands ills, coupled with the forecast world food shortages should motivate people to insist on change.
"The concentrating these [legislative, executive, and judicial powers of government] in the same hands is precisely the definition of despotic government." Thomas Jefferson
"The powers of government should be so divided and balanced among several bodies . . . as that no one could transcend their legal limits without being effectually checked and restrained by the others." Thomas Jefferson
It is hard to imagine that my neighbour may have enough weaponry and ammunition to blow up a ship or an aircraft. What a way to 'keep up with the Joneses' Where does one purchase the latest 'Seacat' missile eh?
After reading that last affidavit I see now why I was advised that civil unrest would be futile on this island but thanks to a few honest and efficient men and women who care, we may be witnessing the beginning of the end.
My thanks to these brave people.
I support the victims of abuse and would like them to have their say in court.
ahimsa
To Ahisma,
I have been reliably informed that the Seacat air to air missile was more of a threat to the aimer\loaders and to submarines than to any low flying aircraft ...
The Beano is not the Rag
Apols for the light heartedness of this post in a, truthfully, horrible subject.
Police probing the Jersey horror home have been led astray by a mock graveyard dug 20 years ago for TV show Bergerac.
Scanning equipment pinpointed suspicious spots in a field behind Haut de la Garenne children's home, where part of a child's skull was found buried last month.
Digging began, then one officer recalled filming in the field in the 1980s.
A police source said: "It was turned into a graveyard for Bergerac.
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"They used fibreglass tombstones but they were going to have a burial scene so they also dug a number of full graves."
Bergerac, starring John Nettles, was shot on Jersey from 1971 to 1981. Haut de la Garenne, shut in 1986, was used as a set.
The source added: "The site will be dug up just in case but we know of the alternative explanation."
Bones dug up at the home this week and sent for analysis had been burned, it has emerged.
I wonder if there is any footage of this "Mock Graveyard" and why would theyyyyy dig full graves? note Graves, Why would they be burying people in a field in the time frame and setting of The TV show Bergerac? Why would not just use a real graveyard?
This police officer is obviously lying through his back as if he know there would be questions and had been told what to say.
I have, in the last ten minutes, received a phone call from an english politician who states that the British Government are in a real quandary over child abuse issues in Britain and the Channel Islands.
It is somewhat pleasing to know that this issue is being taken so seriously at last.
Perhaps it is now time for Jersey's bloggers to start taking notice of advice given to Stuart Syvret about self-protection.
Well Emma Martins will be working overtime after this posting.
Surely Lenny's disclosures of widespread corruption, illegal gun and weapons ownership, coupled with a complict AG and inert civil service breaches everything the lovely Emma holds dear.
Can we expect another round of police raids and arrests as a result
Should the laywers be rubbing their hands with glee at the opportunitites these new revelations present. Will it lead to a new court case funded by the public.
Ladies and Gentleman place your bets
It seems that Roy Boschat is very powerful. Does anyone know his sisters name?
The JEP are revelling in Lyndon (Tintin and Snowy) Farnham taking 2000 signatures to the Privy Council (including such upstanding citizens such as Pierre (monogrammed luggage for the Porsche) and Uncle Reg ('LLP for sale ' Jeune) getting the fewer Senators Law stopped.
Now we have legislation control by an unelected minority imposed by an external unelected body!
They really didn't like that when you went there did they but Lyndon is 'one of them'. Remember that when the ballot paper comes in front of you in November.
PS Tintin and Snowy has nothing whatsoever to do with the Weighbridge sniffers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bergerac_episodes
Series 1 18th October - 20th December 1981
a reader says:
"I have, in the last ten minutes, received a phone call from an English politician who states that the British Government are in a real quandary over child abuse issues in Britain and the Channel Islands."
Not as much of a quandary as they're going to be in, in a few weeks time.
Stuart
In a quandry?!
There should be no quandry - it should be black and white, cut and dried, a no contest - child abuse is abhorrent end of.
Those guilty at the worst end of the scale should be locked up for life.
How the HELL can there be any quandry?
Ah yes - Emma Martins - daughter of Bergerac actor John Nettles.
You know, there was an absolutely fascinating archive photo in The Rag a couple of months back, in a feature on the history of the swimarathon.
If memory serves, amongst the group photo of terribly manly looking individuals, posing in their speedos - was John Nettles - along side Dave Minty - the amazing disappearing man.
You know? The police officer who was responsible for overseeing the illegal police raid against me - the one conducted without a search warrant - and the man who the prosecution then spent 6 months denying he had had anything to do with it.
The same Dave Minty who unlawfully leaked Deputy Labey's e-mails to William Bailhache - who then gave them to his brother Philip Bailhache.
Connections, connections.
But yes, now you mention it, I'm sure Emma Martins will be swinging into action again. After all - only ten day ago I recived the latest lengthy data protection "law" threat from her.
And splendidly entertaining it was too.
I've tabled it and it is now included as evidence in my criminal appeal, thanks.
In fact - it's so funny, I think I'll do my next blog posting on the subject.
It's absurd, Kafkaesque and funny in grim way - as readers would expect. But, you know, when reading it, it began to dawn on me that these people are actually pathetic - inadequate in so many ways, I began to feel a certain pity for them.
Even now, they just still don't 'get' that they've lost - and it's only a matter of time.
But - no room for sentimentality - I'm going to be seeing Emma in court soon.
I'm quite sure Jersey tax-payers didn't create that post, or employ her to protect child abuse concealers, bent cops and rapist clinical serial killers.
One of the ironic things is that the FACAWS would very much have liked to carry protecting these people - but the Jersey oligarchy have simply made it impossible any longer.
There comes a time when defending the indefensible just becomes too much of an ask.
Stuart
Stuart, you said, "This time - the UK Justice Department voluntarily intervenes to clean-up the mafia that has been permitted to run amok in Jersey - or - they're going to have to defend against every single microscopic detail of the Jersey oligarchy corruption - the kind of thing in the affidavits of these senior police officers - in public - through the open courts of London."
How is it that in the UK power structure, from where the History of the English and the rules of Common Law have been studied and exported to the world, does it seem there is no learning wisdom from history? This is the very example of a scandal which will reverberate in the UK for decades if not addressed soon. The lack of foresight is astonishing.
Almost 500 Unique Site Visitors in 24 hours, and your latest blog title does not even show up on the links from other blogs. Don't doubt there are many new readers of this blog.
Stuart.
Can you tell us more about your court appearance tomorrow.
Also your prediction of how long you think it will last and its outcome.
Minty was in charge of Professional Standards. As you say Stuart, "you just couldn't make it up."
a moral operating system Copied from another local blog, but really ought to be viewed by our dear Data Protection Registrar.
It doesn't matter who is in power in the UK they have to do something about it, Jersey, Hollie Greig and many others have used to net to spread the word and its going like wildfire now.
Soon No more pretend pity or kind words they would never use for victims and survivors, no more pretend ignorance to what has been going on in Jersey for decades and a lot longer than that I'll bet.
These people and I use the term people with reservations, these people will have had their day and they will come face to face with the inescapable truth and justice (The Real Kind) will be done.
That days can't come soon enough for many.
Thanks Lenny.
Face behind the nameDave Minty.
Warcup's folly
Doesn't Minty own some self catering cottages , somewhere up in Trinity that had planing consent granted very quickly.
Together with Rico's BDO Alto report expose and this, some of the main culprits, who laughed when you said they would be ending up in jail, must be getting very twitchy at the moment. I'd love to be a fly on the wall in the legal officers department tomorrow morning.
Stuart, any news on whether the national papers are beginning to take notice?
I know Minty lives in Trinity as I recall him being a nimby about Jersey Live.
Reading between the lines of ilms recent email to Rico. I believe that Minty or Bonjour will be blamed for the leak to Rose.
The face is not Dave Minty
Thats what I thought, but the badge says it is.
Someone has said the face isnt Dave Minty is this correct Stuart
If it's Minty, it's a very old picture.
Stuart
Then, if it's a very old picture it's not Minty, simply because of the 'pips'.
Would (policeman) Dave Minty be David A. Minty and have a past connection with a Sally A Minty-Gravett?
Some links to different pictures have been submitted - but, no - they're not of Dave Minty - at least not the Jersey cop, Dave Minty.
It would though be interesting if that picture from The Rag of a couple of months back could found and posted.
Stuart
"I wonder if there is any footage of this "Mock Graveyard" and why would theyyyyy dig full graves? note Graves, Why would they be burying people in a field in the time frame and setting of The TV show Bergerac? Why would not just use a real graveyard?"
An interesting question. I recall a number of Bergerac episodes with funeral scenes, and they used real local graveyards.
The rag have been making pictures of coppers disappear over the passing months.
I have been looking for one of 'fatboy' D Harrison who was given an award before he was fired for doctoring witness statements.
I know it was in the rag as I saw it, but has vanished.
Apologies folks Dave Minty
"I have been reliably informed that the Seacat air to air missile was more of a threat to the aimer\loaders and to submarines than to any low flying aircraft ..."
How exactly does this kind of weaponry get into the island????
Thats the clown!
I'm not entirely sure that latest linked picture is Dave Minty either.
But to answer a separate question, I believe Sally Minty is Dave Minty's sister.
Stuart
once again I apologise
Yes, I guess it is him.
If The Rag says so - it must be true.
Stuart.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zl3ssTyePYM&feature=player_detailpage#t=187s
The only graveyard footage i could find series 1. later in the episode it appears the daylight scene was filmed at St. Saviours church.
If The Rag says so - it must be true.
Ha ha nice one
A little SOMETHING from a friend and ally :)
Stuart
On all the Jersey blog I have checked, your current blog is not correctly linked. For part of the day it had a link to your previous posting and now it links to one you posted eight months ago!
Normally this would be a minor glitch, but this current posting is simply too important for readers to miss.
Please, please can someone fix this problem?
Well, that graveyard footage from Bergerac was filmed in St. Brelade churchyard - south-west corner of the island - kind of diagonally opposite to the location of HDLG in Jersey - which is the north-east of the island.
But far more interesting was the animate fiction of Sergent Jim Bergerac.
A lot of ordinary people in Jersey retain a kind nostalgia for the Bergerac TV series - and the actor who played him, John Nettles.
Which is why his daughter, data protection commissioner Emma Martins - in a two-page interview in The Rag - churned out by the Jersey oligarchy in a desperate attempt to con islanders into believing that she was some kind of heroic victim, after her corruptions had caused a leading opposition politician to be driven from Office and jailed - made a particular point of saying just how important had been the support and advice of daddy during this oh so difficult time.
Who could have imagined, back in Bergerac days - that Nettles and his daughter - would become entangled in a crime so monstrous - born of the dark and toxic side of power in Jersey - that it would, in future, give rise to literary works and TV dramas - so much more extraordinary than the mundane solitary cop tropes of that old TV series?
Some times the truth is stranger than fiction.
Stuart
If you read true crime stories or watch fact based crime drama movies, you won't find many as compelling as this story. This story has it all. Plenty of good vs evil and corrupt power vs innocence. And, some of the heroes are real cops. It should read like a cautionary thriller to people everywhere. In fact, I'm quite sure it soon will.
[But to answer a separate question, I believe Sally Minty is Dave Minty's sister.]
So I guess that back in around 1986, both were wealthy enough to invest approx. £2k each in a privately owned UK company. Not that there is anything odd, although I assume one or other of them was well connected to have known about it.
Ian
Yes - a very useful link. That's the article I've referred to in various comments on this blog and elsewhere - when I've said David Rose was an MI5 recruit.
And of course, once you join The Firm - you never leave it - regardless of his protestations - which were merely an insincere attempt to re-build some credibility.
The man is a spineless, inadequate ethically bankrupt poltroon.
But really - if the likes of him - and striving to cover-up the torture and rape of vulnerable children - is what the British Establishment has come to - then 'the empire' is indeed in its final decay.
I think a number of us in Jersey should jointly write to Her Majesty - with the dossier of evidence of the utter and barbaric decadence of power in Jersey.
As a matter of "form" - we'd get a polite brief response - informing us that it had been referred to Her Majesty's government.
But at least the British Crown will know - on-the-record; the knowledge will be there.
The evidenced facts will be made known to the Crown.
And in due course history will have its verdict.
Stuart
A reader said
"On all the Jersey blog I have checked, your current blog is not correctly linked. For part of the day it had a link to your previous posting and now it links to one you posted eight months ago!"
Think Stuart may have copied and pasted with a link (in there somewhere) from the old blog. BUT, works fine from my computer?
Stuart and Ian, you may both be interested in some additional shameful hackery by Rose. As if he didn't cause enough damage in the run up to the Iraq War, he is considered to be the "GO TO" guy for climate change denial.
Thinkprogress.org has an entire list (with links) of shoddy journalism by Rose under the title, "RoseGate" on their blog.
Is it any wonder Jersey paedo-protectors looked first to David Rose when they had a sham report to leak? If you need to put your lies out there, he's your man.
Elle
David Minty , acted as a concerned neighbour - mediator between residents and Charles Galichan . When the cotraversy about the Trinity land fill site was going on.
Charles Galichan , very god friends with Frank Walker.
(must be lots of old rag clippings about that saga)
Come to think of it ,Minty did get permission for those self catering cottages passed very quickly.
I am intrigued, has Dave Minty always been a police officer? Was he in the police force in 1986? How old is he?
shaxson Gaining traction
S.O.
Minty is 48 yrs old. He was a police officer in 1986.
A reader leaves a comment about a drunk-driver.
Whilst the comment could certainly be accurate - the specific incident is not a case I am aware of, and thus I can't be sure of the accuracy.
More evidence would need to be supplied.
Stuart
What happened in Court today?
I am surprised that a young police officer could afford to risk a £2k lump sum (in 1986-87 worth far more) to invest in a privately owned company operating in the UK!. I assume that in 1986/7 he was so well paid he could afford to throw such sums away or perhaps he had come into some inheritance.
Anyway, it is a matter of public record (companies house) that both David A Minty and (I guess his sister) both own 20 shares each in Ritec International Limited, which in the early years had a business connection in Jersey.
Oh court, yes. Sorry, I forgot about that.
The predictable; all thrown out on strike-out - which means that for various legal and technical arguments - the case never got into the facts - or the rights and wrongs - or the evidence.
But as remarked by me and others on many previous occasions, that was the entirely expected outcome.
But don't worry - other cases are in the offing; cases that deal with different matters - on different causes of action - in different time-frames - and more clearly defined within either public law or private law.
Legally - we're barely warming up yet.
There should be two fresh JR applications in by the end of this week.
As far as the judgment today is concerned - and this was so profoundly concerning from public interest point of view, I shall probably write an entire posting about it once I have the written judgment of Jonathan Sumption - was his assertion that the harassment, repression and harm I suffered in 2007 - was my own fault - as no-one was forcing me to represent child abuse victims, speak with them, listen to them and to fight against the system that had failed them.
His argument was that by choosing to shoulder the burdens of my Office - I was "the author of my own misfortune".
His view is that, as I could have ignored the approaches of the child abuse victims - and not spoken with them - and not tried to help them - getting into the battle I did was "voluntary" by me - and therefore no-one else's fault.
How's that for a message - and a precedent - to send to your elected representatives?
Dangerous and dishonest crooks like Bill Ogley walk away with half-a-million pounds of tax-payers money - plus gold-plated pension - for being an utter shyster.
I, a politician at the time - get oppressed and damaged by people like Ogley and his colleagues - because I was trying to do my lawful duty to help child abuse victims - and I can't even get my claim into court.
Isn't that great?
If that's how notions of "accountability" and "responsibility" operate in Jersey's public administration - it's hardly surprising orphans were being battered and raped over a five-decade period - and not one single solitary Jersey politician ever spoke out about it - until me.
The lesson from Mr. Sumption: "I should have just kept my mouth shut and my head down - just like all the rest."
And you thought the general 'performance' of your States members was rubbish already?
After today - they've been given carte blanche - the absolute green-light - to henceforth ignore all of their legal duties.
The precedent set now gives them a legal basis - a legal excuse - for their customary contemptible failures.
I'm not sure which was funnier - that part of the judgment - or Dian Simon from the JEP attempting to ask me questions afterwards, and when I refused to speak with her, her saying to a member of the public, "we only want to be fair to him".
Suffer the little children.
Stuart
[His argument was that by choosing to shoulder the burdens of my Office - I was "the author of my own misfortune".]
So it was acceptable that the "misfortune" you experienced came not from the public, but other public serving officials, who were trying to hide the facts you were exposing. How mad is that!!
I assume this logic was decided behind closed doors, I wonder who provided the local background legal advice?
I cannot believe how shabbily you have been treated. My heart sank when I saw the verdict of the court today. There must be more avenues to go down. You are a very courageous man and deserve the right to a fair hearing. How you have the strength to just keep fighting, I don't know. Can we do anything to help you?
Holy crap :-(
Would you have not been in contempt of your position as Head of Health if you hadn't investigated?
Rock and a hard place springs to mind.
The Beano is not the Rag
Surely in any normal society, if a government minister with the Health mandate did not investigate allegations of abuse etc.. he or she would be outed in the national papers as having covered it up!!
Jonathan Sumption logic appears to supports those who ignore their responsibilities. How strange is that. Is there UK case history that says otherwise?
Jersey is run by poltroons.
Damned because he did and damned if he didn't!
I sat in that Courtroom today and was utterly incredulous at what came out of Sumption's mouth. This the man with a brain supposedly the size of a planet.
Mr Sumption, in case you were not aware the victims of abuse would NOT have gone to any other agencies as you suggested they should have done. Basically, the did not trust anybody other than Stuart, Lenny Harper and Graham.
Those who should have been taking appropriate action were the very people who were privy to obstructing Stuart, so a nonsensical argument.
Sometimes I wonder if I am dreaming.
Suffer the little children
Absolutely - always the Jersey way. Ask our Catholic "leader" in the island.
Is there any way we can contribute (in a small way) to your costs. I don't have much but if you have to pay all the costs, I for one would be prepared to help
If you took the advice of Mr. Sumption you would be, a take the money and run kinda guy along with others who sit with their heads below the parapet in the States chamber.
Wear your badge with pride.
Stuart.
Deputy Trevor Pitman on MEDIA
JERSEY GIVES THE GREEN LIGHT FOR CHILD ABUSE
My commnet on CTV site. Not expecting a response other tham purile derision.
"I suspect that the vast majority of the people commenting on here are doing so from a position of extreme ignorance, not having read the extremely long affidavit from Lenny Harpers on SS's blog. If you would care to do that you might actually understand the depth of the problem. Love him or lothe him SS is just trying to bring what are very serious matters out into the open and make the guilty accountable.
Ok CHALLENGE TO EVERYONE WHO HAS COMMENTED SO FAR on this story before me, and everyone who reads this post going forward and comments on here. Please confirm whether you have read it, the affidavit or not! And if your commenting without having read it jusify why you think your right when only in considering half the information. I suspect a purile response from some along the lines of "its all rubbish so I dont read it". Go on take the challenge and read, you know you want to. Ask youself as well why the media are too scared to report the affidavit in full and let a wider audience make a judgement.
Apologies to the minority who do appear well informed.
JRCbean"
Was Minty a sea cadet?
It seems that Jonathon Sumption is drawing a distinction between the political events and Stuart's personal life.
I can almost imagine him saying that if Stuart wants damages, he should sue Senator Syvret.
By the way, there are some interesting developments in an old story in Guernsey. It relates to a police raid on the premises of a firm of advocates in July last year.
The police chief is denying responsibility and says that it is his officers who are responsible. Hence the headline in today's Press: "Who's in charge of the police?".
Part copy of UK government site:
'In their constituency, MPs often hold surgeries in their office, where local people can discuss any matters that concern them, although there are limits to the help MPs can give. MPs also attend functions, visit schools and businesses and generally try to meet as many people as possible. This gives MPs further insight and context into issues they may discuss when they return to Westminster.'
So as I understand it, Stuart did try to discuss matters whilst in a States Debating session and was 'illegally removed from his position'. I do not believe that is what happens at Westminster, so why Jersey!!
Stuart, as a long time reader of your blog, I'm familiar with your often expressed view that the political environment is so toxic you don't want to run for election again.
Let me try and put it to you that your view is wrong, and that you would be making a big mistake if you did not participate in the forthcoming elections.
I believe there are at least three powerful reasons why you should declare yourself to be a candidate, and to do so soon.
1: Challenging the oligarchs and getting the facts across to the public. During the Senatorial election, there will be the usual round of hustings meetings. There may be a few anti-establishment candidates, but they will be concentrating on not being too controversial to really speak the truth. Meanwhile, "poltroons" like Ben Shenton, Jimmy Perchard and, in all probability, Philip Bailhache will be on the platform. Even if you had zero interest in getting in, don't you feel it's your duty to be the articulate voice of principled opposition to these people? Imagine the unanswered lies that would be peddled if you weren't there?
2: Casting the spotlight on Jersey's criminal regime. You are penniless, and from what you've said, these people could bankrupt you at any instance of their choosing, simply by enforcing their various court-orders, fines and debts against you. You are in that condition, not through any extravagance of your own, but because the Jersey establishment has repressed you and used its "judicial" system to hound you out of democratic office. Exactly the type of conduct that many lawless jurisdictions employee against 'opposition' figures, not least because you cannot hold public office if you are bankrupt. If you were a candidate, and they bankrupt you, then you couldn't be a candidate any more. Just imagine how that would show up the true colors of the Jersey regime to the outside world.
3: Attracting international condemnation upon Jersey's judicial system. As it is, you are out of prison on bail. I think it was 'contempt of court' charges which they gave you only 24 hours notice of? You have masses of fines, and court cost orders against you that you could not pay a fraction of even if you wanted to. Just imagine what the watching world would make of Jersey's power-structure if you, as a very significant opposition figure, were a candidate in the election, but you were a candidate from your prison cell? A prison cell where you had been sent for the "crimes" of humiliating Jersey's traditional establishment and trying to protect your vulnerable constituents from a system that even the former Deputy Chief of Police says has no effective checks and balances?
Whilst my point 1 is very important, as far as gaining the necessary national anger needed to clean-up government corruption in Jersey, points 2 and 3 would be even better outcomes. Although not for you personally, obviously.
To be blunt, I think you would be failing the legacy of the sacrifices you have made so far, if you didn't run in the election. Don't you see that for my three reasons, the oligarchs will be praying you do not become a candidate?
Anon says :'Stuart, as a long time reader of your blog, I'm familiar with your often expressed view that the political environment is so toxic you don't want to run for election again ...'
I couldn't agree more particularly because all your valid arguements would be made very public and that would do so much to further the cause of justice in this island ... as well as having the bonus of seriously impairing the chances of idiots like Senator Perchard from getting re-elected... god help us!
Stuart.
Audio of Home Affairs Minister hanging Mick Gradwell OUT TO DRY
Bonjour promoted today as one of the new UK Supt has suddenly left for personal reasons.or inappropriate reasons
Firstly even though I do not know and have never met Mr.Harper as a resident of this Island I would sincerely thank him for his sworn affidavit, especially now it is more 'timeline' based. I would say this simple thing to all those (and you all know who you are) who have decided to join the 'chickens' in this Island, remember the rule of the jungle, once you have become 'chicken' sooner or later you will be PLUCKED, or as the age old saying goes "Today's Rooster is tomorrows feather duster" sleep well in the hen house tonight.
Stuart.
There is nothing stopping you getting in and becoming Health Minister.
Infact you would be the most experanced, intelegent and talented politician to stand.
Nothing to loose and running rings around, comes to mind.
It makes perfect sense that church and graveyard scenes were filmed for Bergerac in local churches and graveyards. I think I recall a scene at St Saviour's where there are all the war graves. They used to dot about all over the island filming scenes so that at one moment Jim B was driving down St Peter's Valley and the next he was on the five mile road. There was no logic or sequence about it.
The million dollar question Stuart is who is telling the lies about the "mock graveyard" at HDLG? Why say it was created for a scene in Bergerac when it obviously wasn't? I think most of us already know that there was nothing mock about those graves and that probably people have gone to a lot of trouble to make sure the contents are never found along with the truth about the lime-pits, the bones and the teeth.
Thank you for what you are doing for the "forgotten children" of Jersey and for what you are planning for the future Stuart. I know very well what personal sacrifices you have made for us.
Lorna
X
One of my many reliable and brave sources tells me that a recently employed UK Superintendent - from the same kind of "school" as David Warcup and Mick Gradwell - and who's appointment was announced with a fanfare by Home Affairs Minister Ian Le Marquand - has now been sacked and sent back to the UK. I am told that his name is Bernie Gravett.
His modus operandi apparently included ordering an already busy, trained drugs squad officer on overtime, out to buy him a Chinese takeaway - and other unacceptable behaviour - including open contempt for local traditions and sensitivities.
Good riddance? - Oh dear. I am told that he is to be replaced forthwith by Andre Bonjour - who has been promoted to Superintendent.
A "good" local boy - who has spent his working life in the force.
Alas he is the same Andre Bonjour - who in 2008 was investigated by South Yorkshire Police for suppressing reports of Child Abuse at HDLG - but was merely given "advice" by David Warcup in consequence.
No doubt informed regular readers could add to this somewhat alarming picture.
God preserve us.
Stuart
Stuart, you've been pretty gentle on Jonathan Sumption, all things considered. Are you saving it up for when you have the written judgment?
Is this the same Andre Bonjour, that was involved in the SEA CADETS!!!
and is also on the board of (you couldn't make this up)
Please someone , carry on the thread
Au revoir , monsieur Bonjour
Bojour who wasn't good enough to be promoted all of a sudden is good enough after Gravett was sacked. Loving your work Ian Le Marquand.
Yep - one and the same.
The same Officer Bonjour who was a prosecution witness against me in the supposed data protection charges - but who Bridget Shaw actually stopped me from cross-examining.
Just like she did in respect of her 'friend' Emma Martins.
Just like she did in respect of two other key witnesses - the two former Chief executives of Health & Social Services - Graham Jennings and Mike Pollard.
How's it going Bridget?
How is Richard keeping these days?
Stuart
Hi Stuart.
For your reader's, the Audio of our Home Affair's Minister blaming Gradwell for leaking that report to a Journalist that used it to trash the Child Abuse Investigation.
You can Listen to it HERE
SEACADETS,ah!! Piers Baker.
On Sunday your readers were 422,477 Today 423,480 more than a thousand more in just a couple of days.
“The Club’s corporate and social network represents a unique fusion of skills and experience”
– MATTHEW CORBIN
Managing Director
BDO Alto
Comment on "new" meeting place Totem club maybe this is where BDO were taken on for the BDO report in HDLG for their unique fusion of skills & experience in copying reports & being highly remunerated for doing so!!
Are the members called Indians or cowboys?
Top ex-cop blasts Jersey corruption
I was chatting to some Americans about their gun culture and their argument for owning guns was that if normal good people didn't arm themselves the only people who would be armed would be the government and bad people... Seems to be what's happened right here on our
doorstep !!
HOW TO GET THE TRUTH FROM LE MARQUAND
Anybody wonder why Le Marquand never actually named Gradwell in his bumbling 'half' confession?
"The most likely person who did this" and "The results of the inquiry conducted by my staff" Which staff Ian? Notice again how he avoids naming anyone? And finally "very clearly pointed in his direction".
In truth, this is just the usual legal whitewashing with no accountability for anyone.
What Trevor Pitman needs to ask Le Marquand is the following:
"Could Mr Le Marquand confirm to the house, and on his 'full commercial liability' that
1/ It was infact Mr M Gradwell who leaked the report?
2/ That he name those investigators of said inquiry?
3/ That he (Le Marquand) himself had no knowledge or participation in the leaking of the said document?
Only when Le Marquand answers these three questions, and on his full commercial liability, will you have really found the truth!!!
I WAGER THAT HE WILL NOT DO IT....
Bernie Gravett - I presume he has nothing to do with David Minty's sister Sally Minty-Gravett?
Perhaps I am being over- conspiratorial, but it is not a common name.
A BRAVE GUERNSEY SURVIVOR FIGHTS BACK
Stuart.
Can you give us more information on this so called D notice on the Child Abuse Investigation?
BDO 12
Stuart do you have any thoughts on Ians comment
rs
Hi, No wonder nothing ever gets done about child abuse in Jersey. When listening to Graham Powers interview and he said he was promised and indepndent police authority to manage him and it never happened. When I was interviewed as a social worker in Jersey I asked when the social services would be externally inspected.The answer was that they hadnt been inspected yet but would be soon....4 yaers later ...several child abuse scandals later..(HDG and the secure unit:remember simon bellwood) and no inspection. I,like Graham Power, would'nt have taken the job if i had known there were no external checks on childcare services.Then again only took me 2 weeks to realise and think the corruption went to the top....now i really know it!!glad I didnt stay.keep going stuart I still read the blog! ex jersey social worker.
I thought that Ian Le Marquand had stated that the new senior officers had come from the UK as none of the local officers could do the job. Now Bonjour is promoted. Why?
Was Mr. Gravett sacked or did he walk?
For your foreign readers, Wikipedia.org describes a "D Notice" as:
"DA-Notice or Defence Advisory Notice (called a Defence Notice or D-Notice until 1993) is an official request to news editors not to publish or broadcast items on specified subjects for reasons of national security. The system is still in use in the United Kingdom."
It has been used in a famously publicized case involving a sports figure, so national security is not the only reason it is employed. It is certainly a very strange and disturbing method of information control.
If the sports personality you refer to was the subject of the recent super-injunction controversy - that was not a D-notice - rather just the failure of the British judiciary to come to grips with the 21st century - and their loss of power.
Stuart
Gradwell responds
You can read it on the comment section of my blog.
Poo & fan come to mind
rs
Stuart
Can you or your readers tell us if there is some sort of press injunction, super-injunction or D notice regarding any Jersey scandal? Are the anonymous comments regarding the D notice something we should take seriously?
Elle
I am not aware of any kind of D-notice in respect of the Jersey child abuse disaster.
But that doesn't mean there isn't one.
Although, if there is, that system too is finding its redundancy in the face of citizens' media.
I truth, I don't think the Jersey media would need to be asked by the authorities to comply with a D-notice. I think they have quite voluntarily - and probably with collective agreement - decided to 'black-out' all coverage of the fact that the cover-up by the Jersey authorities has now been exposed - and exposed as both a criminal, and grossly incompetent exercise.
Think about it; all of the local mainstream media - BBC included - swallowed the whole cover-up, hook, line & sinker.
Wholly uncritically, every mainstream media outlet in Jersey found itself very enthusiastically regurgitating a pack of lies that had been fed to them by the Jersey authorities.
They persuaded a significant portion of the island's population - the gullible, non-thinking part - that most of the child abuse scandal was all invented nonsense.
So what can those same media now do?
Start covering the truth - and in the doing, expose themselves as having been liars and dupes?
It would be quite possibly the most dramatic self-discrediting confession by a collection of British media in post-war history.
These people will be only too willing to do all they can to keep the exposure of the oligarchy cover-up - the good work carried out by amateur journalists - out of the public eye.
Stuart
why still no id of the st clements car driver involved in a death crash?
Because you are not aware of any kind of D-notice just means the D Notice is working
If bloggers do not know if there is a secret injunction on disclosing anything, how could they ever be guilty of breaking the law!!!
Zibby Yates in her own words
Stuart.
You'll like this one.
I spoke with two "journalists" today both from CTV and asked them why CTV aren't Reporting ANYTHING about the revelation of our Home Affairs Minister that it appears Mick Gradwell leaked a confidential Report to a Child Abuse denying "journalist" during an ongoing investigation.
Both "journalists" from CTV claimed to know nothing about it!!! They told me that they cannot be expected to know everything that is said in the States!!
I don't know what's worse, the fact that they could be helping to cover up the Child Abuse scandal, or the fact that they might not know about Senator Le Marquand's revelation.
Whichever it is it demonstrates the calibre of Jersey's "journalists."
voiceforchildren - so no doubt now, logically from their answer, they will now check and let the public know, if not, then it was just an excuse so they would not appear to have trying to hide the facts.
It is quite obvious that these journalists only get their news stories when it's handed to them on a plate. A plate with the official States logo across it.
God forbid they actually did some research.
The Beano is not the Rag
I know it's slightly off theme but if we use the sub-title 'Please Sir can I be an Establishment stooge'. The title and accolade must go to the Headmaster of Beaulieu Convent in a Jersey political equivalent of the Darwin Awards.
According to a number of independent sources he twittered Philip Ozouf just before the debate on delaying the funding cuts for fee paying schools being brought to the house by Ben Shenton.The twitter said to Philip 'Good luck in the house I hope the result goes your way'. Now that's strange because as a school desperately hurting through lack of funds ,as he is always telling parents, you'd expect him to be solidly behind Ben Shenton his schools ex PTA chairman etc.But no he 'wants ' the cuts to happen.
Then the idiot posted that private twitter on the front of the Beaulieu Convent website by mistake.... LMFHO !!!!
A rare occurrence for me - just switched on a television - and happened to encounter BBC Jersey.
Now - there's a thoroughly edifying spectacle:
Sean Power - speaking out on behalf or property speculators' profit margins.
I'm surprised Tel Boy Le Main wasn't there along side him.
Oh you people just so have the government you deserve.
You really do.
Stuart
Stuart.
Committee of No Enquiry CONE
Regular readers will understand just how hard we have striven to shine the spotlight of scrutiny upon failings and malfeasances by people in positions of authority and responsibility (and their vassals) in Jersey.
Well – thanks to a recent coc – err - breakthrough – we now have the perfect arena.
Just a brief expression of thanks to the individuals listed below; I couldn’t have done it without them:
Stuart.
1: Mr Piers Baker
2: Mrs Marnie Baudains
3: Mrs. Linda Dodds
4: Mrs. Richard Jouault
5: “nurse M”
6: Mr David Minty
7: Mrs Rose Naylor
8: Mr Danny Wherry
9: Mr. John Haworth
10: Emma Martins
Poltroons. No quarter.
My, what an impressive list of fine, up-standing citizens you describe there.
As a law-abiding, taxpayer, I'm very reassured to learn that there are public-spirited people supporting you in the name of accountability and the public good.
May I echo the opinion of an earlier comment, and express the view that you must declare yourself for election as soon as possible.
You already have, surely, the requisite ten signatories in the up-standing individuals you list?
Another Proud Jerseyman
Stuart you know you have our attention! You have thousands of new readers a week with a current total of about 424,360 unique site visitors. What is behind this list? Don't tease!
'positions of authority and responsibility (and their vassals)'
Surely you miss a category?
Vassals of the vassals.
Where else would Haworth fit?
Mrs. Richard Jouault?
THE CoI FARCE
Sadly, what everyone is still failing to understand is the fact that unless this CoI is 100% transparent, open, and without any TOR, it is going to be covered up!!!
Just look back at every filthy stunt that the States of Jersey has pulled in this debacle, then ask yourselves one long hard question....
HOW MUCH LONGER ARE WE PREPARED TO BE CHEATED AND DECEIVED???
Stuart.
Surely there is a lot more than ten on your list?
Where do Ogley, Pollard, Lundy, Warcup, Gradwell, to name but a few, others - that come to mind?
What kind of a golden hand shake did Marni Baudin get!!!
Sorry - typo.
That should have been Mr. Richard Jouault.
Easy mistake.
Stuart
A reader says:
"Where else would Haworth fit?"
A challenging question.
In feudal societies, some instruments can never hope to achieve vassal status.
Stuart
You said In feudal societies, some instruments can never hope to achieve vassal status. When I first read that I thought you wrote weasel status. LOL
We have seen in the UK how an indepth programme by Panorama has led to the closure of a hospital for young adults with learning difficulties.... we saw how they did a programme relating to Jersey, is it not time the contents of all the blogs in Jersey relating to the cover-ups, corruption, et al was not laid in front of them..... the only way to get justice it seems these days is if a TV programme carries out an in depth enquiry..... who is going to invite them back, who is going to lay the evidence before them.. Some national newspapers are tied. unless it hits the headlines on the TV it seems it is not worth reporting.... hence Channelonline and BBC Jersey are keeping quiet.
I'm sorry - but I have to say I don't think you understand the nature of power and influences within broadcast media.
BBC Panorama did - originally - do a significant broadcast on the Jersey Child Abuse Disaster.
That documentary arose out of the original BBC South-West program on contemporary, institutionalized child abuse in Jersey that I and others, such as Simon Bellwood, exposed.
Panorama - with the lead of the journalist who did the BBC South-West program - tracked-down - and doorstepped, the Maguires.
But - then - after all of that exposure - the powers-that-be - with the instrumental influence of Mick Gradwell - decided that child abuse in Jersey had to be buried.
From that moment hence - from the time of the gangster press-conference by Warcup & Gradwell - the BBC has toed a pro-oligarchy line.
They have gone out of their way to assist in the cover-up.
But even setting aside that BBC bias - it is a mistake to place any great confidence in the broadcast media.
It just can't do the depth.
It is old-fashioned, detailed, fact-based, explanatory - sustained - print journalism that really makes the difference.
Broadcast media - whilst it can have its moments, as we know - isn't really much more than show-business.
Stuart
The UK media is unpredictable. There were almost a dozen comments on the Gradwell story in the Telegraph and they have just disappeared. Wonder why.
panorama jersey secrets
stuart, you said
'..Well – thanks to a recent coc – err - breakthrough – we now have the perfect arena.
Just a brief expression of thanks to the individuals listed below; I couldn’t have done it without them:...'
too cryptic for me ... could you tell us please
what breakthrough?
and what could you have not done without them?
There were some extremely well written comments too, appeared to me to very very factual and accurate, but all removed!! How does one get that done?
Another thousand new readers since Tuesday.
424,513 and counting...........
Word verification "Coaxin" Certainly coaxing more and more readers to your blog.
Where can I read more about corruption in Jersey, and what can I do about it?
Have patience.
All will be revealed.
Although I would have thought it fairly obvious, to anyone familiar with the conduct and methodology of the Jersey authorities - if you think about it.
Stuart
They haven't all decided to sue you for defamation of character, have they?
Stuart.
The Jersey ANTHEM
IS there a copy if this anywhere, Im a parent with a child at Beaulieu and this is very worrying indeed...
Anonymous said.....
I know it's slightly off theme but if we use the sub-title 'Please Sir can I be an Establishment stooge'. The title and accolade must go to the Headmaster of Beaulieu Convent in a Jersey political equivalent of the Darwin Awards.
According to a number of independent sources he twittered Philip Ozouf just before the debate on delaying the funding cuts for fee paying schools being brought to the house by Ben Shenton.The twitter said to Philip 'Good luck in the house I hope the result goes your way'. Now that's strange because as a school desperately hurting through lack of funds ,as he is always telling parents, you'd expect him to be solidly behind Ben Shenton his schools ex PTA chairman etc.But no he 'wants ' the cuts to happen.
Then the idiot posted that private twitter on the front of the Beaulieu Convent website by mistake.... LMFHO !!!!
Understanding The Mind Of The Jersey Blogger!
Worried parent..
More than my one seemingly.
But only for use if vociferously denied!Then....