It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
The Tory peer told journalists last year he had no recollection of being given the dossier. But in a statement yesterday morning, he changed his mind.
He confirmed he was handed a ‘substantial bundle of papers’ by MP Geoffrey Dickens in November 1983 and passed them to his officials for further investigation.
Alison Millar, head of the abuse team at Leigh Day, said: ‘My clients are incredulous at how this dossier can have simply disappeared. It seems inconceivable that a document of such importance can have simply disappeared.
‘I would strongly support the calls for a widespread inquiry into historic sexual abuse so that my clients could have their many questions answered about who knew what and that a very troubling veil is lifted from the corridors of power.’
So it seems for years that there has been evidence of an organized peado ring at Whitehall and just after the official report naming all the people involved was submitted the whole thing just vanished into thin air.
originally posted by: Thecakeisalie
a reply to: PhoenixOD
My guess is that the dossier had a fatal encounter with a paper shredder.
originally posted by: Britguy
originally posted by: Thecakeisalie
a reply to: PhoenixOD
My guess is that the dossier had a fatal encounter with a paper shredder.
Convenient though that might be, I doubt it. Such material always has a high value, and I would suspect that someone, somewhere, has the original material safely locked away, ready to reveal it's contents if certain people don't play ball on a few issues. That's how government works, through blackmail and leverage!
originally posted by: PhoenixOD
a reply to: uncommitted
The sun newspaper said it was more than ten and they were at Westminster. But there's no reference to it online that i can find. In fact there story isnt being reported much anywhere..typical.
originally posted by: DrHammondStoat
It's almost as if Leon Britton had some reason he didn't want members of parliament investigating over child abuse. That would be Leon Britton who was on a list of visitors at 'The Elm Guesthouse', a guesthouse that allegedley shipped in boys from local care homes for the visitors to abuse.
Yeah it's funny he's forgotten those documents!
Anti child abuse activist and filmmaker Bill Maloney interviews Chris Fay, former national adult advisor to NAYPIC (National Association of Young People In Care) about the notorious ELM GUEST HOUSE and the many questions that remain uninvestigated.