Even the Mail has
run a feature on developments: the Metropolitan Police have
now launched Operation Fernbridge, into the alleged historic abuse of
children at
the former Elm Guest House in Barnes. This investigation had its genesis in
the Commons intervention by Labour MP Tom Watson last October, in which he
urged the re-opening of the file on child care consultant Peter Righton.
So, while much
of the Fourth Estate was wrongly, and probably maliciously, telling its
readership that Watson was behind the Alistair McAlpine saga, a small group of
Met officers were poring over the evidence on Elm Guest House, in a building in
Earl’s Court, well away from New Scotland Yard. What they found passed “the threshold for a criminal investigation”.
Which means that, contrary
to what the Mail’s hacks were saying,
there is no North Wales connection this time, there is probably no connection
to the late Peter Morrison, it is nothing to do with Jimmy Savile, and it is
most certainly not, as Andrew Pierce vehemently asserted, to do with the
fuelling of rumours. Moreover, it doesn’t just have the potential to hurt the
Tory Party.
So where has the investigative journalism come from to drive
the reporting of these developments? Not from even the best resourced papers,
and certainly not from the loudest part of the blogosphere, but from a recent start-up called Exaro News, and
more specifically from former Guardian man David Hencke, who has
told this week of yet more developments in the Elm Guest House case.
The Met raided the home of Mary Moss, former organiser of
the now defunct National Association of Young People in Care in London. A
search warrant had to be obtained, but after Ms Moss considered her position,
the Police took away several boxes of documents. More information came from
Richmond Council, but it was the haul from Mary Moss that was most important.
After all, here were the names of those who had stayed at
Elm Guest House, including MPs and ministers. And Tom Watson may have passed
other information to the Met, as Operation Fairbank, launched in the wake of
his Commons intervention, remains in place, although what the “other lines of inquiry”
means specifically, we do not know.
There have, though, been no apologies or withdrawals from
Andrew Pierce, Quentin Letts (let’s not), and Richard Littlejohn of the Daily
Mail, or Patrick “Lunchtime” O’Flynn of the Express, nor from the rabble at the
Guido Fawkes blog, who made yet another wrong call on this affair. After all,
that would mean admitting they were wrong and Tom Watson was right, and that
would never do.
Expect much more from
the past of Elm Guest House in the near future.
3 comments:
You are quite right. Expect this story to grow and grow, but be a bit patient as there is a lot of evidence that needs to stack up for people to be arrested and charged. It has considerable ramifactions and will be reported by Exaro News and on my personal blog. http://www.davidhencke.wordpress.com
I'm used to being patient: I stayed with Phone hacking from when the Guardian broke the story in 2009, so no problem with this one.
Many thanks for stopping by, David!
"certainly not from the loudest part of the blogosphere"
What! Guido not out of the pub yet?
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