At the end of last week, there was a brief moment of relief
as Mazher Mahmood, aka the Fake Sheikh, his legal team bankrolled by the
Murdoch press, failed
in his bid to stop a Panorama
programme which would reveal not only his identity, but also the methods he
used in a series of sting operations. The BBC had also spoken to some who had
worked with Mahmood in the past.
Updated version coming - very soon
Now has come news that someone else likely to come out of
the exercise with their reputation unlikely to be enhanced is voicing disquiet
about the broadcast. Mahmood had one ally in his quest to procure More And
Bigger Paycheques For Himself Personally Now – the Metropolitan Police. The Met
is a formidable opponent, and it
is unhappy about the potential content of the programme.
But, so what? One cannot object to free dissenting speech.
So the Met has rushed to put forward as credible an excuse as can be mustered –
that the broadcast might prejudice any action against Mahmood in the future.
There was, as Captain Blackadder might have said, only one thing wrong with
this idea – it was bollocks. The same Met has not so much as indicated it will
charge Mahmood.
What the Met might not like telling is how closely Mahmood worked
with them: “the entire job I was
basically working for Scotland Yard’s anti-terrorism squad. I was registered as
a participating informant; every single movement I made was on their orders.
Quite often, as it came out in court, I didn’t agree with what they were doing,
but I had to do it as I was working for them” he told Press Gazette.
That was the so-called “Dirty
Bomb” sting, which, not for the first time with a Fake Sheikh plot, resulted
in no convictions at all. But what did
result from this rather ripe-smelling joint exercise was significant
embarrassment for the Met, and the continuing suspicion that Robert Mark and
his successors had failed to purge the force of officers who were, let us not
drive this one round the houses for too long, bent.
What chance of success does the behind-the-scenes leaning on
the Beeb have? Not much, if Sir David Eady’s remarks last Friday are anything
to go by: “while the Attorney General was
‘entitled to point out the problem that might arise if he's prosecuted, it's
not grounds for the injunction as such’”. Plus, as Mahmood has not been
charged, the Corporation is not in contempt of court.
The Met has put the heat on those it thinks are involved: “the Surrey home of former Metropolitan
Police Superintendent David Cook was raided by detectives from the Met's
anti-corruption command, who questioned him under caution over alleged
unauthorised disclosures to Panorama”. Someone is getting desperate.
The BBC looks likely to stand its ground. So it should. The
Met has been party to appallingly bad behaviour over the years. We should be allowed to know about it.
1 comment:
If the police fail what odds the security services next?
" Mark Watts @MarkWatts_1 · 2h 2 hours ago
Ex-MI6 chief sexually abused boys at Dolphin Square: three-piece package @ExaroNews from last night. #CSAinquiry http://www.exaronews.com/articles/5398/ex-mi6-chief-named-as-sexual-abuser-of-boys-at-dolphin-square …"
It's all starting to fall into place? Collusion between NOTW, police and security services getting out of hand when criminal elements take over knowing they have the advantage of blackmail material?
See also
Alastair Morgan @AlastairMorgan · 11 hrs 11 hours ago
Did Mazher Mahmood mislead Leveson about the Dark Arts of his Past? http://wp.me/p1YHIt-QU via @peterjukes"
for another well known name Southern Investigations involvement.
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