It has been widely reported that Max Moseley, son of the fascist and enemy of the British establishment Oswold Moseley was caught on video in an orgy with 5 prostitutes.
The story was reported in the news of the world (British Sunday news paper) who's owner Rupert Murdoch has been courted by the leaders of successive governments including the then government of Tony Blair.
June 8th 2008 the daily mail reported that MI5 were put on maximum alert when one of their officers was pursued across London. The security service (MI5, British secret police) used vehicle number plate recognition technology to identify the vehicle driven by Martin Smith belonging to Quest investigations a private investigation unit run by Lord Stevens.
The investigation had been ordered by Max Moseley to identify who organised and setup the video recording for the news of the world.
www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1024959/how-MI5s-involvement-sex-scandal-led-high-speed-car-chase-london.html
The MI5 officers wife, a prostitute had been used by the officer to obtain the story for the news of the world.
The news of the world has since been exposed by journalist Sean Hoare for illegal activity including hacking and bribing police officers. Hoare claimed that these practices were very much encouraged by the papers management.
The revelations lead to the resignation of corrupt Scotland yard police commissioner John Yates and UK police chief Paul Stephenson and the closure of the news of the world.
The editor of one British Sunday national paper reported that he had been approached by police who tried to stop him from reporting on the news of the world scandal.
The journalist Sean Hoare has since been found dead (see posting 20th Feb 2008) a former MI5 officer claims whistle blowers meet a mysterious death. Police claim there were no suspicious circumstances.
This whole debacle unveils a very sinister case. One British judge is reported as saying; MI5 have a dubious record and cannot be trusted while another reports the freemasonry network being used to gain access and favours from officials in the British establishment.
Saturday, 25 February 2012
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