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The Black Widower by Charles Lavery

The Black Widower by Charles Lavery

Malcolm John Webster is currently serving 30 years in a Scottish prison - a longer sentence than the Lockerbie Bomber was handed – after a life of crime that spanned the globe and raked in hundreds of thousands of pounds.

He had the cars,  the yachts and the status symbols of the rich but the “accident” that claimed the life of his first wife Claire was coming back to haunt him. Cutting edge science and dogged police and forensic work was piecing together the true story of Malcolm’s life.

It involved murder, fire, fraud, theft and poisoning. He was a Black Widower who had already tried to kill a second wife on the other side of the world as well as plot the death of a third fiancee.

I broke the original world exclusive about Webster in the Sunday Mail newspaper and have followed it ever since. In The Black Widower I speak to the experts, the scientists and police officers responsible for putting Malcolm Webster behind bars for the rest of his life.

It’s out on July 5 2012 and published by Mainstream. If you follow the link, thanks! If not, you can’t say I didn’t try.

ends

 


The Black Widower. Published July 5.

I broke the world exclusive story on Malcolm John Webster and his worldwide trail of destruction.

If you like true crime, give it a try.

http://www.randomhouse.co.uk/editions/the-black-widower-malcolm-webster-the-sociopathic-killer-whose-crimes-spanned-two-decades-and-three-continents/9781780575315#popup

 

Ends


Operation Rubicon: Cop Arrested

Exclusive

A 47-year-old police officer was arrested last week as part of Strathclyde Police’s Operation Rubicon, the scoping inquiry into phone hacking, the Tommy Sheridan perjury case and police links to the media.

The officer was based at Govan police office in Glasgow and is believed to work in an intelligence capacity. His home was raided and searched on Friday morning and he was arrested over alleged breaches of the Data Protection Act.

He was held in custody over the weekend. It is unclear at this stage whether he appeared at court on Monday, either on petition or from custody.

The arrest is believed to be the first in the long-running inquiry  for the Major Crime & Terrorism Unit, the team tasked with investigating phone hacking, breaches of data protection and perjury in Scotland.

The unit is working directly with the Metropolitan Police Service and investigates information gleaned from the Leveson Inquiry, as well as evidence given at the Tommy Sheridan trial. It is also probing links between media outlets in Scotland and police officers.

It’s believed the officer is facing charges of accessing information gleaned from restricted databases.

From the Strathclyde Police website:

 

Operation Rubicon is the Strathclyde Police enquiry into allegations of phone hacking, breach of data protection and perjury.

Officers from the Major Investigation Teams under the command of the senior investigating officer, Detective Superintendent John McSporran, have been tasked by the Crown Office to examine aspects of the evidence presented during the Tommy Sheridan perjury trial.

In addition, they will examine specific claims of phone hacking and breaches of data protection in Scotland. Strathclyde Police will review the available information and liaise with the Metropolitan Police in relation to any Scottish dimension to their current investigations, and report their findings to the Area Procurator Fiscal at Glasgow.

If you are concerned

A number of persons across Scotland have already contacted the police expressing concern that they may have been subject to phone hacking or breaches of data protection.

In this regard, at this early stage of our enquiries and given the large number of documents to be examined (both by the Metropolitan Police and Strathclyde Police) we are unlikely to be able to immediately confirm that such activity has occurred, however we will note complainer’s details and their concerns and get back to them at a later date.

Who to contact

Anyone with a concern that their data has been illegally accessed or their phone ‘hacked’ can email Strathclyde Police on the dedicated enquiry email address below. You should provide information as to why you believe you have been the subject of such illegal activity and your contact details. Alternatively telephone our Force Contact Centres, provide them with this information and this will be passed to the enquiry team.

ends

 


Leveson Response

 

A Police officer who complained to the Leveson Inquiry over a newspaper group’s  collusion with a Scottish police force has been told he may be called to give a witness statement.

As I reported earlier in my Cops & Bloggers update, the cop is pushing for answers after a massive operation against him collapsed in farce. He told Leveson lawyers senior police officers and newspaper executives colluded against him, even destroying evidence that he claims could have helped in his defence.

He walked free from all charges after two days of Crown evidence, but feels the Inquiry should be looking carefully at the links between media organisations, senior media lawyers and police forces across the UK.

The following email, redacted here, was sent to the Leveson Inquiry earlier today:

Dear Sir

I would like to bring to your attention the actions of the ********* newspaper part of the *********** Group and Strathclyde Police which I believe merit the attention of your ongoing inquiry.

I was a serving police officer with Strathclyde Police and was arrested on * june 2004 over corruption charges related to selling stories to the above mentioned newspaper.

The case was eventually heard at Glasgow Sheriff and Jury court where on * April 2009  the Sheriff directed a verdict of no case to answer

During the ongoing inquiry into me I believe that there was wilful wrongdoing and collusion between senior management of Strathclyde Police and senior management of the ******(newspaper),

The reasons are listed below:

1: The enquiry was called Operation Merlin and one of the senior officers on the case, a **********(police officer’s rank),  was in the pay and was  a source of the *******(newspaper)

2: There were several meetings between Strathclyde Police and legal representatives of the newspaper ensuring that a deal could be struck whereby no member of the *******(newspaper) group would face any charges

3: The senior editor of the ********(newspaper), Mr ******* ***********,  shredded important documentation relating to my case which would have been beneficial in the presentation of my defence case.

4: The enquiry team in my opinion were selected for their  ”obsessive ambition ” and manufactured and presented evidence at any cost to attempt to secure a conviction in this case.

They  had knowledge via illegal phonetaps of ongoing stories that a reporter was working on…
5:  If I had been convicted of these serious crimes I have no doubt I would have received a custodial sentence and the underhand methods employed by Strathclyde Police and  *********(newspaper group) would have been successful. I am writing to you to ask if this is information that you would consider during your inquiry. I feel it is important in terms of how newspapers work in collusion with police forces.

I have paperwork etc related to the above.

A newspaper colluded with a police force to avoid publicity and charges over this matter. I was the scapegoat for both and it almost cost me my freedom.

Yours

************** *********************

What follows is the emailed response from the Leveson Inquiry, received earlier this evening. Again, I have redacted some details for legal reasons:

From: Leveson Inquiry Solicitors Team <Solicitors.Team@levesoninquiry.gsi.gov.uk>

Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2011 18:43:52 +0000

To: ******@aol.com’<********@aol.com>; Leveson Inquiry Solicitors Team<Solicitors.Team@levesoninquiry.gsi.gov.uk>

Subject: RE: *NEWSPAPER NAME* and Strathclyde Police

Dear Mr **********

Thank you for your e-mail, the contents of which are noted.  In view of the experience which is set out in your letter, the Inquiry proposes to retain your details with a view to deciding whether it would wish to seek further information or a witness statement from you in due course.

Kind regards

Sharron Hiles

Senior Assistant Solicitor to the Inquiry

ends


Leveson

THE Leveson Inquiry is uncomfortable viewing for many in the trade who are even now attempting to rubbish or pour scorn on the evidence of those directly affected by media intrusion.

There has been much made of celebrities lining up to baseball bat the tabloids, like that scene in Airplane when they form an orderly queue to take a pop at the hysterical woman.

Who tests this evidence at the inquiry? How can it be relied upon without cross-examination? Where is the letter JK Rowling suggested was slipped into her daughter’s schoolbag?

The Inquiry has succeeded in making me squirm in my seat on a daily basis, reminding me of  the times I sat outside homes where I had little or no right to do so.

Most of the time I was waiting for the bad guy to appear, but not all of the time. Sometimes I was waiting for Joe Public, who was guilty of nothing more than being “newsworthy” at that particular snapshot in time.  More often than not, I sat waiting for some Z-list celebrity or footballer to emerge from a club, home, or mistress’s arms.

Door-stepping is something all journalists do, not just the tabloids. Broadcast media, broadsheets and tabs together, engage in it. There’s a reason why Leveson is so populated by celebrities. We gave them the ammo, and now they’re firing it.

From the mid- 90′s on,  as celebrity mania gripped TV executives and very quickly thereafter infected newspaper executives and editors, our collective news focus began to shift.

When newspaper executives realised they could fill their pages cheaply by simply re-running what had been on last night’s telly and by targeting celebrities, we were well on the road to the Leveson Inquiry.

Celebrity was always thus, from the beginnings of film and newspapers. Agreed. But in the modern, instant age this obsession with reality TV shows, Big Brother and I’m A Celebrity, all sounded the death knell for proper tabloid journalism.

You may believe no such thing exists. It did, before costs and “easy hits” became the order of the day.

On a Sunday paper it was not unusual to see the first five pages filled with what had been on telly the night before. I never understood the logic of this and I believe it to be one of the main reasons newspapers started to lose readers.

If you decided to watch Big Brother on a Saturday night, fine. Why then would you want to be reminded of it in the next day’s paper? If you chose not to watch, seeing it in the next day’s paper would only annoy you and you might decide not to buy that paper again. It was a lose/lose scenario for papers. But it was cheap.

It filled news pages that would otherwise need to be filled by paid-for content, actual news stories that journalists had worked on and written up. Stories of import, that meant something to the readers.

If you look back through the archives this is abundantly clear in most of the red tops. They all have a rich and powerful cuttings catalogue of incredible stories exposing cheating politicians, government cover ups and hypocrisy. They shone a light into dark corners. That’s what newspapers should do.

The people who control the tabloid news industry in this country have been squeezing the life out of newsrooms for over 15 years. Fewer staff, less time to work on stories, “easy hits” and “take it off the telly.” On any given night in a red-top newsroom someone will be sitting watching the telly noting down the latest celeb drivel, before writing it all up for the next day’s paper.

As the years went by and sales plummeted, editors were being constantly told celebrities were what people wanted to read about. They were told this by marketing people who worded reader surveys that bore no relation to reality.  I remember one such survey where marketeers asked readers if our paper was  a car what car would it be? We were informed it was  a Ford Escort with a saltire on the roof.

This was supposed to describe an everyday upper working class newspaper for the people by the people with a particular interest in Scotland and its affairs. It was evident in the think tank meeting that it had been wholly created by the marketeer who presented it. These were the same marketeers who regularly reported back that “the people” wanted to read about celebrities. The more the merrier. Meanwhile sales plummeted.

That too was addressed. “It’s the industry as a whole, we’re in decline yes, but we’re not falling as fast as that other news group, and that’s because we give them celebrity stories.”

That’s what editors were dealing with and buying into.  These same people insisted over a number of years, and still do, that celebrity lives and gossip is what people want in their newspapers. I disagree. So do all the people who stopped buying the papers. There was a failure to connect, or more properly disconnect,  the two.

Instant media has of course played its part in the demise of newspapers, but you don’t find many exclusives on the web. Not yet, anyway. A good newspaper in this modern world will survive by printing exclusives, not teetle-tattle. The lesson has been there to be learned for some time, but now there is no money available to realise it.

In Scotland, people want stories that have not been told before. They want to know about social issues in our country and they want to know that the paper they buy is looking out for “the man” in the street.

They want a  paper that takes governments and businesses to task if they act outwith their powers, and most of all they want a voice. That voice went hoarse when editors began filling their pages with the pap of a thousand reality shows.

From these beginnings came the celebrity interview, the celebrity being sent on holiday to write a review, the celebrity test driving cars, the celebrity advising on all manner of issues. The same celebrity who has no resonance whatever with the man or woman in the street reading the article.

One paper sacked a doctor who had been writing a column for over 30 years and replaced him with a TV “doc” nobody had heard of. Celebrity was now a virus spreading throughout column inches and managing to replicate itself in every aspect of a newspaper, from politics right through to sport.

This led us to where we are today, I believe. As the pressure mounted to get stories on celebrities, so did the clandestine tools which were employed to achieve these results.

From the mid-90′s on, celebs both minor and major were targeted by newspapers. Phones, emails, lovers, ex-lovers, anything and everything to fill the pages. And as tabloids became more reliant on celebrity driven news they became less reliant on the laws surrounding obtaining it.

These execs also realised that by asking private detectives to acquire the information they needed for the story, they could shorten the time it took to obtain the tale. Faster turnaround meant less expense and, ultimately, fewer staff.

Make no mistake, this was an executive driven move. Do you really believe that a small cabal of “lonewolf” bent hacks decided of their own volition to begin breaking the law, across a number of titles, independent of each other?

The incessant pressure to supply celebrity copy led some journalists to break the law, of that there is no doubt. The all-consuming mantra of the red tops, “you’re only as good as your last story”, is one that rings true on so many levels.

The problem here, is that when you enter into that mindset, it means last week’s story, and the means by which you obtained it, are forgotten by the start of a fresh week, when you have a new fresh page to fill. It’s an easy mindset to enter, and a difficult one to shake off.

There are journalists all over the country decrying some of the evidence given at Leveson as being one-sided and without rebuttal or proper cross-examination. They are living in a bubble that is about to burst, with spectacular consequences.

I understand the Leveson Inquiry is hamstrung by the police investigation running at the same time. It is a pity more cannot be done by way of cross-examining witnesses, especially the evidence given by JK Rowling about a letter being slipped by a journalist into her daughter’s schoolbag. Her telling of it was the first I’ve ever heard of it, which is very unusual in such a small community, where these stories invariably leak out with the passing of time.

But they are living in a bubble because within a year from now at least five people will be in jail for all of this. I limit that number because I feel that politically a lid will be put on it. Were there no politics at play in this crisis for the press I reckon at least a dozen journalists could easily face conviction south of the border alone.

Leveson also heard from ordinary people affected by the casual callousness of the press, alongside the celebrities sharing their concerns. Who got more coverage? So what lessons have been learned?

I believe Leveson, the police inquiries and the overarching scandal facing the media at this time can be traced back to the pursuit of celebrity driven exclusives and the immersion in celebrity culture of our tabloid press. Stories at all costs.

The saddest aspect of all of this is that nobody wanted to read these “exclusives.”  They meant little and changed even less.

ends


Sister Acts

Sister Mark at La Chacra

When Sister Mark Hollywood makes her way home through the hashish laden air of her San Salvador slum, it’s a good day if she doesn’t hear the crack of gunfire.

“It’s not as regular as it once was, which can only be a good thing. It still happens, just not on a daily basis.”

Her fellow slum dwellers are unaware that this 64-year-old woman’s name was once Enda, or that she grew up in Warrenpoint,  Northern Ireland, as a sports obsessed girl who had all the usual teenage dramas over spots and boys.

They don’t know that she walked into a Sisters of St Clare convent in Newry as a 17-year-old girl and took the name Mark after her favourite gospel chronicler, as a sign of her devotion to her duties.

They know her as Sister Mark, and they know she helps them, which is why she has only had “a handful” of bad experiences in this slum and refuses to expand on them.

For the past decade this slightly built woman, who can point to bullet holes in the walls of her home,  has been waging a hearts and minds operation in one of El Salvador’s poorest and most violent slums, La Chacra, the farm, a five hectare gateway to hell.

Home to 32 communities and over 13000 people packed tightly into makeshift homes bereft of water, electricity and sanitation, this is a place where no crops can grow and surviving to the grand old age of 18 is a badge of honour.

Life expectancy, wages and hope are all low. Gangs run riot through the tightly packed alleyways and drugs, vice and violence are the norm. It is the most violent sector of one of the world’s most violent cities, inside one of the world’s most turbulent countries. 71 people in every 100,000 thousand will die at the hands of another.

As if that wasn’t enough, every year the floods sweep away dozens of the makeshift homes and in some cases entire families have been forced to start again for the third, fourth or fifth time. Their only consolation is they don’t have much to replace.

Amidst this seventh circle of hell, Sister Mark is quietly doing some quite remarkable things. Gangsters have become scholars, child prostitutes have become dancers and slum kids have gone to university, returning to La Chacra to teach their own.

As if that wasn’t enough, La Chacra is now also home to three roving clinical psychologists, who help Sister Mark wage her campaign for the hearts and minds of these people.

In a slum where a dollar a day is as good as it gets, it took some time to convince people that talking through their problems might help them find a way around them.

“I moved here ten years ago, as school principal, and it was difficult to come to terms with the very different education system and standards. There’s a very high level of poverty, violence and vice. Let’s just say that every child who makes it through school here is a success story. The important thing is to look for the good and cultivate it so that every child has a chance to flourish. We have had two children murdered in the last three years, a boy who was shot and a girl who was battered, two of the most difficult times in my life.

“We are trying to give them new perspectives that will make life more liveable for them. The main roles they fill tend to be street sellers, leaving home at 5am and not getting back until 8pm. In these circumstances the family unit breaks down. They start school at four years of age and two years ago we managed to find funding for a new school block so we can keep them all the way through to upper secondary level. That has been a bonus for everyone and included some very generous donations from the United Kingdom.

“Two of our teachers are ex-school pupils and come from la Chacra, which is just incredible. It tells these young people it is possible to forge ahead if you have the motivation. When I started a decade ago there were only 25 pupils in ninth grade. Now we have two ninth grades and we have sent dozens of students to the national university and to private ones in the country.

“Again, we have been helped by others to provide funding for them. Nothing much is free here. When I first came to El Salvador the war was still underway. People asked me was I not terrified but I had lived in Northern Ireland and, sadly, to live through a war is more than enough in one lifetime, to live through two is definitely so.

“But the experience of my homeland helped me here. I adapted with relative ease because of that. The people have great respect for us because they realise we are working for and with them. There have been one or two occasions of violence but nothing serious. I find talking calmly and presenting a different reality to the aggressor makes a big difference, but I take that confidence from God.

“The school now has 890 pupils and most of the children of La Chacra will be at school. The government has made a huge effort in the last two years by providing uniforms, pens and books.

“The shooting is sporadic now, not every day, but gangs still fight with each other, although they are getting better at staying in their own areas.

“Drugs are readily available, they are everywhere. We try to teach the consequences of getting involved to the children but we have watched some get involved in that scene. We have a psychologist at school and through a CAFOD project we have been able to hire three clinical psychologists for the community.

“Many of the people living in La Chacra have had very difficult childhoods where they have been victims of literally all types of abuse. They have never had a chance to recover from these events, until now. The psychologists do not wait for these people to knock on the door, that would never happen.

“They went roaming through the slum, working in the streets, meeting and talking to the people and gaining their trust. They eventually move from talking in the streets to the houses. If one person is hurting you can be sure there are others hurting in that same family. In a lot of cases the results are not immediately evident because people have been carrying this around for up to forty years.

“At times we see progress then regression, but the results have been remarkable. The psychologists are Salvadorians, local people, who know the context of the area they are working in. The initial reaction of the people was ‘I’m not mad, I don’t need a shrink,’ but we just gently remind them the opportunity to talk is there and now they take it.

“I think they know they have nothing to lose from it, and some of them have gained immensely. The psychologists have given 100 per cent to the project.

“Under the umbrella title of ‘Strong Family’ we put them through a seven week programme where parents learn about love and limits. You need to remember these people have no role models for parenting.

“We had women telling us they had stopped drinking, swearing at their children, throwing plates and things at walls. One woman was known to stand in the streets shouting and screaming, she stopped that completely. A man who took his belt off to lay into his son only to stop and remember the lessons from strong family. It’s all about mental and physical wellbeing and it seems to be working. These people are becoming more loving to each other, forgiving each other.

“We also work with teenage mothers with one simple aim: that their babies will go through life without receiving abuse.

“Seeing the smile on a child’s face instead of the tears in their eyes, and knowing that they and their parents have become that wee bit more human, is great.

“It may seem strange, but I am just truly grateful to be here.”

CAFOD’s Sarah Smith-Pearse said: “I visited Sister Mark in March, just a few days after a shoot-out in front of her house.

“It´s a dangerous place to live, but the people are strong and proud of what they are doing to heal their community in the face of such violence. The emphasis on building close, united families is what makes this project successful. Parents and children are learning to relate to one another with greater tolerance and respect and build more peaceful and loving relationships within their homes. Already you can see how that is impacting on the wider community culture.”

CAFOD supports the La Chacra project with a grant of US$ 30,000 per year.

ends


Pat Robertson: Evangelist Diamond Geezer

I wrote the story below this preamble in 1999, just as the Bank of Scotland decided it would be a good idea to get into bed with a preacher cum politician called Pat Robertson.
I was flown to the USA first class, at his and the bank’s expense, and stayed in a hotel owned by him. A religiously dry hotel, with not so much as a cigarette machine, and a staff steadily puffing outside the back cargo doors.
There were also some exceptional exceptions in the drink department.
The Bank of Scotland deal fell through after the story below appeared and frankly should never have been considered.
His name, however, just keeps cropping up.
To this day he is a heavyweight Republican donor, campaigner and bankroller. He still speaks daily to 55 million souls through his Christian broadcasting network.
I joined that audience one day, live, in the studio, and watched as the news of the day, the news that tens of millions of voters would be watching, was broadcast. A straight reading of the news was followed by a cut to the man himself, sitting in his silvery haired aura, telling the viewers what they should think about the news just delivered. This happened after every segment.
Everything seemed to be a vengeance from God. It was served up by the harbingers of the USAF.
In the last 24 hours he has been advising Republican candidates on how to win power. So I thought I would post a timely reminder, a warning and a new story for some, all at the same time.

This is the copy from 1999, after a visit to his ranch, in Norfolk, Virginia.

Even before our small, twin-prop plane touched down in Norfolk, Virginia, we knew this town was different.

In the seat in front, a young man, no older than some of the naval rookies being put through their paces on the ground below, sat quietly reading the Holy Scripture.

And as we walked through this East Coast city’s tidy terminal building, there he was in all his glory…

Dr Pat Robertson, smiling down from a huge billboard, proclaiming that the Christian Broadcast Network could change your life.

Pat, of course, is the TV evangelist who joined forces with yet another greater power just weeks ago – only this time, not the Almighty.

His business link-up with the Bank of Scotland caused an outcry, not least from the gay and feminist movements.

Pat Robertson, a dad of four and grandfather to 14, is an evangelist- cum-businessman-cum-philanthropist.

PAT says he loves gays, but he hates what they do.

He also loves women who stay at home and believes they should be given the same incentives to do so as women who go out to work.

And he plans to help set up a telephone bank in the US with the Bank of Scotland.

Contracts are signed and all that is needed is clearance from the governing bodies.

But in the row over the deal, accounts were closed and pickets besieged the Bank’s Edinburgh HQ.

Pat claims Scots ancestry and says he can back it up on paper. But he didn’t have the papers to hand when we met.

He told me the story of his roots was handed down through generations by word of mouth. So if Pat got it wrong, blame his ancestors.

He claims to speak, through his Christian Broadcast Network, to 55 million people – that’s the equivalent of almost the entire population of the UK. He also controls the most powerful right- wing lobby party in the States and once ran for president.

He lost and for that we can all say Hallelujah and praise to the Lord.

In the 60s, he packed his wife and kids into the car after telling her he’d received a calling from God. When wife Adelia, known as Dede, asked him where they were going, he replied: “I don’t know, but I’ll know when I get there.”

A short time later, he was on the doorstep of a rundown TV station in Norfolk, telling the stressed-out owner that God had told him to offer a pittance for it.

The owner accepted, and the rest is history.

Robertson now controls a personal fortune of millions and his business interests are on a global scale. The reaction to his decision to front the bank’s push into America seems to have genuinely stunned him. He cannot believe that he is relatively unknown in Scotland.

HERE is a man whose office walls are lined with photos of his meetings with former presidents Bush and Reagan.

Pride of place in a glass cabinet by his desk are two boxing gloves, one signed by Evander Holyfield and the other by George Foreman. But it seems Robertson wasn’t ring-ready when it came to the biggest fight he’s had to face so far – the reaction of the Scottish people to his plans.

A well-polished man in expensive but discreet suits, he says he makes money simply to give it away. He cites Zaire as an example and says his aid convoys reached the stricken African country before any other agencies could mobilise in 1994.

But what he didn’t mention was that two pilots who flew his relief into the country claim the cargo they carried was of little use to the hungry.

They say it was diamond mining equipment. But then maybe the great philanthropist was intent on giving the diamonds to the people…

We met in the dining room of his hotel, within the 700-acre estate of the Christian Broadcast Network.

Chandeliers litter the place and a framed oil painting of the great man hangs over a roaring fire by reception.

A Baptist conference was being held in one of the suites nearby and the place was teeming with black delegates.

Robertson’s Press relations people took great delight in pointing them out to reinforce the fact that he’s not a racist.

Lunch was a sober affair – literally. His hotel has a no- alcohol policy and the good doctor seemed quite happy with his iced tea.

He told me he loved Scotland, has visited often and plays golf at Gleneagles. His handicap is 23, but at the moment his handicap seems to be the Scottish Press and the people’s reaction to his new business venture.

To those who closed their accounts, Robertson said: “I don’t think the Bank is too concerned. Profits are up.”

And he added: “I have been terribly mischaracterised and I think that people have acted on the basis of erroneous information. I don’t know what else to say.

“Prior to this little incident, I was very proud of my Scottish history.”

Robertson’s PR advisers had been stressing that under no circumstances would he use his viewers on the Christian Broadcast Network to promote his new business venture. But when we spoke, he said: “I think maybe in the future we will use the CBN to sell the phone bank.”

THOSE keen on taking up his offer can look forward to Robertson’s face on Bank of Scotland cheque cards and cheque books.

On Zaire he said: “I lost dollars 3million. The plan was to kick-start their economy with the minerals. But the country wasn’t equipped for it.”

And if the Bank of Scotland deal soars sky high, he has firm plans on what he’ll do with his share: “My aim is global evangelisation.

“Obviously, I need funds for my own personal use – I’m not going to give it all away. But I would reinvest it.

“The government lets you give away 50 per cent of your income to charity. Last year I gave away more money than I made. I really did.”

The impression you are left with is that Robertson doesn’t need the Bank of Scotland – it’s the Bank of Scotland that needs Pat Robertson.

As he stepped into his shiny black Corvette outside the main doors of his hotel, it was obvious who makes the rules.

He had parked right in front of a massive no-parking sign.

Robertson, like Holyfield and Foreman, is a fighter and will never duck a punch.

But it’s perfectly clear that he prefers to hand them out.
Ends


Rangers 2.0?

COMPANY DETAILS
Name & Registered Office: Company No.: 07821576
GLASGOW RANGERS LIMITED
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
ENGLAND 
HP123RE
Date of Incorporation: 25/10/2011
Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Status: Active
Company Type: Private Limited Company
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None Supplied
Accounting Reference Date: 31/10
Last Accounts Made Up To: (NO ACCOUNTS FILED)
Next Accounts Due: 25/07/2013
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Next Return Due: 22/11/2012
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Registered No.: 07821576
Name: GLASGOW RANGERS LIMITED
 
Address: 1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
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HP123RE
Company Appointments: 2 / Resignations: 0
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MORAN, GERARD MR SECRETARY
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
UNITED KINGDOM 
HP123RE Appointed: 25/10/2011
   
Appointments: 1
 
MORAN, GERARD MR DIRECTOR
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
UNITED KINGDOM 
HP123RE Appointed: 25/10/2011 
Nationality: BRITISH 
Occupation: COMPANY DIRECTOR

Country/State of Residence: ENGLAND 
Date of Birth: 25/08/1965  
Appointments: 2
 
Name & Registered Office: Company No.: 07821463
GLASGOW RANGERS FOOTBALL CLUB LIMITED
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
ENGLAND 
HP123RE
Date of Incorporation: 25/10/2011
Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Status: Active
Company Type: Private Limited Company
Nature Of Business (SIC):
None Supplied
Accounting Reference Date: 31/10
Last Accounts Made Up To: (NO ACCOUNTS FILED)
Next Accounts Due: 25/07/2013
Last Return Made Up To:
Next Return Due: 22/11/2012
Mortgage: Number of Charges: ( 0 outstanding / 0 satisfied / 0 part satisfied )
Previous Names
No previous name information has been recorded over the last 20 years.

COMPANY APPOINTMENTS
Registered No.: 07821463
Name: GLASGOW RANGERS FOOTBALL CLUB LIMITED
 
Address: 1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLNS INN LINCOLN ROAD
CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
ENGLAND 
HP123RE

Company Appointments: 2 / Resignations: 0
 Resignations
To view details of other appointments held, click on the appropriate underlined name.

MORAN, GERARD MR SECRETARY
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLN INN OFFICE VILLAGE 
LINCOLN ROAD, CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
UNITED KINGDOM 
HP12 3RE Appointed: 25/10/2011
   
Appointments: 1
 
MORAN, GERARD MR DIRECTOR
1 BISHOPS COURT LINCOLN INN OFFICE VILLAGE 
LINCOLN ROAD, CRESSEX BUSINESS PARK 
HIGH WYCOMBE 
UNITED KINGDOM 
HP12 3RE Appointed: 25/10/2011 
Nationality: BRITISH 
Occupation: COMPANY DIRECTOR

Country/State of Residence: ENGLAND 
Date of Birth: 25/08/1965  
Appointments: 2
 


Hands Across The Water

AMPTHILL, Bedfordshire, England, Oct. 25, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — The Ministry of Defence has selected Lockheed Martin UK to lead a 642 million pounds ($1 billion) contract as part of the major 1 billion pounds ($1.6 billion) upgrade of the British Army’s Warrior Armoured Fighting Vehicle.

Under the Warrior Capability Sustainment Programme (WCSP), Lockheed Martin UK will be responsible for upgrades and enhancements extending the vehicles’ service life to beyond 2040.  WCSP will generate employment opportunities and support up to 600 jobs in the UK.

“We are delighted that the MoD has selected us to lead this critical upgrade effort designed to maximize the investment made in Warrior vehicles to extend their lives into the 2040s” said Alan McCormick, vice president and managing director in Lockheed Martin UK’s Ampthill business.  ”The WCSP will provide a highly capable vehicle to fulfill the British Army’s current and future requirements.  It will also bring significant job opportunities for our team of suppliers based here in the UK.”

Leading suppliers on Lockheed Martin’s Warrior Transformation Team (WTT) include Ultra Electronics; the Defence Support Group; SCISYS; Rheinmetall Defence; Curtiss Wright; Thales UK; Moog; Meggitt; CTA International; Westwire; TKE; MTL and Caterpillar UK.

UK Secretary of State for Defence, Philip Hammond, commented: “As a key step towards meeting our requirements for Future Force 2020, the upgraded Warriors will give commanders and their soldiers greater flexibility and firepower.  Not only is this fantastic news for the Army, it also represents a great boost to British Industry – sustaining jobs, skills and capability within the UK’s armoured vehicle sector.”

Chief of the General Staff, General Sir Peter Wall, added:  ”This announcement of an upgrade to one of the Army’s most important fighting vehicles is extremely welcome. Warrior will continue to be at the heart of our combat capability for at least another 25 years with state of the art firepower and electronics. Wherever the Army deploys, our infantry will depend on its superior protection, mobility, and lethality. This will be a battle-winner.”

Lockheed Martin UK’s WTT will introduce major improvements to the current Warrior Armoured Fighting Vehicle, including fitting and integrating the CT40 weapon system, as well as an open electronic architecture system and improved armour protection.  

Lockheed Martin UK, part of Lockheed Martin Corporation, is a leader in systems integration, working on major programmes spanning the aerospace, defence and civil sectors.  Lockheed Martin UK works with more than 100 business partners and employs over 1,500 people at sites across the UK.

Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global security company that employs about 126,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. The Corporation’s 2010 sales from continuing operations were $45.8 billion.


media execs in hacking probe

Exclusive

by Charles Lavery

THREE senior media executives in Scotland are to be interviewed by police as part of the UK wide phone hacking and corruption probes.

Strathclyde Police, Scotland’s biggest police force, was  tasked with re-examining the Tommy Sheridan court case to establish whether witnesses told the truth.  Andy Coulson, former News of the World editor and Prime Minister David Cameron’s PR guru, is awaiting interview as part of that investigation.

The Scottish force was also tasked with a scoping exercise to establish if phone hacking or the illegal accessing of  personal information had been carried out by newspapers and media groups north of the border.

That “scoping exercise” has  identified three prominent individuals in Scotland’s media industry who will be interviewed in the coming weeks. All three worked for the same newspaper group.

Two of the  three executives are still employed there and hold senior positions. The third is a former senior editorial executive at the group who left several years ago.

The men targeted are from Stirlingshire, Lanarkshire and Ayrshire.

The Major Investigation Unit of Strathclyde Police has begun contacting  journalists and former journalists from news groups including Trinity Mirror as part of the inquiry into the Scottish press.

Detectives are requesting statements.

One former journalist contacted by the inquiry team was told there is an on-going inquiry into allegations of corruption and the illegal accessing of personal data by newspapers north of the border.

That inquiry is running alongside the Sheridan perjury probe and will cover all Scottish news groups.

It’s believed the former highly placed executive, who controlled budgets at a paper within the group,  is of major interest to the investigation team, given his links to a senior, high profile police officer.  The Major Investigation Unit is probing links between this executive and a number of well placed police officers.

ends


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