Operation Midland: Met Police to face fresh investigation over more witnesses ” perverting the course of justice”

Convicted paedophile Carl Beech – who made the allegations that sparked the inquiry

The flawed £2 million Operation Midland investigation by the Met Police into alleged sexual abuse by VIPs and politicians which contained sensational false allegations of child murders from a man who turned out to be sex offender himself could be re-opened after four years.

Carl Beech was sentenced to 18 years in prison in 2019 on 12 counts of perverting the course of justice and one of fraud.

His allegations named  former Members of Parliament Harvey Proctor and Lord Janner, the former Home Secretary Lord Brittan, former Prime Minister Edward Heath, former Chief of the Defence Staff Lord Bramall, the former Director of the Secret Intelligence Service Maurice Oldfield, and former Director-General of MI5 Michael Hanley. All the cases involved historic child sex abuse allegations.

Police raided the homes of Harvey Proctor and Lord Bramall and Lord Brittan. .

New inquiry to be set up

Former judge Sir Richard Henriques did a highly critical investigation of how the Met Police handled the investigation and also suggested that two other people -known as Witness A and Witness B who both claimed to be victims of child sexual abuse – should also be investigated for perverting the course of justice.

West Midlands Police carried out a further inquiry and has recommended a further inquiry into all the evidence supplied by both witnesses to see if further action should be taken against them. The police force said there were reasonable grounds to think they had perverted the course of justice.

The Met is asking a second police force to decide now whether there is enough evidence to breing charges.

The Met Police also said that new evidence against them had been supplied by a third party.

After the statement Harvey Proctor claimed he was the person who had supplied fresh evidence. I do not know the identities of the two people

The full Met Police statement reads: “

In 2016, Sir Richard Henriques was asked to carry out a review into the Met’s handling of Operation Midland which was an investigation into non-recent sexual offence allegations against persons of public prominence.

Sir Richard’s report recommended that “offences of attempting to pervert the course of justice be considered” in the cases of two individuals known as witnesses A and B. He added that “it would be appropriate for another police force to carry out such investigations”.

Earlier this year, following a third party referral which included new information, the Metropolitan Police arranged for West Midlands Police to consider all relevant material relating to witnesses A and B in order to advise on whether any further investigation should follow.

That work has now been completed, with West Midlands concluding that there are reasonable grounds to suspect witnesses A and B have committed an offence of perverting the course of justice and that it is in the public interest to open an investigation into whether there is sufficient evidence to justify a prosecution.

Acknowledging that in light of its previous involvement the Met would not be the most appropriate force to carry out this investigation, officers are in the process of agreeing terms of reference with an external force so that the matter can be taken forward.”

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Why prosecuting “Nick” for perverting the course of justice may not stand up in court

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Will Scotland Yard prosecute Nick? Pic Credit: Wikipedia

CROSS POSTED ON BYLINE.COM

The storm after the damning Henriques report  into  how the  Met Police police handled a series of high profile paedophile investigations -including Operation Midland and Yewtree  -has led to demands that one of the principal accusers called ” Nick ” be prosecuted for perverting the course of justice.

I have never met ” Nick” as the story was handled by my colleague Mark Conrad but am aware of the circumstances of the Exaro investigation.

Henriques himself – while deciding that all the prominent figures accused in Operation Midland are innocent and were subject to false allegations – stops short of actually recommending this despite being pressed by the Janner family and seeing the strong demands from former Tory MP Harvey Proctor.

He says “Such a course  is well outside my terms of reference and may well be cited as a ground for staying any criminal action against ” Nick.”

But the Met Police decided to ask Northumbria Police to investigate whether ” Nick” had indeed done this.

Unless Henriques, who has only released 84 pages of a 500 page report,has secret information on Nick proving how he made all this up I have considerable scepticism that the police could make a charge of perverting the course of justice stick or even be accepted by the Crown Prosecution Service.

My reason is that there is a precedent. Just 16 months ago a person was tried at the Old Bailey in a court case that most of the national newspapers could not be bothered to cover.

I was a prosecution witness  alongside other journalists in that trial  in a case brought  by the Met Police against Ben Fellows   who had accused the former  Tory chancellor, Ken Clarke, of sexually abusing him.Clarke denied it vehemently and Henriques backs him up.

My involvement – which is contained in a statement on this website after the trial was over – was because I had given a statement to the Met Police while they were investigating his claims.

Fellows was a member of an undercover sting by the Cook Report which was looking at Ian Greer Associates, a long defunct lobbying company, and it was while he was working with us he alleged this had happened.

The Met Police in the end not only did not find any evidence but decided to prosecute him for perverting the course of justice.

He was acquitted of this charge by the jury.

We do not know why the jury decided this. However it was put  to them by his defence barrister that  it was the police that sought his statement not Fellows  who had actually initially refused. So he had not deliberately set out to pervert the course of justice.

The survivor Nick is in the same position. He did not go to the police demanding they investigate the Westminster paedophile ring. The police sought him as a potential witness when they contacted Exaro asking whether  we could provide his details to them.

Exaro made it clear to the police that it would be up to Nick whether he talked to them. Exaro also remained neutral on whether he wanted to talk to him – we did not pressurise him to go to the police. In the end he decided he would – but it was because the police requested it.

Given that – unless again there is something secret that Henriques knows but is not telling the public – it is going to require a high bar to prove he deliberately set out to force the Met Police to spend £2m on an investigation.

There is also another point to this. If the police ask a survivor to make a statement to them so they can pursue people where child sexual abuse crimes are  alleged to be committed are they now going to issue  a warning to the survivor. Are they going to tell survivors that if they cannot prove the case – or no other witnesses come forward – they will liable for prosecution for perverting the course of justice. If that is the new era  survivors are going to be very reluctant to come forward to the police in future.

 

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