29 August 2013
Guccifer Special Services Requested
A sends:
Subject: Lockerbie bombing, political corruption. Scottish Crown Office.
Guccifer.
I assume that you realize that the Lockerbie bomber was not the Lockerbie
bomber but was fitted up for political reasons. The trial was a farce and
the SCCRC found compelling reasons to conclude that a miscarriage of justice
had occurred.
A complaint was issued to the Scottish police with 8 significant accusations
of criminal allegations of perjury and attempting to pervert the course of
justice.
http://lockerbiecase.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/police-instructed-not-to-investigate.html
Frank Mulholland, Lord Advocate (sort of attorney general) issued the orders
to NOT investigate the criminal activities of the police surrounding the
Lockerbie trial.
So a lot of people are very pissed off at this ongoing clusterfuck of
institutionalized corruption.
Time for another approach.
If Guccifer was my dog I'd let him loose in Frank Mulholland's office. The
question is "How can I point Guccifer at Frank Mulholland and his Crown Office
communications?"
There must be a whole bunch of panicky emails out there discussing the cover-up.
Wouldn't it be nice if they got leaked :)))
_____
Background info:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/lockerbie-evidence-was-not-
given-to-megrahis-lawyers-7555110.html
Lockerbie evidence 'was not given to Megrahi's lawyers'
Key evidence that could have acquitted Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi of the Lockerbie
bombing was not given to his defence team, according to the author of a new
book.
Crucial information about a fragment of electrical circuit board that was
alleged to have come from the bomb which destroyed a passenger aircraft over
the skies of Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 270 people in 1988, was given to
police in the run-up to Megrahi's trial in 2000 but never disclosed, it is
claimed.
The allegations are made in the book Megrahi: You Are My Jury, by John Ashton.
The book has been condemned by David Cameron, who called it "a disgrace"
to the families of the murdered. It claims that a key fragment of circuit
board, found at the Lockerbie crash site and said by the prosecution to be
from a timer which detonated the bomb, could not have been one of a batch
that was sold to Libya by the manufacturers.
The fragment was a vital link in the prosecution argument that the bomb was
placed in the aircraft by Megrahi. Last night experts who have closely followed
the case said the claim, if true, meant the case against Megrahi is now "blown
out of the water".
During Megrahi's trial it was accepted the fragment from the timer came from
the Swiss company Mebo. The company admitted selling 20 such timers to the
Libyans, but new evidence points to the Lockerbie fragment not being one
of them. The one at Lockerbie was coated in tin, whereas those sold to Libya
were coated with a tin and lead alloy, Mr Ashton says. A sworn affidavit
from the production manager said the company only ever used alloy, rather
than pure tin.
Megrahi's trial heard evidence from two prosecution witnesses that the lack
of lead on the coating could be explained by it having been burned off in
the heat of the explosion. Neither witness was an electronics expert.
However, the book reveals that Megrahi's solicitor, Tony Kelly, commissioned
two scientists, Dr Chris McArdle, a former adviser to the Government, and
Dr Jess Cawley, a consultant to the engineering industry, to test the suggestion.
Both concluded this could not have happened.
The book also claims that notes by a prosecution forensics expert, Alan Feraday,
during his original examination of the circuit board fragment in 1991, reveal
he was aware of a difference in the make-up of the circuit board. However,
his notes, which were given to police on 8 November 1999, were not disclosed
to Megrahi's defence team until 2009.
"Had these documents been disclosed to the defence team, they would have
provided the basis for a vigorous cross-examination of Feraday but, in the
event, his claim that the fragment was 'similar in all respects' to the control
samples went unchallenged," said Mr Ashton. "I don't believe the police would
have withheld the documents from the Crown, which raises the second question:
why was it not disclosed to the defence?
"Whether it was deliberate or not, I don't know. But it was appalling, and
someone should be held to account for it. They did not meet their duty of
disclosure. That is a huge scandal."
The Independent on Sunday sent the relevant pages of the book to Mr Feraday
but received no response.
Defence lawyer Gareth Peirce said yesterday: "What the research makes unarguable
is that any claimed investigation to date has been determinedly false and
has robbed them of a truthful and transparent account."
Peter Biddulph, a researcher for Jim Swire, who lost his daughter in the
tragedy, said the allegations would further victims relatives' push for a
new inquiry. He said: "[These allegations] show the case against Megrahi
is totally blown out of the water."
A Crown Office spokesperson said: "In respect of the timer fragment, the
defence experts were satisfied it had suffered damage consistent with it
having been closely associated with an explosion and that it had come from
an MST-13 timer."
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