Monday, March 21, 2016

End the #spycops secrecy: Solidarity Demonstration

Message from Campaigner:

Pitchford Inquiry are hearing submissions on Tuesday and Wednesday as to whether to allow the police to use Neither Confirm Nor Deny as response to whether a given person was a police spy... and also on hearing some evidence in secret. 

The more the better at the demo... 
  • End the #spycops secrecy – make the Public Inquiry PUBLIC
  • Neither Confirm Nor Deny = Neither Truth Nor Justice
  • Release the Names, Open the Files
Solidarity Demo: Tuesday 22 March 9am-10am
Royal Courts of Justice, The Strand, London WC2
(Holborn or Temple tube)

The Public Inquiry into Undercover Policing will be holding a preliminary hearing to determine how the inquiry will be conducted. Police authorities have asked ask the public inquiry to keep some evidence secret, and to uphold the police’s shameful ‘neither confirm nor deny‘ policy.
In contrast, those who are fighting back against police undercover abuses and their legal teams will be arguing that the public inquiry must exactly that: public.
Join the demo outside the Royal Courts of Justice. Spread the word.

The Pitchford Inquiry into undercover policing is going to make a ruling on disclosure of evidence and protection of identity.
The police – supported by the Home Office and Cabinet Office – have said they want to have large parts of this “public” inquiry held in secret and intend to use their “Neither Confirm Nor Deny” approach.

This has been a tool they have used to obstruct the fight for truth from women who were deceived into relationships by undercover officers. They only invented this hardline policy six months after the women launched their legal case.

It is the police characteristically failing to admit wrongdoing, let alone sanction those who did it. It results in the absurdity of police refusing to confirm whether people like Mark Kennedy and Bob Lambert were ever undercover officers, even after the Metropolitan Police have admitted some of them were, in the press, and apologised to women targetted by these officers and others.

We only have details on 14 officers from Britain’s political secret police – 90% of them are still unknown. The only way we will know what those officers did is if the people they spied on tell their stories and, in turn, the only way for that to happen is if they are told they were targeted.
The inquiry cannot be credible if it hides 90% of the truth. It must release the names of officers. Those who were spied on should see their files to discover what took place and why, rather than take the word of the liars who abused them.

The inquiry has designated 179 people targeted by the 14 known officers as ‘core participants’, and 133 of them have called for the release of the officers’ cover names. For many, this issue is the test of whether the Inquiry is serious or a whitewash.

There will be a demonstration outside the High Court at 9am on Tuesday 22nd March, ahead of the first day of the Pitchford Inquiry’s hearing. Let’s make it clear; without truth there cannot be justice. WE URGE EVERYONE WHO CAN GET DOWN THERE TO SUPPORT THIS DEMO: THIS IS AN IMPORTANT MOMENT TO MAKE IT CLEAR TO THE JUDGE THAT THIS INQUIRY CANNOT BE A WHITEWASH.

A briefing by Police Spies Out of Lives on the police's submission to the inquiry regarding restricting information can be read here:
https://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/uploads/2016/03/Secrets-beyond-lies-briefing.pdf

... and a contrasting submission on behalf of Non State Core participants, i.e. the individuals and campaigning groups targetted by the undercovers, can be read here:
https://www.ucpi.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/160311-submissions-on-the-legal-approach-to-restriction-orders-non-state-non-police.pdf

2 comments:

  1. The saga continues...
    "Undercover relationship woman wants officer prosecution" -
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-43957299

    ReplyDelete
  2. Follow-up to the above:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-43992692
    "Undercover Met Police officer sacked over relationship"
    Spycop quote: "The Met does a good line in selective amnesia, as indeed they do in selective disclosure."
    See also: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-43472630
    "Police took 'squatters' rights' on dead children's identities":
    'Details of how police took "squatters' rights" on the identities of dead children to infiltrate protest groups have emerged with full publication of sections of a Scotland Yard manual.'

    ReplyDelete