Showing posts with label Geoffrey Bacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geoffrey Bacon. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Richard Fulcher, part 17

1.            I then opened the locked electricity housing and showed the people claiming to be from E.ON the meter.

2.            This meter number was an entirely different meter number than the one on the bills my wife is receiving from E.ON. (The account was set up in her name).

3.            The female operative looked surprised and beckoned to her male counterpart.

4.            The female took a photograph of the meter with her mobile phone. I found this odd behaviour, just as I found it odd that neither operative had an HHT on which to record the meter reading.

5.            I believe that the operatives then checked the seals on the meter and found them not to have been tampered with.

6.             All of this scene was played out in front of the two armed police officers and one other (female) police officer. I understand that the female officer (WPC Girton) is married to one of the male officers. I believe it to be improper that two married police officers should be sent out on a job together and that this also makes the arrest unlawful.

7.             My friend appeared at King’s Lynn Magistrates’ Court on 2 August 2013 and he entered a plea of Not Guilty to causing criminal damage.

8.            I did not see the police take any photos of alleged damage to the car.

9.            I did not see the police take photos of the damage to my farm gate.

10.       On 4 August 2013, both my wife and I pressed criminal charges against the female driver for causing damage to the farm gate.

11.       On 28 August 2013, I sent an email to Katie Parry of Parry & Company, the solicitors alleging to represent E.ON in their fraudulent claim against me. (They had not claimed against my wife, but only me.)

12.        I sent this email at 10:02. It was entitled “NOTICE OF FRAUDULENT MISREPRESENTATION AND CRIMINAL DAMAGE”.

13.       I copied all of the Directors of the E.ON Board (UK) into the email and I held them jointly and severally liable for their criminal actions.

14.       I ensured that all parties knew that the letter was an Open Letter and that I intended it to be shown to the world via the medium of the internet.

15.       In this email, I brought the fraudulent misrepresentation to the attention of all parties concerned, so that they would be in no doubt that if they went ahead with their criminal activities and continued to enter false documentation into Court, then the Hearing would be a nullity (because it would be based on fraud) but that they would held criminally liable for their actions, jointly and severally.

16.        In the same email, I also sought full disclosure, but this was denied me.

17.       In the same email, I asked for a report into the incident on the farm on 1 August 2013. This has not been sent to me to date.

18.       I believe that Ms Parry, Thomas Denash, the entire UK Board of Directors of E.ON, Judge Barry Rutland and Timothy Williams (Fenners Chambers, Cambridge) are all complicit in an unlawful and fraudulent Hearing at King’s Lynn County Court on 04 September 2013.

19.       I had witnesses present in the public gallery.

20.       On 06 September 2013, I received a number of telephone calls from the High Court Enforcer (hereinafter “the HCE”), whom I had instructed to collect the monies owed to me (£270k) in my Judgment against Fenland District Council. This Judgment is dated 7 November 2012.

21.       Officers from the HCE informed me that fraudulent documents had been provided to them by Council Officers from Fenland District Council, when the HCE had attended their offices on 03 and 04 September 2013.

22.       Officers from HCE told me that my Judgment was bona fide but that documents involving Gordon Dean (of Gordon Dean Solicitors, 16 Princes Street, Norwich, NR3 1AE) and Andrew Clarke (of Weightmans Solicitors, LLP) were clearly fraudulent.

23.       The officers from HCE advised me to contact the police and inform them that an investigation needs to take place because fraudulent documents had been entered into court and had been made to deceive the court and the HCE agency.

24.       On Friday 6 September 2013, I spoke with the High Court Enforcers office regarding my bona fide judgment against Fenland District Council. The HCE informed me that court documents allegedly involving District Judge Barry Rutland were bogus documents and that fraud had been perpetrated.

25.       On 07 September 2013, I reported the theft of a meter to Siemens, UK and I have asked them to investigate where the meter owned by that company has gone.

26.       In an email dated 10 September 2013, Siemens informed me that they had reported a stolen meter to E.ON.

27.       I, in turn, informed the local Safer Neighbourhood Team police about the stolen meter.

28.       In an email dated 10 September 2013, the HCE sent me a letter claiming that they had never said that the court documents were fraudulent. I believe that they had been “got at”.

29.       On 10 September 2013, I received an email from an Elliot Nason of Eastern Counties Finance (hereinafter “ECF”) in which he once again refused to meet to discuss the loan agreements with me.

30.       Mr Nason claims that there are 6 agreements. I believe from evidence that I have seen that Mr Nason and ECF are acting fraudulently and I have reported them to the police on 11 September 2013 under the Fraud Act 2006.

31.       Also on 11 September 2013, I reported District Judge Barry Rutland to the Office for Judicial Complaints and cited fraud, misconduct in public office and perverting the course of justice amongst other misdemeanours.

32.       Also on 11 September 2013, I reported Judge Nicholas Coleman to the Office for Judicial Complaints and cited fraud, misconduct in public office and perverting the course of justice amongst other misdemeanours. He had refused to seek full disclosure – particularly the CAD report – and he refused to allow me to call witnesses in a direct breach of Article 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998.

33.       On 10 September 2013, I received a visit from two people purporting to be from the Official Receiver’s Office (hereinafter “the ORO”), but I had reason to doubt their credibility. After some initial research on these people, I still have reason to doubt their credibility.

34.       They had brought the police with them and PC 503 (Ben Clarke) from Hunstanton Police and WPC 1424 Whitmore from Dersingham Police came on to my property without lawful excuse.

35.       I was informed by the two people purporting to be from the ORO that District Judge Barry Rutland had issued a Bankruptcy Order and that “it stands”.)

36.       I informed the men from the ORO (if, indeed, they were) that I cannot be bankrupt because my assets outweigh my alleged liabilities, that I have not attended a bona fide Bankruptcy Petition hearing; that I have never signed any documents declaring that I am bankrupt and that DJ Rutland must have created the documents fraudulently, just as he had had a hand in fraudulent documents emanating from Norwich Courts (a fact initially corroborated by the HCE and subsequently denied.)

37.       I informed the two men from the ORO that they were acting ultra vires and that any Bankruptcy Order would be void ab initio.

38.       The two men left after around half an hour. The two police officers left around 15 minutes later.

39.       On 11 September 2013, I reported the two men from the ORO to the police for having perpetrated a course of conduct amounting to harassment.

40.       I have received email receipts from the police for every email that I have sent them.

41.       I have put my name to a book entitled FRAMED! which highlights judicial and police corruption.

42.       I believe that the allegations against me (of Threats to Kill and Harassment) arose because James Morgan (of Hayes and Storr Solicitors, King’s Lynn) did not want me to obtain a seat on the Borough Council of King’s Lynn.

43.       Hayes and Storr were supposed to be handling my legitimate claim against Fenland District Council, but they sat on my claim for two years. It was only when I brought their dilatory attitude to their attention that they initiated criminal charges against me.

44.       Upon my unlawful arrest for Threats to Kill (under section 16 of the Offences Against the Person Act, 1861), I was given a duty solicitor, Mr George Sorrell from Credence law. I believe he has connections with Hayes & Storr and Gavin Cowe of FisherCowe Solicitors.  

45.       Mr Sorrell failed to act on my behalf and I subsequently de-instructed him.

46.       When I instructed Gavin Cowe, he failed to obtain the CAD report and he failed to write a defence statement for me.

47.       Mr Cowe led me to believe that my case would be heard in the Crown Court, but it was heard in the Norwich Magistrates’ Court.

48.       Mr Cowe also failed to obtain the pocket notebooks of the arresting officers (armed police) in my arrest of 15 August 2013.

49.       My wife and I managed to obtain a bona fide judgment against FDC for more than £270,000 in November 2012, but they have still failed to pay me out.

50.       Having uncovered all of this corruption, I made contact with an investigative journalist and author.

51.       It is my belief that there should be a full and thorough investigation at the highest level into this corruption.

52.       The offences committed against me and my wife are getting out of proportion.

53.       I was due to attend the Norwich Crown Court on 13 September 2013, but under duress have had to decide not to attend because I cannot get a fair trial or Hearing in my Appeal in Norfolk or Cambridgeshire. Judge Nicholas Coleman has been reported to the OJC for failing to allow me witnesses, to obtain full disclosure and for significant breaches of my human rights and those of my wife.

54.       I still intend, however, to continue my Appeal against Conviction and Sentence, but have decided that it will have to be outside of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire and I want it to be heard in the Court of Appeal in London.

55.       I believe that writing this Affidavit and my part in publishing the book has put my wife and me at risk from reprisals.

56.       My wife and I fear for our lives, having had three properties destroyed by fire and I feel there is no point in asking for police protection as they are involved in most of the matters mentioned in this Affidavit.

57.       If anything should happen to me or my wife and family or my friends or property because of these Facts of Truth being made public, I have appointed three former Army and RAF officers to expose all the evidence we have gathered in these matters.

58.       I shall now devote the rest of my life to exposing miscarriages of justice upon the public and corruption as this is my destiny in life. 


59.       I believe that everything I have said in this Affidavit is true.

A famous miscarriage of justice ... the Bridgewater Four

Ann Whelan's son was convicted of the killing of newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater. He, like Brian Pead and Richard Fulcher and Robert Ecclestone, was innocent.

Read about how Ann Whelan describes the police and judicial corruption. How they created documents, got witnesses to lie (perjury), invented charges ... just as they have done for 6 years with Brian Pead and for six years with Richard Fulcher.

The Borough Council of King's Lynn and West Norfolk stole a rare Book of Common Prayer from an elderly 91 year woman under the guise of 'cleaning her home'. But that was not all. They stole rare stamps, Roman coins, more than 100,000 rare postcards, etc etc ... then claimed they had done it to 'de-clutter' her home (which she owns outright!) When her elderly husband died, the police tried to blame Violet's son, Robert, for killing his father.

The ability of the police to lie about, invent charges against and prosecute perfectly innocent and decent people knows no limits.

Brian Pead had variously been described as a 'monster', a 'pervert' and a 'paedophile' ONLY AFTER HE UNCOVERED CHILD ABUSE IN LAMBETH COUNCIL. Before that, he was a regular guy aged 55 with no previous. You couldn't make it up. In Brian's illegal trial at Southwark Crown Court in 2009, THERE NEVER WAS A VICTIM.

Richard Fulcher was accused of Threats to Kill by his solicitors ONLY AFTER HE COMPLAINED ABOUT THE POOR SERVICE HE WAS GETTING AND ABOUT LOCAL COUNCIL CORRUPTION.

The police and the judiciary like to portray themselves as 'whiter than white' and the UK justice system as the 'best in the world'. The vast majority of the public have NO IDEA of the corruption going on in courts EVERY DAY under the guise of the best justice system in the world. It is far from the best. We believe that the Courts in England & Wales commit more human rights abuses than China ... only the BBC would never dare expose them! Which is why Savile got away with his crimes for so long.

Now read Ann Whelan's story. Afterwards you might like to ask "Why are the courts in England and Wales SO corrupt and why are the paedophile judges and police allowed to get away with their crimes?


Ann's story:

In 1978 my son, along with three other men, was charged with a horrendous crime - the murder of newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater. I watched in complete shock and disbelief - how could this have happened to my son and myself? As the court proceedings gathered pace, false confessions were produced and dubious witnesses perjured themselves. The police were more than anxious to bring a conviction and, as we know today, they falsified documents to secure a conviction.

When the guilty verdict was pronounced, I vowed that I would clear the names of my son, Michael, Jim Robinson, Pat Molloy and Vincent Hickey. I knew that a gross miscarriage of justice had been perpetrated and that justice would prevail. What I was not prepared for was the time that it would take and the opposition that I would encounter along the way.
I did not know where to start and to whom I could turn. In those early days I felt very much alone, but as my campaign got under way, people began to take notice. However, the police and judiciary will never easily admit that they are wrong and it took almost twenty years before they were finally forced to concede that a miscarriage of justice had taken place. I have made a great many friends over these years and I am indebted to them all. So many of them would have liked to have contributed their experience to the production of this booklet but, for reasons of space, this was not possible. Our hope is that it will serve as a useful guide to both innocent prisoners and their families in their fight for justice. If such a booklet had been available to me in those early days, I really believe that my campaign would have been shorter.

Unfortunately, the judiciary still does not appear to have learned from its past mistakes. At the time of writing no police officers have been brought to justice for the part they played in the Bridgewater Four miscarriage of justice or any other, and there are still corrupt police around who will do anything to further their own ends. It is, therefore, sadly inevitable that there will be further miscarriages of justice. The important lesson to learn is that every effort must be made from the very start to demolish the evidence of the prosecution. Once a conviction has been made, it is very difficult to reverse -the law does not like to be proved wrong and, as I have learned, it takes many years of full-time work to prove a miscarriage of justice has taken place.
In solidarity
Ann Whelan, January 1999


Thursday, 19 September 2013

FRAMED! - part 21

41

28 January 2008

Having encountered the ‘girl’ in a chatroom on the Faceparty.com website, Brian Pead added ‘her’ to his MSN contact list in order to smoke this person out. Claiming to be a girl aged fourteen, this person had entered an adult social networking website and was asking for money in return for sex. This had immediately not made sense to Brian.
It was even more obvious to him as the conversation progressed that it was not a fourteen-year-old girl at all. He looked at ‘her’ profile again. It contained just one photograph – of someone looking about fourteen and dressed in hockey kit. Again, this did not make sense because it was clear that the poor quality photograph (it looked like a copy of a copy) had been cropped from a team photograph so that just this one girl was visible. Other girls’ shoulders and hair could just be seen. Brian felt that this was extremely odd. He had taught pupils for some twenty years by this stage. He had a very good understanding of fourteen year old girls and boys. In respect of girls, he knew that they liked to put up photographs which showed all their friends or team-mates. He also knew that they liked to put up photos which showed many aspects of their lives. And that you usually couldn’t shut them up!
Yet this profile contained only the one poor quality photograph and no information at all about the ‘girl’. Instinctively, Brian knew this was odd. Odd things always draw his attention.
His initial hypothesis when he encountered this person was that this was not a girl. He was clear about that.
As they moved to MSN to chat there, he was determined to use all of his counselling skills in order to smoke out this person. Although he felt it was an adult, possibly with paedophilic tendencies, in order to exploit teenagers by posing as a teenager, he suspended this hypothesis just as he would with a real client in his counselling room.
Within two or three opening sentences of their conversation it became obvious to him – despite having suspended his hypothesis – that this was not a teenaged girl at all but an adult posing as one. There were a number of reasons for this. Firstly, the person’s use of language did not match that of the average fourteen-year-old. Brian had taught literally thousands of teenagers in his twenty-five year career and he had a very good idea of the language skills of the average teen – both boys and girls. Should the reader be minded to undertake even the most basic research on the internet, such research would show that by the age of fourteen, girls in general have a wider vocabulary than boys.
Secondly, this ‘teen’ was omitting the use of vowels in the conversation. As an author of nine books and with a first class honours degree in English, Brian has a good understanding of linguistics and linguistic devices. When he received speech therapy as a five-year-old after suffering the trauma of sexual abuse in a children’s home, he had learnt a great deal about speech patterns and words. He knew that many people, when texting or ‘speaking’ online, will often use a form of short-hand and omit occasional vowels or consonants. However, this person was omitting almost all of the vowels and hardly any of the consonants. It was a particularly strange use of language.
Thus, he had already formed an opinion that this person’s vocabulary was not that of a teenager and that the ‘teenager’ was not actually writing as a teenager. As a teacher, he had encountered thousands of teenagers and it was clear to him that this was not.
But Brian did not jump to conclusions. His first book took him twenty years to research – he is not a man usually given to rash judgments or hasty decisions. He resolved to continue to investigate this person.
Another counselling skill that he was able to bring to bear was that of transference and counter-transference. These can be difficult concepts to even experienced counsellors, but Brian was conscious of them. He had been praised for his understanding and use of transference and counter-transference in his counselling work.
There were two main themes on the Advanced Diploma course he was completing in March 2008: transference and counter-transference and psychosexual issues. There was a great deal of reading around these subjects. Brian was fascinated by both themes. From an early age, he had been part of groups in a children’s home, as a manager and within his dysfunctional family and marriage. He had been particularly interested in the interaction between the different members of whichever group he was involved in. He was acutely aware not only of his own role within each group, but he also gained increasing awareness of the transferential and counter-transferential issues between members of the group. And having been abused between the ages of 5 and 11, he naturally had a deep interest in psychosexual matters.
Brian was particularly adept at sorting out what was ‘his stuff’ or ‘the other person’s stuff’ in encounters he had, both in and out of the therapy room. He has a significant level of awareness of his own ‘stuff’ and, as a peer was later to point out, was emotionally intelligent enough to differentiate ‘his stuff’ from the ‘other person’s stuff’ in most encounters. This ability had been honed through years of management, years of reading about psychology and years of attending psychology and philosophy talks at Inner Space in London. His counselling supervisor, Clare Manifold, was impressed with the level of awareness that Brian had around these concepts, writing in his end-of-year report that he “...is able to perceive transferential issues...”
She also wrote that he “...is open to self-exploration, uses his journal well and is happy to look at issues raised in our sessions. [...] he is open to both give, which he does with sensitivity, and receive. [...] He is willing and interested in examining the cultural heritage (of people he encounters). [...] His strengths are good boundaries, evident intelligence and a serious commitment to the work. He forms trusting relationships, gives insightful feedback and is a generous contributor...”
Whilst engaging with this person online, Brian Pead was fully aware of his own feelings in the process and did not merely focus on the conversation itself.
He felt that this was an adult, and an adult male. He felt that this was a middle-aged male. And he felt that this adult had an interest in paedophilia. He had gleaned all this from the first conversation online on 28 January 2008.
As a result of these feelings – which he committed to his personal learning journal which he had to complete as part of his Advanced Diploma counselling course – he decided to make notes and keep a watching brief. If it did, indeed, turn out to be a sex offender, he would report this person to the management of Faceparty.com.
Thus, by the time the first online conversation had concluded, Brian had gathered information that the ‘girl’ was using a particularly strange form of shorthand when typing, that ‘she’ used a form of vocabulary not usually associated with a fourteen-year-old and that he had intuited that the person was a middle-aged adult with paedophilic tendencies.
He had also read a good deal about the work of Dr John Olsson, a linguist, and founder of a world-renowned forensic linguistics consultancy. Olsson is a world-leading expert in forensic linguistics, a science where linguistics techniques are applied to legal processes to solve cases and provide new angles on evidence.
With kind permission from Dr Olsson, we have reproduced the introduction from his book Word Crime (Continuum, 2009):

“...What is forensic linguistics? If you have gotten this far, it is a question you may have some answers to already. On the other hand, forensic linguistics might be a subject that you have heard nothing on, but want to know more about.
My name is John Olsson, and for the past 15 years I have been (and still am) the world’s only full-time forensic linguist. This book concerns my work, and is designed in part to illustrate how forensic linguistics can solve crime. Before I move onto this though, I would like to go over some background information. Let me detail in brief how the science of forensic linguistics came into being.
In 1968 a Swedish linguist working at the University of London heard about a case which had occurred a number of years previously. It concerned the murder of several women and a baby at an infamous London address, 10 Rillington Place, Kensington. Rillington Place became so notorious that the authorities were eventually forced to change its name to Ruston Close at the request of the people who lived there. However, the bad associations remained and eventually the local council demolished the entire street and a new development of houses was constructed there in the 1970s.
The ground-floor tenant of 10 Rillington Place was one John Christie, a quiet perhaps even shy man, apparently contentedly married. Above him lived Timothy Evans and his wife Beryl and their baby daughter. Evans disappeared from Rillington Place in 1949 and questions began to be asked about the whereabouts of his wife and baby. In November of that year, Evans handed himself into police in South Wales where he had been living with his uncle at Merthyr Tydfil. Forensic linguistics comes into the story at this point because Evans was supposed to have given several statements to the police confessing to the crime. Evans was found guilty partly on the basis of the statements and partly on the basis of evidence given by John Christie. Evans was hanged in 1950. Later Christie’s wife disappeared and neighbours began asking questions about his odd behaviour. After Christie moved out another tenant occupied his flat and, while attempting to put up a shelf made a gruesome discovery: a partly clothed woman’s body. When police arrived at the house they found evidence of several other murders. Christie was eventually tracked down, charged, found guilty and later hanged. Not long before he died he confessed to the murder of Evans’ wife and ‘probably’ of their baby. Despite urgent requests to investigate these claims before Christie’s execution date the Home Secretary refused to halt the hanging and Christie was put to death in July 1953. The crimes he had confessed to for which Evans had been hanged continued to be attributed to Evans for over a decade until journalist Ludovic Kennedy became interested in the case in the 1960s and the statements also drew the attention of a Swedish professor working at the University of London, Jan Svartvik examined the statements and concluded that they contained not one but several styles of language, most of which were written in what is known as ‘policeman’s register’. Svartvik’s analysis and the unwavering campaign by Kennedy caused the Home Secretary to reverse the conviction and Evans was posthumously pardoned. This was probably the first murder appeal in the world in which linguistics played a prominent part. Because Svartvik used the term ‘forensic linguistics’ in his report on the statements he is credited with being the ‘father’ of the discipline.
In the 1990s the case of Derek Bentley drew the attention of linguists at Birmingham University where I was doing postgraduate research in linguistics. Several anomalies appeared in the statement Bentley is supposed to have dictated to police officers after the shooting of Police Constable Sidney Miles at a burglary in South London by Bentley’s co-burglar, Chris Craig. A number of other previously accepted confessions now fell under suspicion and one after another several convictions were quashed, largely on the basis of evidence provided by ESDA trace, an electrostatic procedure which has certain elements in common with photocopying and reveals indentations from other sheets if several sheets were placed on top of each other in the course of writing.
In 1994 I founded the Forensic Linguistics Institute in the United Kingdom which has since become one of the leading linguistics laboratories in the world. Along with my colleagues I examine texts of all types for authorship, authenticity, interpretation of meaning, disputed language and other forensic processes. An early case involved the analysis of an alleged terrorist’s statement to police at Paddington Green Police Station in the mid-1980s. Since that time I have handled nearly 300 forensic linguistics investigations. These have ranged from examining the language of suicide letters for genuineness, assessing threat in extortion demands, evaluating police interview tapes for alleged oppressive interviewing (a rare occurrence these days), and the authorship identification of many hundreds of letters, emails and mobile phone texts in a range of inquiries from murder to extortion to witness intimidation, sexual assault and internet child pornography. I get commissioned by police forces, solicitors, international companies and organizations, and even private clients who have received hate mail from someone who might live just down the road or even next door.
In an early case I was asked by the president of a dog club in the mid-west of the United States to see whether a spate of hate mail letters the club had received came from one of their own members. The most likely author turned out to be an elderly mild-mannered lady who had devotedly carried out the club’s administrative affairs for many years, but who had been disappointed by the failure of one of her pets to win a prize at the club’s annual dog show. It may come as something of a surprise, but hate mail also occurs within families: in one case a disgruntled woman had become infuriated at the success of her younger brother in his hotel business and wrote a spate of poison letters to the local chamber of commerce not only denigrating his efforts but insulting his wife, accusing him of nazism and claiming that the hotel often hosted white supremacist weekends. In another case a teenage girl grew jealous of her sister’s impending marriage and tried to poison her against the bridegroom. On the other hand, not all hate mail is from family members: I recently had to attempt an identification in which a middle-aged male, having been sexually rebuffed by a teenage boy, then wrote to the boy’s parents accusing their son of being a child molester. The boy’s father - perhaps as a result of this accusation against what he perceived to be his family’s honour - then committed suicide.
However, there is something you the reader should know, in case you are ever the victim of hate mail, or in case you receive hate mail which denigrates a friend, relative or colleague: in every hate mail case I have dealt with the accusation has turned out to be pure malice - a complete invention. Yet these inventions are capable of wrecking lives, as I have seen all too often. A businessman of my acquaintance received several such letters and it nearly destroyed him, even though he - and everyone around him - knew that the accusations contained in those letters were completely false. It was only through strong family support that he was eventually able to recover. The perpetrator of this terrible crime - and you only have to see the effect on people’s lives to realize how serious a crime it is - has never been found.
Nor should anyone imagine, as per those dark 1940s and 1950s films, that all hate mail writers are women. Far from it: rancour and spite know no gender boundaries, no age limits and no social divisions. I have seen hate mail from young teenagers, old aristocrats and middle-aged artisans, from highly successful executives, doctors, and respectable grandparents. The internet has enabled the genre to flourish: anybody can access a free email address under a pseudonym and post the vilest slander about another person on public forums or communicate it privately in emails. However, despite the advent of technology, the Royal Mail and other postal services around the world still deliver thousands of traditionally written paper missives every day, each designed to destroy a happy life, wreck a worthy reputation or sow the seeds of hatred between formerly devoted couples or other family members. The motive is not always hatred either: it is often a combination of boredom and a failure to foresee the inevitable devastation which can occur.
Fortunately, forensic linguistics is not all hate mail cases. Every day brings a unique inquiry: the father who wants to know if the letter he has received from his daughter is really in her style, the mother who is concerned her teenager’s writing is becoming influenced by ‘gang speak’, the insurance company trying to identify a fraudster’s voice from among several possible clients, the police detective trying to interpret a coded letter from a prisoner to an accomplice, the prisoner who claims innocence, the solicitor working on an appeal for her client, the employee who feels his bosses are trying to frame him by saying he wrote an anonymous email - the list is seemingly endless.
In the 15 years I have been doing this work I have analysed literally thousands of texts by hundreds of different writers implicated in scores of types of crime. In that time forensic linguistics has grown from being a marginal discipline which only a few people were passionate about to an internationally recognized practice which can be of real service to law enforcement and the legal profession.
In this book I will show you the details of some of the many cases I have been privileged to work on. Wherever possible I have avoided identifying victims, where they live or what their occupations are or were. This has sometimes also meant that I could not identify the perpetrators of some of these crimes either. Unfortunately, some cases are well-known to the public and could not be anonymized, and the reader who follows the daily news will recognize these cases quite easily. Some cases are too recent to write about, but I hope to be able to do so in years to come when memories of certain crimes and events are no longer fresh in the public memory.
I hope that this book, which tells the stories of many lives, mostly of ordinary people often faced with extraordinary circumstances through no choice of their own, will show you the power of language analysis in the solving of crime. In telling you about these lives in a simple narrative format I have tried to do so in a straightforward, down-to-earth way. My aim is not primarily to tell a ‘good story’, but to illustrate how interesting and complex language is, and how powerful a resource it can be when it enters the arena of the law. If the stories are worth reading I hope this will not be seen as in any way lessening the importance or the tragedy of the events they seek to describe. I am always conscious of the fact that the work is about people above all, and not just language, and I have found this to be both a privilege and a responsibility over the years.
Forensic linguistics began life as an instrument to correct miscarriages of justice. It now plays an active day-to-day role in our courts. The common law system which has evolved in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland in the last millennium should be treasured by all who live in these islands, despite its undoubted errors over the years. This is why forensic science is so important. In an age when the erosion of civil rights and liberties has once again become a topic to rouse the passions, and rightly so, forensic science stands as one of the guardians of justice and liberty. From small beginnings just 40 years ago, forensic linguistics is now an important, and I believe, permanent component in this process...”

The eminent forensic scientist Dr John Olsson describes forensic linguistics as being one of the guardians of justice and liberty. Since he was passionate about psychology and linguistics and had been all his life, Brian Pead was aware of Olsson’s work. For this reason, he instructed his barrister, Dominic Bell, then of Charter Chambers, 21 John Street, London, to call Dr Olsson as a witness for the defence. Bell refused. There was no valid reason for such a refusal. In fact, the refusal itself flouted several legal principles.
Firstly, if a client makes such a legitimate request, as Brian did here, a barrister has to comply with that request. Bell, therefore, is guilty of failing to act upon his client’s clear and specific instructions.
Secondly, it is a defendant’s duty to put forward as cogent and as powerful a defence to an allegation as possible. Rule 22.4 of the Criminal Procedure Rules states:

“...Under section 6A of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996, you must:
(a) set out the nature of your defence, including any particular defences on which you intend to rely;
(b) indicate the matters of fact on which you take issue with the prosecutor, and in respect of each explain why;
(c) set out particulars of the matters of fact on which you intend to rely for the purposes of your defence;
(d) indicate any point of law that you wish to take, including any point about the admissibility of evidence or about abuse of process, and any authority relied on;
and
(e) if your defence statement includes an alibi (i.e. an assertion that you were in a place, at a time, inconsistent with you having committed the offence), give particulars, including –
(i) the name, address and date of birth of any witness who you believe can
give evidence in support of that alibi,
(ii) if you do not know all of those details, any information that might help identify or find that witness...”  
There was no legitimate reason for not calling the expert witness. In his book The Art of Persuasion, Sir David Napley writes:

“...In legal aid cases you [the barrister] may be uncertain whether the expense of obtaining expert opinion or calling expert witnesses will be allowed by the Taxing officer or the Legal Aid Area Committee, and, if allowed, at the amount which the expert will require as his fee. You can obtain guidance in advance from the Chief Clerk of the Crown Court in respect of trials on indictment, or from the Area Secretary in magistrates’ court cases. It is important, however, not to allow these gentlemen, who are uniformly helpful, to usurp your function. You are in control of your own case and have the sole responsibility for conducting it, and even if, exceptionally, they are unwilling to authorise an expert you may feel constrained to take the risk, and hope to justify your decision later. In most cases, however, no difficulty of this sort is likely to arise...”

It is evident that calling expert witnesses is a run-of-the-mill exercise in most cases. Yet Bell refused to take instructions from his client. Apart from being a breach of the code of conduct that barristers are required to uphold, Bell’s refusal was also a breach of the Criminal Procedure Rules, or CPR.
The CPR are, in effect, a handbook for conducting a criminal trial and set down the procedure that all parties in a criminal trial are supposed to adhere to. Each component part of a trial has a number of rules that must be followed if a trial is to be fair. The elements of a trial include, for example, disclosure, witness statements, evidence and expert witnesses. The rules are numbered and consisted (in 2005) of some 211 pages.
The Criminal Procedure Rules 2005 were finalised on 18 February 2005, laid before Parliament on 4 March 2005 and came into force on 4 April 2005. It was this set of rules that was in effect at the time of Brian Pead’s trial in December 2009.
Expert evidence is dealt with by Part 33 of the CPR. However, there were no rules in this Part of the 2005 rules and the obligation to disclose expert evidence was referred to in Part 24.

Rule 24.1 imposes an obligation upon either party in a criminal trial – where the Defendant has issued a plea of ‘Not Guilty’ - to adduce expert evidence (whether of fact or opinion) in the proceedings as soon as practicable.

FRAMED! - part 20

We hope that by now you will be thinking: “Isn’t the issue of Disclosure covered by Archbold?” and it is. At 12-45 in the 2008 edition (the edition relevant to these trials) it states:

“…In relation to offences into which a criminal investigation was commenced on or after 4 April 2005, the duties and responsibilities of parties with regard to disclosure are now governed by Parts I and II of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996, as amended by the Criminal Justice Act 2003.
Part I (ss1-21) has created a staged approach (initial prosecution disclosure, defence disclosure, continual review by the prosecution)…”

Put simply, the Prosecution show a defendant some of the material they have against him (or her). Then the defendant shows the prosecution some of what he/ she has by way of defence and then the Prosecution is supposed to provide all of the remaining evidence (or disclosure) they have against the defendant, even if this is fatal to the Crown’s case against the defendant.
(Authors’ note: we believe that this present system of disclosure needs to be reviewed so that all of the available evidence is produced at the initial stage and not at stage two of the process.)
Archbold provides the following on Part II of the disclosure process:

“…Part II (ss22-27) provides for a code of practice for regulating action the police must take in recording and retaining material obtained in the course of a criminal investigation and revealing it to the prosecution for a decision on disclosure. […] A protocol for the control and management of unused material in the Crown Court was published under the auspices of the Court of Appeal on 20 February 2006. In R. v K. (Note) [2006] it was said that the protocol clearly sets out the principles relating to disclosure, that those who act for the prosecution and the defence should familiarise themselves with it, and that it should be applied by trial judges…”

The rules with regard to disclosure of evidence are therefore very clear. It is also very clear that disclosure in this trial caused serious concerns for the judge – so the question has to be asked: why did he proceed with the trial when it was evident that the rules of disclosure had been breached?
Furthermore, the issue of disclosure forms part of the European Convention on Human Rights:

“…The Commission held that the ‘equality of arms’ principle imposes on prosecuting and investigating authorities an obligation to disclose any material in their possession, or to which they could gain access, which may assist the accused in exonerating himself or in obtaining a reduction in sentence. This principle extends to material which might undermine the credibility of a prosecution witnessNon-disclosure of evidence relevant to credibility may also raise an issue under Article 6(3)(d) – the right to a fair trial…”

The emphases are ours. It is evident that the prosecution has a duty to produce any material in its possession which might undermine the case against the defendant and even lead to the prosecution dropping its case against the defendant.
In what the authors feel was an attempt at ‘arse-covering’, Loraine-Smith mentioned the lack of disclosure but did nothing about addressing the problem. The authors believe that this one factor alone made Brian’s trial unlawful and a miscarriage of justice. But worse – much worse – was yet to come.
 At this point, Loraine-Smith asked in open court whether the Faceparty website was bankrupt, and he was told that it was by prosecutor Forster. Note that he was told and not shown any evidence to support the assertion.
This means that Forster lied to the judge. He did not merely mislead the Court – which can inadvertently occur – but he deceived the Court by lying. The consequence of this lie was that Brian could not receive a fair trial, since the trial was based on inaccurate information and lies.  It is, furthermore, a relatively easy function to establish whether the Faceparty website was currently in a state of liquidation (a search on the Companies House website would show this <http://www.companieshouse.gov.uk/>).  Not only was the judge deceived, but he also failed to demand that the question be answered. 
Back in Court 4, Loraine-Smith said to Bell: “Tell your client to take his hands out of his pockets!”
It is clear that Loraine-Smith was attempting to disempower Brian, who was alive to the judge’s poor attempts at destructive psychology. The instruction from Loraine-Smith to Brian via his barrister was designed to unsettle the defendant.
Having commented on the lack of disclosure from the prosecution, Loraine-Smith then commented on Bell’s defence statements, calling them (in another arse-covering exercise) “...the worst I have ever seen in my entire career...”
Brian was in Court on two entirely separate criminal charges – (i) alleged exposure to three female students and (ii) allegedly inciting a child to engage in sexual activity.
He was innocent of both charges and had produced two separate statements (one for each case). His defence against the charge of Exposure was some 50 pages in length. His defence against the charge of Incitement ran to some 64 pages. In total, Brian had written 114 pages in his defence. As an author and qualified therapist, it is likely that most of what he had written would have made sense. Given the fact that he is not a lawyer, if we allow for the fact that an experienced lawyer might reduce the 114 pages down to a mere 10% of the original (which would be rather severe), that would mean that Brian’s defence statement against two charges would be 11.4 pages. 
Brian’s defence statement in his two criminal trials was prepared by Bell. It was half a page in length. Bell had claimed in a rare conference on 26 November 2009, that he had deliberately made it short in order to “outwit the opposition”. The Criminal Procedure Rules do not permit this kind of ‘ambushing’. Under section 11 of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996, if you:

“…(a) do not disclose what the Act requires;
(b) do not give a defence statement within the time allowed;
(c) at trial, rely on a defence, or facts, that you have not disclosed; or
(d) at trial, call an alibi witness whom you have not identified in advance,
then the court, the prosecutor or another defendant may comment on that, and the court may draw such inferences as it thinks proper in deciding whether you are guilty…”

Bell had (not for the first time) lied to his client and broken the rules of Court.  He also told his client that he would ensure that all his evidence would be entered into Court.  It was not.
All rise.
Outside Court 4, Bell told Brian, “We are in great shape.  Don’t try to influence the proceedings. Just let the process play itself out.”
As a counsellor, Brian knew this was not common sense.  He had read a sufficiently large number of legal books and crime books to know that influencing proceedings is precisely what barristers try to do.  To have your own barrister tell you to just sit back is not a good thing – it smacks of a distinct lack of common sense.
Several barristers entered court. The verdict in another case is to be heard before Brian’s trial commences proper.
Eventually Brian re-entered the Court and Loraine-Smith informed all parties that he would not, after all, be sitting this afternoon.
By 11:45, the trial had still not begun. Forster has two assistants, both solicitors. Bell has no-one. Brian’s solicitor, Angela Shaw, has gone on holiday!
A jury was brought in, but was not sworn in properly. The Criminal Procedure Rules provide specific criteria which must be met in order for a jury to be sworn in properly and for a fair trial to take place.
This did not occur in Brian’s trial. The jury was not selected by ballot in accordance with section 11 of the Juries Act 1974. At no point was Brian given the opportunity to remove (or ‘challenge’) any jurors from the jury under section 12 of the Juries Act 1974. No jurors’ names were read out in Court, yet at section 4-235 Archbold states that the clerk to the court first calls 12 jurors from the panel of 18 in the following manner: “Members of the jury in waiting, please answer to your names and step into the jury box as you are called.”
On the basis of this single incident, the trial was an abuse of process and null and void.  The verdict is also null and void.
With an improperly sworn-in jury sitting, Forster opened the Crown’s case against Brian.  He handed out documents to the jury and told them that they could keep the documents. These documents formed what is commonly known as the ‘Trial Bundle’. A defendant must also be provided with a copy of the very same bundle as provided to each juror (for obvious reasons), but Brian was not provided with the trial bundle. At the Harry Redknapp trial also at Southwark Crown Court in January and February 2012, both Harry Redknapp and Milan Mandaric were provided with a copy each as they sat in the dock watching the trial against them unfold.
In the John Terry trial at the City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court – which Brian also attended – Mr Terry was also provided with a copy of the trial bundle and he was seen occasionally leafing through it as his trial unfolded. Yet Brian Pead was not given a copy. His defence counsel did not ensure that he had a copy. This means that Brian has no knowledge whatsoever of what each juror was shown in the trial bundle – the police and CPS could have put any documents in the bundle. 
Forster then told the jury about the importance of Joinder. He claimed that the Crown was forced to join two separate indictments against Brian in the “interest of justice”.
What Forster failed to tell the jury is that the rules of Joinder do not allow for different indictments to be joined unless certain criteria apply. Archbold deals with Joinder at section 1-154:

“…Rule 14.2(3) of the Criminal Procedure Rules 2005 […] provides that an indictment may contain more than one count if all the offences charged
(a) are founded on the same facts, or
(b) form or are part of a series of offences of the same or a similar character…”

Although both cases against Brian were of a sexual nature, they were not capable of being joined because their execution was significantly different. Exposing one’s self to a group of three students is an entirely different act from going online and inciting a child to engage in sexual acts.  Indeed, the ages of the alleged victims were different – the students were in the 20-22 age-range and the alleged ‘girl’ was 14.
Thus these two separate Indictments should never have been heard in the same Court by the same jury. But the issue of mis-Joinder was a much larger issue because, as we have seen in an earlier chapter, in February 2009, the CPS – with the same Timothy Forster representing them – applied for Joinder at Woolwich Crown Court before Judge Charles Byers. Quite rightly, Byers refused to join the two cases, stating that the two allegations did not contain a ‘common nexus’.
The CPS, however, would not relent. They ensured that the Exposure case collapsed at Woolwich Crown Court, and that it was transferred to Southwark Crown Court, a court with a higher record of convictions when compared with other Crown Courts in London.
In a case of mis-Joinder, any conviction is automatically overturned:

“In R. v Newland [1988], it was held that misjoinder of offences in contravention of rule 9 of the Indictment Rules 1971 cannot be cured by a direction for separate trials of the misjoined counts. If a court proceeds to try a misjoined indictment the proceedings will be a nullity and any resulting convictions […] will be quashed…”

Yet here was Forster telling the jury that the first case is for Exposure and the second for Incitement. The trial, because of mis-Joined indictments, is already void ab initio (from the beginning).
Legally, Exposure means exposing one’s genitals to another to cause them “alarm or distress”. Forster told the jury that Brian Pead lived opposite three female students in Days Lane, Sidcup in Kent. But he didn’t. He lived opposite a church. The three female drama students were actually four females who lived at 62 Days Lane. This house was rented out to the females, who were attending Rose Bruford drama college in Burnt Oak Lane in Sidcup which was about a twenty-minute walk from Days Lane.
The house at 62 Days Lane – where the four students lived – was almost 100 feet (33 metres) away and at an angle of approximately 22.5 degrees from the perpendicular. In other words, this would mean that it would be extremely difficult to look out of Brian’s bedroom window and into the house at 62. Or the other way round.
Just prior to the students moving into number 62 in September 2007, Brian Pead had had the entire front of his house clad in scaffolding. He had decided to embark upon a huge refurbishment of his tired-looking 1930s-built semi-detached house which meant knocking down some internal walls, pulling down all the ceilings and taking up all the floors. During this process he also installed an entirely new central heating system and re-wired the entire house. Much of this work he achieved on his own. On other occasions he sought extra help from David Cox, a firefighter friend with significant building skills and Geoffrey Bacon, a self-employed plumber and builder friend. Certain work took extra pairs of hands or some skills that Brian did not have or, if he had the skill, he sometimes preferred to buy in extra labour to ensure that he was undertaking the refurbishment properly.
Soon after the females moved in, he noticed one night that the female in the front room would often undress for bed in front of open curtains or, more accurately, in front of one open curtain. She would shut the curtains which were directly opposite Nell Stanley’s house at 85 Days Lane, yet keep the curtains open which allowed slight visual access into Brian’s house.
Brian is a man who notices such oddities. Yet what was particularly odd was that the female would almost dance as she stripped, as if she were working as a stripper in some Soho club. She would run her fingers through her hair and over her breasts and it appeared to Brian when he noticed this that she was, perhaps, dancing to some music in her room. After three occasions, he wrote what he regarded as a humorous note complimenting her on her dancing and informing her that she could be seen. For many years as a teacher, he had employed the use of humour when chastising pupils, believing this to be more effective in the longer-term than a straightforward admonishment. The inference, of course, was that she should close her curtains. He put the note through her door one evening in October 2007. The humorous, yet informative, note was intended by Brian to simply draw the female’s attention to the fact that she could be seen (if she were not aware of this fact). Initially he thought that she might be dancing seductively in order to draw attention to herself from the three young men (all aged around 20-24) who lived directly next door to Brian at 87 Days Lane. This house was owned by Glen Meeking, a van driver, and his wife, Jenny, a teacher. Brian hypothesised that the female might be dancing in order to attract the attention of one or another of the young men.
It occurred to Brian that a young woman – she looked to him to be around 23 – who received such a note would then start to ensure that she closed her curtains when she undressed for bed. Yet the note had the opposite effect. She continued to dance on a more regular basis – something around one or two occasions a week – and she maintained this for almost nine months.
This was not something that drew Brian’s attention much after the first two or three occasions. As a counsellor, he hypothesised that she must have some personality disorder that was driving her to display herself so often, perhaps some form of narcissistic disorder. Perhaps she had a lack of parental love or she needed the attention of men through displaying her body rather than seek love from a man for who she was and not for what she looked like. Several hypotheses floated through his mind and he carried out some initial research into Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
Forster played to the gallery: “This note caused Elizabeth McIntyre great distress. She was very upset by the thought that she could be seen by others living across the road. And especially by a much older man.”
This was clearly a ridiculous line of reasoning from Forster. Had she really been so upset, she would have closed her curtains and that would have been the end of the matter. She didn’t do that. Instead, McIntyre kept the note, allegedly failed to mention it to anyone and continued to dance and display her body for the next eight months. Hardly the actions of a young woman who was distressed at the thought that others might see her.
Brian asked Ellen “Nellie” Stanley, an elderly neighbour in her seventies who lived directly opposite the females’ rented house, if she had seen anything odd about the house. She said that she had seen several strange things, not least that the girl whose bedroom was at the front of the house – Elizabeth McIntyre – would close her right hand-hand window curtains at night but not the left-hand curtains. Nellie Stanley also told Brian that she had seen a handgun being waved about in the front bedroom. She hadn’t been sure whether it was a real gun or merely a prop. Given that they were drama students, it was perhaps more likely to have been a prop. On the other hand, ‘drug-dealer types’ had been seen at the house, especially attending the late-night parties.
Brian then went to see Glen Meeking, a man of around fifty who drove a delivery van for Palmer and Harvey. Meeking was a football fan and a Sunday League referee and he and Brian shared this common interest. Meeking told Brian that the girls had lots of late night parties which sometimes didn’t finish until four or five in the morning.
The following is a copy of Glen Meeking’s statement:

“…7 June 2008
To Whom It May Concern,
My name is Glen Meeking and I live with my family at 87 Days Lane.  I have lived there for approximately 5 years.
From around September 2007, I noticed that some students had moved into the house opposite my house, 62 Days Lane.
I had often seen lots of people in and out of that house.  I don’t know if it was a brothel or drug or vice den, but there were often late night parties till about 3 or 4am.
With regard to Brian Pead, my neighbour at 89 Days Lane, we have never fallen out or had a cross word.  I would describe him as a friend and a good neighbour.  I’ve got to know quite a bit about him from the chats we’ve had over the fence, or when he’s been doing up his house. 
I am prepared to go to court and say that in all the time I’ve known him, I’ve never seen anything out of the ordinary at his house or with him.  I have never seen any schoolgirls at his house, or anyone under aged…”

On 4 November 2008, Ellen Stanley made the following statement:

“…To Whom It May Concern
My name is Mrs Ellen Stanley and I live at 85 Days Lane, Sidcup. I have lived here since 1994, making it just over 14 years.
In September 2007 a group of female students moved into 62 Days Lane, which is directly opposite my house.
I noticed a lot of comings and goings and there were lots of different men going in and out of the house.
There were also a lot of loud parties and noise late into the night, often until 3 or 4am.
For several months I noticed something really strange with the curtains in the upstairs bedroom which overlooks my house, directly opposite.
The curtains were nearly always left open on the left-hand window (as you look at it from my house) even though the curtains at the right-hand window were drawn.
The arrangement of the curtains seemed strange to me and I wondered why anyone would choose to draw the curtains on one window but not the other window which was obviously in the same room.
This strange pattern with the curtains carried on from about September 2007 through to May or June 2008.
The new lodger in that room always draws both sets of curtains.
I have known Brian for 14 years and believe him to be of good character…”

These two character references from neighbours who had known him for several years were obviously helpful to Brian. How strange, therefore, that the police did not interview either Ellen Stanley or Glen Meeking. How strange, too, that neither Angela Shaw nor Dominic Bell contacted either of the neighbours who had spoken highly of Brian.
Then Brian went to speak with Nicholas Kerr, the vicar of the Holy Redeemer Church in Days Lane, directly opposite his house. The vicar confirmed that “there had been several complaints about the tenants’ behaviour”.
It is not beyond the realms of possibility that the females at 62 Days Lane were committing some form of criminal offence, whether it were prostitution, using or dealing drugs or even merely creating too much noise in the neighbourhood.
It is likely that, if they were committing criminal offences, then a ‘deal’ could be worked out whereby they would accuse Brian of masturbating at his bedroom window and charges against them would be dropped.
These were clearly not the sweet and innocent victims that Forster was attempting to portray to the Jury.
“These girls,” (notice his use of the word ‘girls’) Forster continued, “were frightened by the defendant. He was watching them at least twice a week and on 5 May 2008 he was seen at his bedroom window in the dark with his right hand down his trousers playing with himself.”
Forster was misleading the Jury. It was not ‘girls’ plural who had complained, it was ‘girl’ singular – Elizabeth McIntyre, the exhibitionist, who had allegedly called the police to say that she had seen Brian at his bedroom window masturbating over a period of some nine months before she complained.
On the night of 7 May 2008, Brian had a bad attack of gout. He had never suffered from this condition before and thought that he broken his toe but couldn’t understand how it had occurred. He went to bed early that night in an attempt to sleep off the pain. He was certainly not in a condition to stand at a window masturbating.
Forster mentioned that the females had claimed Brian had been seen in the dark. In front of the alleged window was a scaffold ladder and three scaffold poles blocking the view into and out of that window.
The windowsills in Brian’s house were somewhat high. In the bedroom in question, there was a particularly low ceiling. Brian Pead is a little over six feet tall. He could not have stood on a chair to expose himself. His genitals would have been below the height of the window sill had he stood at the window. The females’ house was some 100 feet away. In the dark, McIntyre claimed that she could see the Defendant’s eye colour: brown. His eyes are blue. She claimed she could see his hair colour: brown. He is mostly grey-haired. She claimed that she would often see him masturbating with his right hand. Over a period of nine months.
Yet Brian Pead is – and always has been - left-handed.
Then Forster further misled the jury when he stated that “...the Faceparty website is now defunct...”
It was not, in fact, defunct, at all. It had been liquidated in May 2008 and immediately started up again under a different company name but with the same domain name of <www.faceparty.com>. The director was the same. Forster thus committed perjury. He also perverted the course of justice because he knew that the website was not defunct.
It had been liquidated and then had risen, like a phoenix from the ashes. In the process of liquidation, however, evidence had been ‘lost’ and a considerable amount of money (some reports suggest a figure in the region of £25m) had also been siphoned out of the company.
Brian Pead had been carefully monitoring this website. He was not the only person in the country monitoring this website from a distance, but this book will focus only on his story.
From around September 2007 he had noticed a considerable moral decline on the website. He had joined it in around 2004 and had engaged in a number of intelligent – and not so intelligent – conversations. He had shared music files with people (before it was outlawed) and he had been sent books by people and had himself sent books to others. He had met several people from the website in the real world, but no under-age people. He had met people aged between 18 and 60, been abroad with some and generally made some good friends from the site. He had never seen it merely as a ‘virtual’ meeting place, but as a tool to meet a wide variety of people in the ‘real world’.
Consider what Forster had already achieved. He had sown a seed of doubt in the jury’s mind that Pead had exposed himself to three ‘innocent girls’ in a house across the road and that he waged a campaign of sexual harassment against them for a period of nine months.
He had also sowed a seed that Pead had been interacting on the internet with ‘more young women’. Forster’s prosecuting act was based on falsehoods and he knew it.
The Crown’s proposition was that Brian Pead had engaged in three conversations with an underage girl of 14 and that he had incited her to engage in sexual relations contrary to section 10 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
The charge in itself is interesting and was examined in chapter 29. Even a cursory glance at the precise wording of the legislation shows that – for the crime of incitement to have been committed, and therefore for someone to be guilty of the crime – that there has to have been another person involved. Clearly it is not possible to incite a machine or thin air.
The prosecution claimed that Brian had incited a police officer who had been posing as a 14-year-old girl.
Had that been true, then it follows that Brian had incited a police officer (and, therefore, not a 14-year-old girl). Had this been true, then the police officer is clearly not underage and it follows that Brian cannot, therefore, be guilty of inciting an underage girl.
There clearly was never a case against him. But what the Crown Prosecution Service did (acting on instructions from on high) was to change the indictment to one of attempting to incite. In any event, Brian could not be guilty of this crime either because there still has to have been a real person who is under aged. Yet it was a ploy created simply to deceive the jury.
During Brian’s investigation into what he believed – and later knew to be – illegal activities on Faceparty involving prostitution, child prostitution and child pornography, he had come upon a person entering a chat room claiming to be a 14-year-old girl who wanted money ‘desperately’ in exchange for sex.
At this time (January 2008), Brian was undertaking an Advanced Diploma in Humanistic Integrative Counselling. Much of the content of this course was of a psychosexual matter. He was counselling clients with significant sexual issues. He had been sexually abused between the ages of 5 and 11 which started in a children’s home in Harpenden, Hertfordshire.
He therefore knew more about the subject of child sexual abuse than the ‘average person in the street’. He had been deeply traumatised when it first occurred and had thereafter developed a lifelong interest in the subject from a psychological and counselling perspective.
He instinctively knew, therefore, that this person claiming to be a 14-year-old girl in the chatroom was not, in fact, a child at all. He knew it was an adult and it was his belief that it was a middle-aged male, or certainly someone with a deep interest in the subject of paedophilia.
He was, of course, right.
Several members of the chatroom – all adults – responded to this ‘girl’ by telling ‘her’ that if she really was only 14, then (a) how did she get access to the adult social website and (b) that ‘she’ should leave the room and forget about earning money that way.
Upon leaving the room (at least under that profile name), ‘she’ left her MSN messenger email address and asked people to add her.
Several people did this. Undoubtedly some would have added this email address in order to solicit sexual services. Brian added this email address, however, for entirely different reasons. He knew this was a completely odd situation and he wanted to learn more. He also believed that the person on the other end of the profile might be a paedophile, since his counselling training had taught him that a common modus operando of a sex offender is that they pose as teenagers in order to attract children to them. He thus added this person’s email address in order to ‘smoke out’ whoever it was pretending to be a teenager.
This was not the first time he had operated in this way. As a counsellor, he often worked in such a way whereby he would create a hypothesis about a client, listen patiently to whatever the client presented and observe over a long period of time to see if the client’s behaviour patterns and ‘story’ matched their original presenting issue. Often with the use of a judicious question or two, he would ‘smoke out’ the personality issue that the client was attempting to mask.
Unlike many counsellors who often try to interpret whatever a client tells them, Brian rarely operated in this way. His clients would often tell him that his greatest quality was that of being a listener without offering interpretations. This requires a specific frame of mind. It involves pushing one’s ego into the background – the willingness that we all have as human beings to interpret what others are telling us in relation to our own frame of reference.
Brian does not do that. He listens and stores that information without attempting to interpret. Interpretation, he believes, can come later in the work if it is necessary. He seeks to understand and to help clients understand their lives.
He views the counselling process as one entirely made up of ‘smoking out’ the truth in a person’s life, such as human beings can ever be sure of what is truth in their lives.
Brian Pead had been brought up by a father who often would say to him, “Give them enough rope and they’ll hang themselves.” Being told that at the age of 10 did little for the young Brian’s education at that point, but, as he grew older, his father’s words began to gain credence in his life and he began to see the wisdom in the words.
At the age of 15, his brother Robert ran away from home and stayed away. He re-located to Lowestoft, then a thriving fishing town on the east coast of Suffolk. He commenced work as a deck-hand on board a trawler. Lowestoft trawlers at that time would often work the east coast of England and Scotland, move to the west coast of Scotland and sometimes even work off the coast of Iceland (until the famous ‘Cod Wars’.)
The general rule of thumb was that the boats – which were only around 90 feet in length – would be away for 12 days and in harbour at Lowestoft for two days (when wages were often spent in public houses on alcohol and prostitutes.)
Robert had worked his way from being a deckhand to a Third Hand. He was on his way to becoming a Mate (assistant skipper) and then finally a skipper with his own boat. At this period in history, being a skipper of a Lowestoft trawler meant a considerable income and several skippers owned significant properties on the coast in areas like Corton and Gorleston on the east coast.
Robert had gained employment with Boston Deep Sea Fisheries, and he signed on to the St. Kitts trawler. The St. Kitts was built in 1941 by Cochrane and Sons of Selby, Yorkshire.  It was 142½ feet long.  It was a steel side trawler and ran on oil, requiring between 14 and 16 men to operate it. The vessel had an interesting life and had several names. Starting out with the name of Le Royal (GY400) it was operated in December 1941 by Grimsby Motor Trawlers, of Grimsby.  On 30 December 1944 it was transferred to Milford Steam Trawlers, of Milford, managed by James Carpenter Ward and was re-named the Milford Marquis (M14).
The St.  Kitts was the first motor trawler designed for Arctic fishing.  On 1 October 1940 it was converted to a minesweeper (P.No.FY.1750). After the war, it was returned to its owners in July 1946. It landed fish at Milford between 2 July 1946 and 10 June 1951.  The trawler was skippered by Albert Saunders in 1946, Benny Riches in 1947, Jimmy Jobson in 1949 and Harry Rich in 1950. It transferred to Dutch owners, Ymuiden, and in 1964 it was purchased by Claridge Trawlers of Lowestoft, managed by Gordon David Claridge and it was renamed the St. Kitts (LT481). The boat was finally broken up on the River Humber in November 1976.
However, as we have seen, on Tuesday, April 11, 1972, Robert Pead suffered catastrophic head injuries on board the St. Kitts trawler working off the east coast of Scotland.  The knocking-out bar, which weighs around a hundredweight, had fractured his skull.
Despite being air-lifted off the trawler and taken to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Robert died in September 1972. Despite giving up his job in Surbiton, and despite enrolling as a deckhand on board a trawler with Boston Deep Sea Fisheries in Lowestoft, Brian Pead never found out what really happened to his brother.  However, seeds had been sown in his mind about investigative journalism, undercover work and seeking justice.
With this kind of mind and determination to seek justice, Brian first engaged in conversation with the ‘girl’ on 28 January 2008.