logo
Judges order 'robust' inquiry into MI5 false evidence exposed by BBC

Judges order 'robust' inquiry into MI5 false evidence exposed by BBC

BBC News2 days ago
The High Court has ordered a "robust and independent" new investigation into how MI5 gave false evidence to multiple courts, after rejecting two official inquiries provided by the Security Service as seriously "deficient".The two reviews took place after the BBC revealed MI5 had lied to three courts in a case concerning a neo-Nazi state agent who abused women.A panel of three senior judges said it would be "premature" to decide whether to begin contempt of court proceedings against any individuals before the new investigation was complete.They also "commended" the BBC for "bringing these matters to light".
The two official inquiries, one of which was commissioned by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, absolved MI5 and its officers of deliberate wrongdoing.But the judgement concludes that the "investigations carried out by MI5 to date suffer from serious procedural deficiencies" and that "we cannot rely on their conclusions".The three judges - England and Wales' most senior judge, Lady Chief Justice Baroness Sue Carr, President of the King's Bench Division Dame Victoria Sharp and Mr Justice Chamberlain, said: "It is to be hoped that events such as these will never be repeated."Their judgement says the new investigation should be carried out under the auspices of the Investigatory Powers Commissioner Sir Brian Leveson, who has oversight of MI5's surveillance activities. His office, IPCO, was also provided with false evidence by MI5 in the case.MI5 director general Sir Ken McCallum repeated his "full and unreserved apology for the errors made in these proceedings".He said resolving this matter was "of the highest priority for MI5" and that they would co-operate fully with IPCO."MI5's job is to keep the country safe. Maintaining the trust of the courts is essential to that mission," he said.
The case began in 2022 with an attempt to block the BBC from publishing a story about a neo-Nazi agent known as X. It has become a major test of how the courts view MI5 and the credibility of its evidence.MI5 gave evidence to three courts, saying that it had never breached its core secrecy policy of neither confirming nor denying (NCND) that X was a state agent.But in February, the BBC was able to prove with notes and recordings of phone calls with MI5 that this was false.An MI5 officer had confirmed the agent's status as he tried to persuade me to drop an investigation into X, a violent misogynist who used his Security Service role to coerce and terrify his former girlfriend, known publicly as "Beth".The two official inquiries criticised by the High Court were an internal MI5 inquiry and an "external" investigation by the government's former chief lawyer, Sir Jonathan Jones KC. The latter was commissioned by the home sectary and Sir Ken.But the judgement said that "there was in our view a fundamental incoherence in Sir Jonathan's terms of reference".
The ruling said he was asked to establish the facts of what happened but not to "make findings about why specific individuals did or did not do certain things".However, the judges said Sir Jonathan nevertheless "did make findings" that there was no deliberate attempt by anyone to mislead the court - without ever speaking to an MI5 officer at the centre of the case and without considering key additional BBC evidence about what took place.The judgement also found that MI5's director general of strategy, who is the organisation's third-in-command, gave misleading assurances to the court in a witness statement.He said its original explanations were "a fair and accurate account" of secret material which, at that point, had not been disclosed.The court forced the government and MI5 to hand over the material, and the judges concluded that MI5's explanations were not "fair and accurate" and "omitted several critical matters" - including that IPCO had been misled and what was known by several MI5 officers at relevant times.Their judgement said that it was "regrettable that MI5's explanations to this court were given in a piecemeal and unsatisfactory way - and only following the repeated intervention of the court"."The impression has been created that the true circumstances in which false evidence came to be given have had to be extracted from, not volunteered by, MI5," they said.
Today's highly critical judgement also found:
In this one case MI5 has misled two separate branches of the High Court, as well as the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, the Investigatory Powers Commissioner, and security cleared barristers representing the BBC known as special advocatesMI5's core NCND secrecy policy about the status of agents was maintained in the legal proceedings long after "any justification for its maintenance had disappeared"The BBC and I, as well as our lawyers and special advocates, should be "commended" for the "central role" we have played in bringing these matters to light
The judgement said that a "major" failing by the official reviews is that they did not contact me, despite the fact I was the other person involved in the key events.The judges said that, having "considered carefully" further evidence I submitted in response to the reviews - such as records and notes that showed both reviews included false statements - it "paints a significantly different picture" to the one presented by MI5.They added that they accepted the internal investigators and Sir Jonathan in the external review later considered my evidence "in good faith".But they said that because they had already reached a conclusion that there had been no deliberate attempt to mislead the court, they would "inevitably find it difficult" to revise those conclusions in the light of evidence which "fundamentally affects" the basis of their conclusions.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three Albanian men and a British woman are charged over spate of million-pound burglaries in Cheshire's Golden Triangle
Three Albanian men and a British woman are charged over spate of million-pound burglaries in Cheshire's Golden Triangle

Daily Mail​

time10 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Three Albanian men and a British woman are charged over spate of million-pound burglaries in Cheshire's Golden Triangle

Police have charged three Albanian men and a British woman in relation to a spate of high-value burglaries across swathes of England. Cheshire Police detectives swooped on three addresses in Walsall, Sutton Coldfield and Birmingham early on Wednesday and cuffed three men aged between 27 and 30 as well as a 33-year-old British woman. Endrit Nikolli, 27, Kristian Gropcaj, 30, George Pepa, 30, and Jade Tubb, 33, have all been charged with conspiracy to commit burglary between November 2024 and March 2025 and conspiracy to possess criminal property. These relate to 20 offences in Cleveland, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and Cleveland, detectives said today. Nikolli has also been charged with an additional count of burglary in connection with a theft in Staffordshire on March 1 2024. Police have been probing dozens of alleged thefts across the country in which around £1m of high value goods were stolen - some allegedly in Cheshire's 'Golden Triangle', a trio of towns beloved by footballers and other celebrities. Nikolli, Pepa and Tubb, of Crabtree Road in Walsall and Gropcaj of Gas Street in Birmingham are in custody ahead of an appearance at Chester Magistrates today. A fourth Albanian man aged 28 was arrested in London on suspicion of conspiracy to commit burglary on Thursday. He remains in police custody. Morning raids were staged at addresses across the country earlier this week as part of Operation Ambler, a multi-force police investigation specifically targeting Albanian organised crime gangs. Dramatic footage showed uniformed officers shouting 'Police!' as they stormed into a house in the execution of Operation Ambler. In the stunning raids, a man was seen being handcuffed as he lies prone and shirtless in bed. Other clips showed men being led into the back of cage vans. Detectives from Macclesfield CID leading the operation allege that gangs have carried out a large number of 'sophisticated' burglaries that took place over several months at addresses all over the country. The raids would target 'high-value residential premises', police claim. Thieves are thought to have broken in via first-floor windows and doors as they carried out the raids, and went to 'great lengths' to do so across England. Criminals are said to have made off with more than £1million of high-value items in total - £400,000 of it from homes in Cheshire alone - some of which were allegedly recovered during the morning raids. In video released by Cheshire Police, officers wearing head torches could be seen raking through wardrobes as they sought to trace the stolen goods. Valuable-looking watches were dropped into evidence bags, while a mobile phone was placed into a specialist forensic evidence box. Detective Sergeant Laura Fox of Macclesfield CID said: '(Wednesday's) raids are the culmination of detailed investigations across multiple forces brought together into at least thirty-seven high value burglaries spread over a six-month period. 'Our investigation has shown us that these incidents have been carefully planned and coordinated, and they've gone to great lengths to continue their crime spree across the country. 'On each occasion the offenders have specifically targeted high value properties, breaking in via first floor windows and doors, and ransacking the premises to steal as much as possible. 'In total we believe that the value of the items stolen in the burglaries was more than £1 million, which includes more than £400,000 from the ten homes in Cheshire. 'I hope that (the) arrests provide some reassurance to the victims in the case and also act as a warning to other offenders.' And in a warning to thieves, her colleague Detective Inspector Dave Jarvis added: 'No matter where you live, or how much you try to hide, our officers will come for you, and you will be arrested.' Burglaries were once thought to be crimes of opportunity - but have allegedly become the preserve of organised crime gangs who go to great lengths to execute professional operations targeting lucrative homes. Last month, Cheshire Police issued an appeal for a burglary in Prestbury that saw three thieves drill a hole into a wall of a disused building in order to climb into the store next door. The thieves made off with £260,000 of high-value designer handbags from Dress Cheshire, whose owner Christine Colbert, 58, could only watch on helplessly as CCTV was livestreamed to her phone. She told MailOnline last month: 'This has been very well thought through - it's very frightening for me. 'I can't believe the lengths they have gone to. It used to be watches people wanted – now it's handbags and they are worth more second-hand than they are new.' Similarly, £1million of designer handbags were stolen in a raid in Alderley Edge in February. At this time, the incidents have not been linked to Albanian crime gang activity - but spates of incidents across Cheshire have prompted the rich and famous to beef up their security, hiring private contractors.

It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms
It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms

The Independent

time12 minutes ago

  • The Independent

It is time to release prisoners trapped by inhuman endless jail terms

The Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentence, introduced in 2005 under the Labour government, was intended to protect the public from serious offenders deemed too dangerous for a fixed-term release. But nearly two decades on, this law stands as one of the most egregious stains on Britain's criminal justice system. Abolished in 2012 for its inherent flaws, it nonetheless continues to trap thousands of people in a cruel legal limbo, as a debate in the House of Lords today will no doubt highlight. It is long past time that every person still serving an IPP sentence be resentenced. The continued use of this now-defunct punishment is both unjust and, arguably, inhumane. At its core, the IPP sentence allowed judges to hand out indeterminate prison terms for offences that did not justify life imprisonment but were deemed serious enough to warrant extended supervision. Offenders were given a 'tariff' – the minimum time they must serve before being considered for release. Many of these tariffs were shockingly short, some as low as two years. Yet thousands remain in prison long after these tariffs have expired. Why? Because release is dependent not on time served, but on proving to the Parole Board that they are no longer a danger to the public – a nebulous, subjective, and often unreachable standard. This flips the basic presumption of justice on its head. In a fair system, the state must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt to imprison a person. Under IPP, once the tariff is served, the burden of proof shifts unfairly to the prisoner. It is no longer the state's job to justify incarceration; it is the prisoner's burden to earn freedom. This is particularly problematic when access to rehabilitative programmes, often required for parole, is limited or unavailable – especially in overcrowded prisons. The system sets people up to fail and then blames them for not succeeding. Moreover, the psychological toll of such indefinite punishment is catastrophic. Suicide and self-harm rates among IPP prisoners are significantly higher than average. Many live in a state of constant uncertainty and despair, unsure if they will ever be released, even decades after their offence. It is not unusual to find individuals still imprisoned for minor crimes – such as theft or assault – that would today warrant only a few years behind bars, yet they languish without a release date. The punishment no longer fits the crime, if it ever did. The injustice of the IPP system has been widely recognised. The House of Commons justice committee labelled it "irredeemably flawed" and called for all remaining IPP prisoners to be resentenced. The European Court of Human Rights has also condemned aspects of the sentence as incompatible with human rights obligations. Yet the government has so far refused to act decisively, citing public safety and political sensitivity. This is a failure of courage and leadership. Protecting public safety does not require trampling basic rights or holding people indefinitely for crimes long past. Dangerous individuals can be managed through proper risk assessment and robust parole conditions – not through perpetual punishment without end. Resentencing every IPP prisoner is not only fair, it is necessary. It would give judges the opportunity to reconsider the nature and severity of each offence and impose a proportionate, fixed sentence with clear guidance for release. For many, this would mean immediate or imminent freedom; for others, it would offer clarity, rehabilitation goals, and hope – something the current system wholly lacks. Justice demands consistency, proportionality, and transparency. The IPP sentence undermines all three. Some argue that resentencing might release dangerous individuals back into society. But the risk can be responsibly managed without recourse to indeterminate detention. Modern sentencing tools, community supervision, mental health support, and parole frameworks are all capable of mitigating risk. Perpetual incarceration without due process is not a solution – it is a violation. Britain prides itself on the rule of law, but this chapter of penal policy betrays that principle. IPP sentences should not only be consigned to history – they must be actively undone. Every person still caught in this Kafkaesque trap deserves a proper sentence, a path to rehabilitation, and a chance at freedom. Anything less is a continuation of a deep and unforgivable wrong.

Banning Palestine Action ‘considered months before RAF break-in'
Banning Palestine Action ‘considered months before RAF break-in'

Telegraph

time16 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Banning Palestine Action ‘considered months before RAF break-in'

Banning Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation was considered by the Government months before the break-in at RAF Brize Norton, the High Court has heard. Huda Ammori, the group's co-founder, has sought to bring a legal challenge against the Home Office because of Yvette Cooper's decision to proscribe the group under the Terrorism Act 2000. Justice Martin Chamberlain was asked at the Royal Courts of Justice on Friday to grant 'interim relief' to Ms Ammori, which would temporarily block the legislation from coming into effect at midnight on Saturday. During the hearing, he noted that an assessment on whether to ban the group had been made as early as March and 'preceded' the incident at the RAF base. He said: 'The process or assessment on the basis of which that proscription decision was made preceded that, in March.' Another hearing to decide whether Ms Ammori will be allowed to challenge the Home Secretary's decision is expected to be held later in July. If the law comes into effect as planned, it would make membership of or support for the action group a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison. The move was announced after two RAF Voyager planes were damaged at Brize Norton in Oxfordshire on June 20. Palestine Action promptly claimed responsibility for the incident, which police said caused around £7 million worth of damage. Arguing on behalf of Palestine Action, Raza Husain KC, said: '[This is] the first time in our history that a direct action civil disobedience group, which does not advocate violence, has been sought to be proscribed as terrorists.' He described the decision to proscribe the group as an 'ill-considered, discriminatory authoritarian abuse of statutory power'. Speaking for Ms Ammori, he said she had been inspired to create the organisation by the 'long tradition of direct action' in the UK, 'from the suffragettes to Iraq War activists'. Mr Husain added that while people may disagree with Palestine Action's methods, which include criminal damage, trespass and burglary, but to say they are concerned in terrorism was 'an abuse of language'. 'The Secretary of State has still not sufficiently articulated or evidenced a national security reason that proscription should be brought into effect now,' he continued. Ms Cooper publicly announced plans to proscribe Palestine Action on June 23, calling the vandalism of the two planes 'disgraceful' and saying the group had a 'long history of unacceptable criminal damage'. MPs in the House of Commons voted 385 to 26 – a majority of 359 – in favour of proscribing the group on Wednesday before the House of Lords supported the move without a vote on Thursday. Four people – Amy Gardiner-Gibson, 29, Jony Cink, 24, Daniel Jeronymides-Norie, 36, and Lewis Chiaramello, 22 – have all been charged in connection with the incident. They appeared at Westminster magistrates' court on Thursday after being charged with conspiracy to enter a prohibited place knowingly for a purpose prejudicial to the safety or interests of the UK and conspiracy to commit criminal damage under the Criminal Law Act 1977. They were remanded in custody and will appear at the Old Bailey on July 18. Counter-Terrorism Policing South East said on Wednesday that a 41-year-old woman arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender had been released on bail until Sept 19 and a 23-year-old man who was arrested has been released without charge.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store