MP’s, Lawyers, Councillors, Ex-Councillors, Land Developers, Charities, Gangsters and the Labour Party – An Abuse of the Scottish Electorate – Part 1 Steven Purcell

 

 

 

 

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All of the following are linked directly or indirectly to Steven Purcell

Steven Purcell – Dodgy Allan Stewart & Steven McKenna – Lawyer and Sheriff, Peter Watson – Levy & McRae – Jack Irvine (The Sun) – Convicted drug dealer James Bryce.- His son Jamie similarly employed – Bar Manager of the Boundary Bar, Kelly Bryce. (Sister of Jamie) –  Convicted criminal (ex boxer) Barry Hughes – convicted criminal and drug dealer Jamie “The Iceman” Stevenson – Jeanie McDougall, Ruth Black and Paul Ferris & The Castro (Lesbian and gay drop in centre) in Merchant City – Gangsters  Justin McAlroy, Jason McAteer, Sohan Singh, James Sanderson – Gangster Jamie Daniel and his mob –  Gangster Eddie Lyon and his mob – Bridget McConnell

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Steven Purcell Leader Glasgow City Council

Born in 1972, he lived in Yoker in the west of the city and was educated at St Thomas Aquinas Secondary School. He joined the Labour Party in 1986, campaigning for Donald Dewar and helping the future Scottish first minister secure his Westminster seat in Garscadden in the 1987 election.

He was first elected as a Glasgow councillor for the ward of Blairdardie in 1995, aged just 22. Between 1999 and 2003, he was the council’s convener of development and regeneration services. During this time he oversaw the creation of the Glasgow City Plan. From 2003 until his election as leader Purcell was convener of education, and delivered a controversial £220m P.F.I. programme closing, refurbishing or rebuilding secondary schools across the city.

He was elected, unopposed, as leader of Glasgow City Council in May 2005 at the age of 32. In his time in the job he played a high-profile role in helping to bring the 2014 Commonwealth Games to Glasgow. In 2006 Mr Purcell announced he was gay and that he was separating from his wife. He had been tipped to become a future Labour leader at Holyrood or an MP but is reported to have put his wider career aspirations on hold in order to oversee a successful Commonwealth Games for Glasgow.  (BBC-News)

 

 

 

 

5 Feb 2008: £25m homes plan after East End land deal

A derelict area near the site of Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games athletes’ village is to be transformed into a £25million housing development.

Stewart & McKenna acquired the site after striking a deal with Glasgow City Council, which needed another piece of land the developers owned at nearby Millerfield Road for the 2014 Games participants’ accommodation. The developers got £1.7m as well as the new plot in Beechgrove Street after selling the parcel of land to the council.

A total of 131 flats will be built in the development. As well as six penthouses costing £180,000 each, one-bedroom flats at around £110,000 and two-bedroom apartments for £150,000, the development will feature studio flats aimed at first-time buyers. Dubbed nano flats’ by the developers, the 18 flats with balconies will cost under £100,000. The flats are due to be completed by mid-2010 after going on sale in July. (Evening Times)

After-note: Purcell and Stewart & McKenna, (land developers) enjoyed a relationship lasting many years. The land deal at Millerfield Road netted their company a significant profit since they had purchased the land at a knock down price from the City Council.  And they got a large parcel of land at Beechgrove Street for nothing. Stewart & McKenna are involved in the Gregory King £600million Ponzie scheme still under investigation by the Fraud Squad.

 

 

 

 

20 Jan 2009: Glasgow Schools to be closed and merged

More than 2,000 children in Glasgow could be affected by proposals to close 13 primary schools and 12 nurseries. Councillors will be asked later this month to consult with parents, staff and unions over the move. If final approval is given, children could be merged into new schools and nurseries from August. Parents accused the council of being “underhand” and said the proposed consultation would be “a sham”. Education officials have carried out a “city-wide assessment” of schools and nurseries which could be involved in potential merger This takes into account educational benefit, building capacity and occupancy, transport arrangements and the wider community impact.

Councillor Steven Purcell explaining the proposal to shut schools said:  “Children deserve to be in better accommodation, but in this financial climate we cannot afford to build new schools and nurseries through prudential borrowing,” so the works will be completed by extending the P.F.I. programme

The SNP group on Glasgow City Council called for each school to be looked at on its merits and warned against a “blanket” of cuts and added that  Taxpayers in Glasgow will be paying for Labour’s discredited PFI secondary school project for decades; that Labour-controlled Glasgow had chosen not to be among the councils working constructively with the Scottish Government on the SFT proposals was very disappointing”.

A Glasgow taxpayer said: “It’s clear that this is a financially motivated decision as Glasgow City Council expects to save £3.7m per year from these closures. There will be the all too familiar sham consultation process, and then the plans will be rubber-stamped by the council. Merging nurseries and primary schools into large groups will not lead to better education for children. The positive ethos and atmosphere which many of these smaller establishments currently have will be lost.”

The council said it had spent £550m on school building improvements over the past 10 years – building 64 new schools and refurbishing five others. All of the projects had been funded using Public Finance Initiative (PFI) funding, borrowing and receipts generated from the sale of surplus land and property. (BBC-News)

After-note: The council despite public opposition, including school sit-ins by parents, implemented their programme of change. Many schools were demolished and replaced with a much reduced schools list. Purcell and PFI had won out yet again bringing new buildings but requiring the Council to accept massive debts (lease/lending the properties) for periods between 50-90 years. The Glasgow Taxpayer stung badly.

 

 

 

 

23 Jun 2009: Games village developer unveiled

Glasgow City Council has named the consortium which it wants to build the athletes’ village for the 2014 Commonwealth Games. City Legacy – including architect RMJM, which designed the Scottish Parliament – is the preferred bidder for the 38.5 hectare site in Dalmarnock. The development will provide accommodation and facilities for 6,500 competitors and officials. The village will provide 1,400 homes for sale and rent after the games.

Steven Purcell, said: “The athletes’ village will be one of the most recognisable aspects of the legacy of the 2014 Commonwealth Games – and certainly one of the most important. “I look forward to the successful delivery of a key part of the games, and later, the creation of a stunning new neighbourhood for the city as Glasgow’s regeneration continues.

Glasgow City Council will make the village site available to City Legacy at “nil cost” in order to reduce borrowing requirements. The developer will then enter into a profit-sharing arrangement with the council at the end of the project. When the games are over, the site will be redeveloped to include 1,100 private homes and about 300 for rent. There will also be a 120-bed social work care home for the elderly. Preparatory work on the site is expected to begin later this year with construction scheduled to start in autumn 2010.(BBC News)

After-note: The much vaunted 124 bed social work care home is not yet complete (nearly 3 years after the games) and there are other problems associated with the overall development. Locals are not happy.

 

 

 

 

2 Mar 2010: Glasgow council leader Steven Purcell stands down

The former leader of Glasgow City Council is being treated in hospital for what his advisers described as “exhaustion”.Steven Purcell’s resignation was announced at a special meeting of the council’s Labour group

In a statement issued on Purcell’s behalf, Peter Watson, of Levy & McRae solicitors said: “Earlier this morning Steven made the effort to telephone his resignation as leader of Glasgow City Council. Steven does this with a heavy heart but the strain of running one of the UK’s largest authorities combined with the added pressures of the Commonwealth Games planning and the controversy over Strathclyde Partnership for Transport (SPT) has just proved too much for a man who lived and breathed Glasgow 24 hours a day. We have received an enormous groundswell of support from all sides of the political spectrum for Steven for which he is very grateful. His family would now like him to be left in peace to recover his health. It is now up to the Labour Group to decide what is the best way forward for their party, and the people of Glasgow, and I know Steven wishes them well in their deliberations.”

Purcell was not at the short meeting of the Labour councillors, in which they were told of his decision to step down but Purcell’s colleagues were said to have become aware he was considering resignation on Saturday. He then confirmed his intention to step down late on Monday evening. Earlier Jack Irvine, a spokesman for Mr Purcell said he had been “under enormous pressure”. He added: “Steven agreed to seek medical help immediately and subsequently he is now under doctor’s orders.”

Glasgow City Council has been contacted by Levy & McCrae representing Mr Purcell and have agreed to make no official statement on his health.  A Scottish Labour Party spokesman said: “We hope Steven makes a full recovery.” (BBC News)

After-note: The entire press release was a smokescreen organised by Peter Watson and Levy & McCrae designed to “buy time” so that they would be able to protect their client. Note that the Council  was cut out of “the loop”. Jack Irvine was dismissed from his post as spokesman for Purcell.

 

 

 

 

5 Mar 2010: The former leader of Glasgow City Council, Steven Purcell has resigned his council seat, it has been confirmed.

Having spent three days at a rehabilitation clinic in the Borders specialising in treating drug and alcohol addiction as well as other conditions Purcell, who quit as leader of the council on Tuesday announced that he had also stood down as councillor for the Drumchapel and Anniesland ward “to take a period of rest and recuperation”.

In a statement released on Friday afternoon, solicitor advocate Peter Watson of Levy McRae, the legal firm which is representing 37-year-old Purcell, said: “Steven Purcell tendered his resignation today. “He did so with much sadness but with great support from friends, family and many well-wishers from every part of the city. “Steven has accepted advice that he must now concentrate on his health and well-being. As he steps out of public life, he now wishes to be left in peace and quiet. There will be no further comment.”

A spokesman for the Labour party said: “Steven Purcell was a respected leader of Glasgow City Council and represented his ward with great commitment, as well as leading Glasgow’s bid for the Commonwealth Games. “It is clear that he is ill and everyone in Glasgow will no doubt wish him a full recovery. This is no doubt a testing time for his family.”

BBC Scotland revealed on Thursday how psychiatrist Dr Florian Kaplick, who carried out a medical assessment of Purcell during his stay at the Castle Craig rehabilitation clinic near Peebles, said the Labour politician had not been treated for a drug problem having been admitted to the clinic on Sunday. Later that day, he was reported missing to Lothian and Borders Police, and was found after a search.

It is understood that before Purcell resigned as council leader, officials at Glasgow City Council had been planning to say his resignation was to allow him to deal with “chemical dependency” issues. But the planned statement was never released, and a spokesman for Purcell subsequently insisted the chemical dependency claims were without foundation.

Purcell’s legal team has also reported the local authority to information watchdogs over allegations that someone at Glasgow City Council breached the Data Protection Act by leaking details about Mr Purcell’s health to a newspaper.

The lawyers have also complained to the Press Complaints Commission about what they claim is the media’s “harassment of a sick man”.(BBC news)

Afternote: What a load of twaddle. Watson and Levy & McRae were evidently not at all amused that Jack Irvine (Purcell’s spokesman)  had released the correct information about Purcell.

 

 

 

 

6 Mar 2010: Spectacular fall of Stephen Purcell shocks Scotland’s political world

Glasgow’s Hilton Hotel two Thursdays ago was playing host to a fundraising event for Labour and the roll-call of the party nomenclature had been taken. There were very few absentees. Labour’s hegemony remains absolute in the west of Scotland and familiar figures from business, entertainment, leisure, sport and the media were all present and correct. It should have been a relaxing occasion for Stephen Purcell, the city’s young council leader.

A youthful and single man, he thrives on these occasions and enjoys the company of those who direct the social and business life of his beloved city. In normal circumstances he would have been basking in the acclaim of a party which had come to acknowledge him as a genuine contender for future first minister and who had watched in admiration at some adroit recent manoeuvring on the national stage.

On that evening though, observers encountered him in a subdued mood and he left earlier than would normally have been expected. It was the last time most of them would see of him again for the foreseeable future. Within four days, he had resigned as council leader. Last Friday he announced that he was withdrawing from all political activity and would no longer be representing his constituents in Blairdardie in the west of the city.

The events of the 72 hours that elapsed between his departure from the Hilton and his resignation have attracted fevered speculation. Glasgow’s citizens normally need no encouragement to turn into forensic scientists, political analysts and private detectives and last week it seemed that most of them had a theory about the most spectacular downfall in modern Scottish politics. A senior political media observer told me: “I’ve heard more theories about this than on Lord Lucan’s disappearance and the kidnapping of Shergar.”

What seems clear though, is that Purcell has suffered a major breakdown. The suddenness of his collapse means that the speculation about its causes will continue for some time. He himself will not be making any comments about it. He is currently believed to be with relatives in Donegal and is not expected back in his native city any time soon.

The first ripples of the tsunami that has now engulfed Glasgow’s Labour party began to appear last Friday. Purcell abruptly cancelled two public engagements scheduled for that day at very short notice. Within hours a group of his closest council allies and advisers, who had become alarmed at his tone in telephone conversations, began to envisage a worst-case scenario. They visited him at his home in Broomhill and found their friend in a fragile and vulnerable state.

They quickly devised a damage-limitation strategy designed to leave a door open for him to resume his political career at a future date. For what was painfully clear to all of them was that he was in no fit state to operate as leader of a £10bn local authority. Crucially, they drafted a statement that would have made mention of “a chemical dependency”. They felt that a sympathetic and sophisticated electorate, already well-disposed towards this charismatic young leader, would cut him the slack to retreat from public life for a while and then hand him an opportunity to resume it in the near future.

But another group of people were equally concerned with Purcell’s state: his family. They were with him throughout last weekend and were alarmed at the prospect of him being induced to sign off a statement about his health while clearly being in a reduced state of mind and under heavy sedation. One source very close to the Purcell family said last Thursday morning: “Stephen’s brother was not happy with what the council press office was proposing and persuaded Stephen to give him power of attorney over all his affairs. He decided to seek immediate advice from the family lawyer, Peter Watson.”

It was a fateful but entirely understandable position for the family to take. The Purcells felt that the wording being proposed by the council press chiefs would immediately give rise to speculation about illegal substance abuse when, according to the same source, “the problem was that Stephen had formed a Valium dependency as he struggled to cope with the huge demands of running a local authority with a budget of £10bn”.

Watson is one of the two top media lawyers in Scotland and has close links to one of the country’s most prominent media management firms run by Jack Irvine, a former editor of the Sun in Scotland, and with a formidable track record in successfully managing bad news.

Purcell had also made an SOS call to a friend who was prominent in the Scottish business community, who also advised him to seek independent press and legal representation. Purcell’s closest council confidantes were aghast. They believed Irvine to be a Tory party supporter and had always viewed him with suspicion after he had played a prominent role 10 years ago in the campaign to keep the controversial Section 28 law that forbade discussion of homosexuality in Scottish schools. They were also understandably anxious that to have Irvine handle the media firestorm was to invite all sorts of speculation about what had contributed to the council leader’s breakdown. As one source put it: “I’m not saying we could have killed the story, but we could have disclosed it in a more orderly fashion.”

Last Monday night a handful of journalists began taking calls saying that Purcell had resigned. At a full meeting of the Labour group the following day, the resignation was formally announced. Later the same day Colin Edgar, the council’s communications chief, hosted a press conference. It was clear that Edgar, a close friend and political ally of Purcell, had slept very little in the previous 48 hours. He also announced that Purcell’s legal team had silenced the press department by threatening action against any council officers found to have commented on the medical condition of their former leader. In effect, Edgar, a highly regarded media handler, had been cut out of the loop by his old friend.

Nevertheless, reaction was universally sympathetic. Even Alex Salmond, the first minister, who had become embroiled in a bitter war of words with Purcell over the cancelling of funding for the Glasgow Airport rail link, spoke warmly of his abilities.

On the streets and in the wine bars adjacent to the city chambers the suggested reasons for Purcell’s resignation were growing ever more lurid. There was said to be video footage showing him in a compromising situation and that he had been blackmailed. Most of this though, had its origin in old-fashioned homophobia. Purcell, as a young, single, gay man, was a full participant in the Glasgow social scene. Indeed most Fridays he hosted an informal “lunch club” attended by prominent business and media figures. Among his closest circle of friends were restaurateurs, publicans, journalists and businessmen. Among the old guard on the council however, he was regarded as an over-confident gilded popinjay who had destroyed their influence and replaced them with a coterie of sharp-suited, modernising activists cast in their leader’s mould. Some were only too happy to whisper innuendo about his private life.

In the middle of the week, Purcell’s media advisers were forced to confirm that he had received treatment for a few days at Castle Craig, a private facility in the Borders specialising in drug and alcohol dependency. The following day however, they produced a letter from a psychiatrist at Castle Craig saying that Purcell was not being treated for any chemical dependency. The story was now running out of control.

The Scotsman subsequently revealed the contents of the council’s original preferred statement that talked of a chemical dependency. Watson responded with a complaint that this was a breach of the data protection act. Even before Purcell formally announced his complete withdrawal from public life his closest friends knew that his career was finished for the foreseeable future.

It was at around 5pm in the tearooms of Glasgow city chambers on Friday and a group of Purcell’s closest council colleagues had gathered to review the fallout for what one of them said was “the worst week of my political life”. Each of them revealed, in turn, what it was that had attracted them to politics and public life. “It was good to remind ourselves that the fight for social justice and against poverty goes on. And that the most important thing for Stephen Purcell is that he regains his full health.” Others though, while wishing the former leader a full recovery, nonetheless feel that the voting public needed to be given full disclosure of what led to his breakdown.  (The Guardian)

After-note: Too many cooks spoil the broth. Differing opinions as to the most appropriate strategy (applicable in the extraordinary crisis) resulted in conflicting press statements which added to the confusion surrounding Purcell’s resignation. But Watson eventually took control of the matter confirming his role as Mr Fixit

 

 

 

 

8 Mar 2010: Labour’s opponents last night demanded a major investigation of disgraced Steven Purcell’s reign at Glasgow City Council.

Reports revealed Purcell had confessed to using cocaine after police warned him he was the target of a gangland blackmail plot. And the SNP claimed watchdogs should be called in to probe whether the scandal “had any impact on public policy in the city”. It was also revealed that Purcell, ended up in a river last month after walking out of a drink and drug rehab clinic. Friends fear it was a suicide attempt. Scottish Labour yesterday brutally disowned Purcell, once their party’s rising star, by insisting he was no more than a “brand” for Glasgow and took few big decisions in his five years as council leader.

But Labour’s political enemies, who were quick to give Purcell their sympathy last week, switched to the attack. Glasgow East MP John Mason of the SNP said: “The whole thing stinks. We need answers. “In relation to the visit of senior police officers to Purcell, we need to know who are the people suggested as having applied pressure to him in terms of possible blackmail threats. “And crucially, has this had any impact on public policy in the city of Glasgow? “Given the massive budgets managed by the council, there is a clear case for Audit Scotland carrying out a thorough investigation in light of the events of recent days. “The people of Glasgow, and Scotland as a whole, deserve to know the full facts.” Audit Scotland’s website says their job is “to make sure organisations that spend public money in Scotland use it properly, efficiently and effectively”.

Purcell, resigned as council leader last Tuesday, blaming “stress” and a breakdown suffered the previous weekend. He quit politics altogether last Friday and is now in hiding overseas. As Purcell was “resting and recuperating” in his bolthole, a slew of damaging revelations about his conduct emerged.

In May last year, Purcell was visited in his offices at Glasgow City Chambers by two senior officers from the elite Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency. The cops warned him that he was at risk of blackmail, and said a cocaine dealer had claimed to have incriminating mobile phone footage of him which could destroy his career. Purcell told the officers he was unaware of any blackmail plot and the police considered the matter closed as far as he was concerned. After the meeting, Purcell admitted to friends that he had “dabbled” with cocaine, although he said he no longer took the drug. Soon afterwards, he moved from Glasgow’s Yoker district, where he had lived all his life, to a new flat in the more upmarket area of Broomhill. It is believed he wanted to distance himself from a drug dealer who lived in Yoker.

Purcell rented the Broomhill flat from Katrina Scott Moore, the ex-partner of his friend Brian Dempsey, a major Labour donor and former director of Celtic. The Record revealed last week that an early draft of Purcell’s resignation statement referred to “drink” and “drugs”. It was vetoed on the advice of his lawyer, Peter Watson.

Purcell booked himself into the Castle Craig rehab clinic in Peeblesshire before his resignation announcement and spent three days receiving treatment there. He went missing from the clinic on February 28 and returned soaking wet, having been in the nearby Lyne Water.

It also emerged yesterday. that Purcell’s council-issue mobile phone was disconnected after it was used to make a string of abusive calls to the help desk at providers Vodafone.

Purcell’s media advisers, hired just before he quit, have denied claims that the council had planned to cite “a chemical dependency” as the reason for his resignation. They refused to answer questions yesterday. on his whereabouts.

Another major Labour donor, multimillionaire businessman Willie Haughey, denied that he had offered Purcell the use of a home he owns in Australia. Purcell has relatives in Australia. Other reports claimed he had fled to Florida, where he spent New Year, or to Ireland, where he has family.

He earned £60k as council leader, but it’s believed his sole income now comes from two flats he owns and rents out in Yoker. He has a combined £218k mortgage on the flats. One, in Bulldale Place, was bought for £120k in 2007. The second, bought six months later for £130k, is in nearby Greenlaw Court.

Publicly, Labour politicians voiced sympathy for Purcell’s “personal tragedy”. But behind the scenes, the party were preparing to write him out of history. In a devastating attack, one senior Labour council source said Purcell “did not actually take decisions” at the City Chambers. The insider added: “There is an executive committee to take decisions. He was leader of the Labour group. “He did not run the council single-handedly. That was a media myth – one we played up to because he was a good brand for us. “There were lots of people in the council coming up with proposals and making decisions. The council is still just as capable as it was. “The council is no longer talking about former councillor Purcell. We are back to the business of running the city council.”

A spokesman for the £2.5billion-per-year council denied that the smooth running of the city was affected by Purcell’s problems. And Labour furiously rejected claims by John Mason that Purcell was prevented from standing as a by-election candidate in Glasgow East in 2008 because of fears over his health. A spokesman called the claim “baseless and false”.(Daily Record)

Afternote: The press fightback against Peter Watson coupled with the Labour Party dismissal of Purcell as a lightweight who exercised little authority in the council. But the “dogs of war” smell blood

 

 

 

 

15 Mar 2010: Purcell’s Pet Quango Faces Inquiry over [Pounds Sterling]1.5m Wages

A Construction quango created by troubled ex-council leader Steven Purcell more than doubled its wage bill for senior managers in two years, it was revealed yesterday. Glasgow City Building recruited so many senior employees that the executive wage bill rose to £1.5million last year, despite the worst construction downturn for decades. It has also emerged the arms-length Glasgow City Council body paid £2k for a table at a Labour Party fundraiser even though it is frowned upon for public bodies to make contributions to political parties. The revelations cast further doubt on the stewardship of the disgraced Glasgow City Council leader Steven Purcell – who privatised the council’s buildings division to create “City Building” in a blaze of publicity in 2006. (Highbeam)

After note: “What a cracker.” Purcell formed a strategy designed to bring about a massive reduction in the council’s annual expenditure. He set about achieving his aim by dismissing large numbers of staff from the council, transferring their employment to newly created private companies operating at arm’s length from the council. The companies were awarded long term service contracts with the council (appropriate to their area of speciality) guaranteeing their future. Workers rights would be protected so that their would be no detriment to their conditions of employment.

Female staff (mainly part-time) soon discovered the reality of their situation when they were denied equal pay by the new arm’s length organisation’s. The saga of the short pay lasted many years and is not yet full resolved.

Senior managers of the newly created arm’s length organisations were appointed by the council. They were each awarded commercial rate salaries (£100 – £150k) per annum together with pension rights applicable to their grade. Not that long after the change a number of senior managers retired taking huge retirement packages, which could not be justified. The press attacked council inefficiency and their reports suggested the packages amounted to fraud.

John Swinney SNP Treasurer at Holyrood moved fast, closed the loophole and brought to an end the practice of city councillors taking up employment with the arm’s length organisations. But  damage had been done. A number of former councillors/senior managers retired with obscenely high lump sums and pensions. Nice one Purcell.

 

 

 

 

29 Mar 2010: The former leader of Glasgow City Council has admitted using cocaine and told of how this may have left him open to blackmail.

Purcell told The Scottish Sun newspaper that he had taken drugs a “handful” of times. He also said police warned that there could be video footage of him using drugs which might be used for blackmail. He told the newspaper he had used cocaine on several occasions after being first offered it at a party.and blamed his own “stupidity” for his decision to take the Class A drug and explained how it eventually led to a visit from police.

He told the paper: “Two officers from the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency came along. “They told me that during the course of an investigation they came across information that could mean I would be subject to blackmail because of the use of cocaine. “They said there might be a video of me using cocaine and that could be used to blackmail me. “The last time I used it was a year ago, a few weeks before the police came to see me. I told close colleagues at the council about it because I think it’s important to be honest.”

Following his resignation, there were calls for Strathclyde Police and the public spending watchdog, Audit Scotland, to investigate allegations about how council contracts were awarded under Mr Purcell’s leadership. But both bodies advised last week that they would not be proceeding with any investigation.’

Justice Secretary Kenny Macaskill said that while there were questions to be answered surrounding Mr Purcell’s departure, he could not launch an inquiry. “These are operational matters, whether it’s for Audit Scotland, whether its for the police,” he said. “It’s for other organisations to take steps to make sure that questions are answered and we can be satisfied in the great city of Glasgow that situation is as it should be.” The Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency (SCDEA) said it was unable to comment specifically on any contact it may have had with Mr Purcell.

Deputy Chief Constable Gordon Meldrum, director general of the organisation, said: “As we have made clear on a number of occasions over recent weeks, the SCDEA has a long-standing policy of not confirming the details of any individuals who they may have had contact with in carrying out their day-to-day work to disrupt and dismantle serious organised crime. “Serious organised crime groups also thrive on information. The less they know about the ‘who, what, where, and why’ of our approach, the less chance they have of changing their tactics to evade our grasp.”  (BBC News)

After-note: Pressure was applied to responsible authorities requesting the investigation of the business affairs of Glasgow City Council, including a full financial audit responding to many rumours of financial wrongdoing.

 

 

 

 

 

29 Mar 2010: Steven Purcell – disgraced former leader of Glasgow council admits to using cocaine

Purcell, shocked Glasgow and his party by resigning suddenly as council leader earlier this month. His departure sparked a surge of allegations about his links to wealthy party backers and their lucrative civic contracts, and claims of a cover-up of his drugs misuse, seriously undermining Labour’s pre-general election planning and its attempts to retake the Glasgow East Westminster seat from the Scottish National party. In a desperate attempt to kill off the controversy the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown publicly praised Purcell. He advised the press that Purcell’s resignation was “a personal sadness, a tragedy” and urged voters to focus on the city’s future and its successful regeneration.

Purcell denied showing any favouritism to Labour funders in awarding council contracts, with particular reference to Willie Haughey, an influential businessman and council contractor. “I make absolutely no apology for our reputation as an administration that is business friendly,” he said. “I have never once seen a hint of corruption. Regulations are tougher than people think. Everything is audited and legal.”

Strathclyde police and the Scottish public spending authority Audit Scotland last week rejected SNP demands for an inquiry into Purcell’s conduct and council contracts, but Mason insisted the police think again. He said: “His admission not only that he used cocaine but had a very real fear that gangsters had a video of him and could blackmail him goes beyond the individual and brings in questions of propriety in the council that are of genuine concern to my constituents. Continuing concerns in the newspapers over council contracts, connections to city businessmen and now gangsters are legitimate points that should be investigated. Councillor Purcell’s resignation has simply exposed the cracks in Labour’s façade.The questions facing the Labour administration go well beyond Steven Purcell’s personal situation.”

SNP councillors submitted a motion on 1 Apr 2010 to the council asking for an independent investigation into “the practices and recent decisions of the council” It failed to win enough support. A  counter amendment by the Labour dominated council backed a motion saying there was no need for an enquiry.  (BBC News)

After-note: The entire Scottish system of controls closed ranks and prevented any enquiry of Glasgow City Council. A disgraceful event which succeeded only in adding to the public distrust of the Unionist party’s in Scotland. Why was Purcell not investigated in a public setting. Might be he knows too much

 

 

 

 

 

4 Apr 2010: Former council chief Steven Purcell’s cocaine party with dealers

Shamed council leader Steven Purcell was targeted by cocaine dealers in a pub run by Kelly Bryce, (the sister of thug security boss Jamie Bryce.) Their dad is convicted drug dealer James Bryce, once sentenced to 10 years in jail for dealing cocaine and cannabis. The late-night party with the dealer took place at Purcell’s flat weeks before the Scottish Crime and Drugs Enforcement Agency began a probe into the extortion threat. Officers from the agency told him he could be the target of a drug blackmail plot last May. Assistant Chief Constable Johnny Gwynne and Detective Chief Superintendent Allan Moffat, head of crime support at the agency, told him a dealer claimed to have mobile phone footage of him snorting cocaine.

Purcell’s partying with dealers in his own home emerged when a gangland source said: “Purcell walked into trouble. He was in way over his head. He invited two dealers into his flat for a party. The SCDEA were all over the dealer. He had got to know Purcell in The Boundary Bar and basically saw his potential. The dealer told the plain-clothes guys he and his mate had footage of Purcell snorting coke on a mobile. he said: “Purcell was so out of it he didn’t know what was going on. He was drunk and high.” Detectives couldn’t believe what they were hearing but the guy was able to give them chapter and verse. A Yoker local added: “It was well-known among a small group of people for months before Purcell quit.”

Jamie Bryce, was part of a gang including boxing tycoon Barry Hughes, who were convicted of assaulting a clubber with a metal pole.He was ordered to carry out 150 hours’ community service. At one time, Bryce was head of Thor Security, lived in a penthouse and drove a £100k Mercedes, (despite his firm providing protection for just one site.) He frequented The Boundary Bar). Bryce and Hughes visited Scotland’s biggest drug dealer, Jamie “The Iceman” Stevenson, in jail.

Last week, Glasgow city councillors ruled out an independent inquiry into the Purcell scandal. (Sunday Mail)

After-note: It appears convicted criminal and drug dealer, Jamie Bryce might have had Purcell in his sights. Purcell’s choices are most definitely suspect. And the Council rejected an inquiry??

 

 

 

 

 

3 Jul 2010: Ex gangster Paul Ferris sensationally linked to the Gay and Lesbian drop-in centre at the heart of the Steven Purcell drugs and corruption probe.

Police and council chiefs are investigating claims that Purcell helped councillor Ruth Black get £50,000 of public cash to run The Castro venue in Glasgow. Black and McDougall were good friends with Purcell and socialised with him in the months before he stood down in March this year

Paisley-born McDougall, (who is well known to police and has spent several spells on remand) is a friend of convicted gun-runner Ferris and is the step-sister of former Glasgow drug baron Stewart “Specky” Boyd, who was killed in a car crash in Spain seven years ago.

Black and McDougall, who live together, are being probed as part of a wide-ranging police investigation into Purcell. Black has already been quizzed by cops over claims that she sold “speed” – amphetamine – at Glasgow City Chambers but strenuously denies the allegations.

The police probe into Purcell is looking into allegations about both drugs and cronyism. These include claims that Purcell used undue influence to help Black win the right to run The Castro over a rival bidder. A council spokesman warned that, despite only opening in spring, the centre could be closed within days because of a series of “financial irregularities” flagged up by whistle-blowers.

Both police and the council – who are carrying out parallel inquiries – have been alerted to Ferris visiting The Castro, in the Merchant City area of Glasgow. Ferris was there twice in recent weeks, speaking to his pal Jeanie McDougall and her girlfriend councillor Ruth Black, the boss of the centre – which is now the focus of a probe into alleged financial irregularities.

A source said: “To say there are concerns about Ferris wandering in and out of a publicly-funded organisation is an understatement.” An insider at The Castro said: “Ferris passed me on the stairs one day wearing a hat and I thought to myself he looked right dodgy. The last time I saw him he came in and then Jeanie and Ruth disappeared with him into the office.”

Yesterday, Black insisted Ferris was at The Castro to speak to McDougall about setting up a charity scheme. She said: “Jeanie has been discussing setting up a project with Paul to prevent re offending. It’s something they both have a passion for. “They go back a long way – about 20 years. His visits have been to do with an organisation down south called Unlock, who Paul Ferris has spoken to.” ( Daily Record)

After-note: Is there no end to it?

 

 

 

 

 

13 Aug 2010: Council chiefs have handed police a dossier about a gay drop-in centre run by two pals of Steven Purcell.

Officials at Glasgow City Council, called in the police after investigating “financial irregularities” at The Castro centre. The council, who own the centre, have also begun the process of evicting its boss, councillor Ruth Black, and her lover Jeanie McDougall, who ran the venue’s Noise cafe-bar. It’s understood the council probe revealed serious problems, including tax and national insurance being taken from staff wages but not paid, and Black’s son being employed in breach of council grant rules. The centre is said to have run without proper insurance, there were reports of “irregularities” over fruit machines, and it’s believed part of a public grant was used to pay for a car. Insiders say the council hope to have Black and McDougall evicted within three weeks.

Police are already probing claims that Purcell, who quit days before it emerged he had taken cocaine, helped Black get £50,000 of public money to open the centre. Black was suspended by the Labour Party after alleged financial irregularities at The Castro first emerged. Police said an investigation was ongoing. (Daily Record)

 


19 Jul 2010: The Funny Old World of the West of Scotland

Steven Purcell, who quit as leader of Glasgow City Council citing exhaustion, has been brought onboard by the Stewart & McKenna Foundation, which works on humanitarian projects around the world. Stephen McKenna and Allan Stewart, who state that they founded their property group in 2004, said they hoped to give Purcell a second chance after reading he wanted to become involved in charity work. McKenna said “Steven made a mistake and he understands that.I think it’s fantastic that he will be working with us. He’s said he wanted to work on Scottish projects. It will be great for our foundation, for Steven, and for Scotland.”

But Stewart & McKenna should be called the Bulloch and McKenna Foundation. Allan Stewart, a partner in housebuilders Stewart and McKenna, was banned from acting as a company director for 7 years in the 1990s and twice declared bankrupt. Born Allan Stewart Bulloch, the 53 year old rebuilt his career under a new name. He says he dropped his original surname because of a speech impediment and that there had been no attempt to mislead people. He also dropped it from the electoral roll and official records at Companies House.

In the 80s Allan Stewart (then Bulloch) was a director of Grampian Glazing which was subject to numerous court actions. In 1984, Everest Double Glazing banned it from ‘passing off’ windows and doors by using a logo with a ‘striking resemblance’ to its own. The next year two creditors served warrants on the firm to freeze it’s assets after it failed to pay for £32k of goods. In 1986 Grampian, Bulloch and his partner Graham Gracie, were sequestrated (the Scots term for bankruptcy). The firm owed 55 creditors £160k, equivalent to £350k today. Both men had to sell their homes but their creditors still lost every penny.

In 1990 both Bulloch and his wife Margaret were banned from serving as company directors after being judged “unfit to be concerned in the management of a company”. Bulloch was disqualified for seven years, his wife for five. Just two years later Bulloch was sequestrated again after problems with a new window business. If he was disqualified, how did he manage to set up another business? It would appear Mr Bulloch’s speech impediment occurred in the late 1990s when he stopped using the surname Bulloch.

In 2006 Glasgow City Council, under the leadership of Steven Purcell, agreed to pay Stewart and McKenna’s £1.7m for land for the 2014 Common Wealth Games – £350k more than the company paid for it only a year earlier. After the council backed the deal Stewart & McKenna donated £9.1k to the Labour party. According to the Electoral Commission, the pair made no donations before the land sale. After his resignation, links emerged between Purcell and a number of Labour Party donors, some of whose firms had benefited from council deals.

It  has also been revealed that Purcell helped tee-up meetings between the developers’ lawyer and council chief executive George Black in 2009. He also asked senior officials to examine several of the men’s business ideas.

In January 2010 HMRC took Stewart and McKenna Ltd to court over an unpaid tax bill of £78k and the company was would up in May. There are twelve other companies still registered as active. a number of which are being investigated as part of the £600 million Ponzie scheme inquiry.

Funny how Stewart developed a speech impediment late in life, so serious as to prevent him from saying Bulloch. Fortunately it would appear he has no problem with Stewart. Aye, it’s a funny old world the West of Scotland, particularly where labour donors are concerned. (Subrosa-blonde. blogspot)

After-note: The McKenna & Stewart link is significant. They are linked to the £600million ponzie scheme still under investigation by the Scottish police fraud squad

 

 
1 Aug 2010: Stewart & McKenna firm goes bust owing £78k

A firm run by two millionaire property developers has gone bust – owing the taxman £78k. Stewart and McKenna’s empire once boasted a turnover of £134million a year. But last week insolvency experts Buchanan Roxburgh were appointed as the liquidators. The duo, whose HQ is in Cambuslang, near Glasgow, have formed more than 20 firms. In an interview in 2007, the partners claimed they had made £134million the previous year after selling 14,000 flats worldwide.  (Daily Record)

After-note: Well Well Well. The chickens have come home to roost

 

 

 

 

 

19 Dec 2010: Shamed Purcell arranged a thank-you Christmas party for his friends and supporters at an exclusive hotel.

The disgraced politician hosted around 30 guests at the Grand Central hotel in Glasgow on Friday night. But there was no sign of the A-listers from politics and business who Purcell used to rub shoulders with before being forced to quit his job in April after being quizzed by police over his cocaine use.

One guest said: “Steven is a great host. There was plenty of drink to go around. It was a great party and everyone was very merry. It has been a tough year for him so I think he just wanted to get everyone together and wish them all a merry Christmas and thank them for their support.”

But another onlooker said: “The guest list wasn’t what Steven was once used to. “There were a few people there who would not have been allowed an appointment with him when he was in power. Never mind A-list, they wouldn’t make the Z -list.” (Daily Record)

After-note: He doesn’t work so where did the money come from and the Grand Central isn’t cheap

 


13 Mar 2011: One year on, why no charges in Purcell probe?

Twelve months have passed since Purcell’s spectacular fall from grace at Glasgow City Council. Last March, Strathclyde’s Major Crimes and Terrorism Investigation Unit said it was probing “allegations of drug taking” and “other matters” concerning 38-year-old Purcell, thought to centre on the awarding of contracts from the council’s £2.4billion budget. However, the inquiry is still said to be “ongoing” with no likelihood of any imminent charges, prompting suggestions last night that Labour officials were obstructing the investigation. Some high-placed sources have said they believe the shamed councillor still holds a web of influence across Glasgow. At the time, his connections took in almost every area of the council, which had close links with a number of prominent business leaders.The fall-out surrounding his sudden resignation, however, only led to more questions and allegations of links to gangland figures in the Glasgow underworld.

Purcell went on to spend time in Australia and Ireland, and on his return set up the company Twenty Ten Consultancy and secured a post with the charity Stewart & McKenna Foundation run by two Labour-supporting developers. A council insider told the Scottish Sunday Express: “He’s now toxic in the corridors of power and council members have been warned about associating with him.” Strathclyde Police yesterday said their inquiry is “ongoing”. A spokeswoman added: “There are no reports that anybody has been charged.” (The Express)

After-note: It is evident that his friends in high places are determined to protect him from prosecution. But things might change over time as the electorate pressures politicians and the press for answers. But, at this time his digit finger is well extended to all asunder.

 

 

 

 

 

23 Sep 2011: Cocaine shame ex-council boss Steven Purcell is ‘Happy as Larry’ as corruption police complete probe into his dealings

Shamed politician Steven Purcell has adopted the catchphrase “Happy as Larry” – despite possible corruption charges. Cops yesterday confirmed they have completed a probe into Purcell’s time as leader of Glasgow City Council. A police dossier on Purcell and his cronies has been submitted to the procurator-fiscal to decide whether charges are brought over allegations of corruption and links with gangsters.

It is rumoured he is responsible for a behind-the-scenes battle between factions in Glasgow’s ruling Labour group, who are at risk of being ousted by the SNP in next year’s council elections. And, despite having no permanent job, he has left his working class heartland of Yoker for a swanky city centre pad and is frequently seen boozing and partying in the trendy Merchant City with several councillors who remain loyal to him.His Facebook page confirms his lifestyle showing snaps of him in pubs and on foreign holidays, including Las Vegas.  (Daily Record)

After-note: Purcell appears to be coated in Teflon. The police have done their job but the Fiscal has yet to decide if the case is to be brought before the courts. Delay is the most invidious form of denial

 


17 Jan 2012: Dodgy Land Deals in Dalmarnock

In yet another example of the disgraceful way Glasgow City Council operates, we see Labour Councillors paying off their chums from regeneration budgets while those they have displaced or evicted are ignored. Ronnie Saez, a close friend of Frank McAveety, (Labour MSP, and former Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Glasgow East Regeneration Agency), had been made redundant with a £500k settlement   approved by City Councillors Catherine McMaster, George Redmond and James Coleman.

That’s the George Redmond who told housewife Margaret Jaconelli and her family to ‘take it on the chin’ when she was brutally evicted from her home (she has not yet received compensation.) so developers could profit from the Athlete’s Village. And it is the James Coleman who promised users and carers of “The Accord Centre” a brand new purpose built facility, as a legacy of Glasgow 2014 … but then somehow the £200k they were promised isn’t there any-more. Budget cuts, apparently. Fortunately for Ronnie, budget cuts don’t apply to friends, so he’s sitting pretty.

And there’s more, there are other friends of City Councillors who have been cared for:

Graham Duffy, (the failed businessman who attempted to take over Rangers Football Club back in 2009) owned Grantly Developments (Parkhead) who had been holding onto derelict land on Millerfield Road in Dalmarnock since 1988. But when the area was named as the site for the Athlete’s Village, Duffy brokered a £5.5 million deal with the Council for the land – a staggering 12,000% increase in the land value since it’s original purchase.

Allan Stewart and Steve McKenna, Labour party donors, (who operated a number of building companies, one of which went bust in 2010 owing the Inland Revenue, their suppliers and clients  a massive tax bill)  bought property in Dalmarnock in 2006 for £1.6 million, (just over the road from Mrs Jaconelli and her family.) When the Athlete’s Village was announced for the site, the Council paid them £1 for the land, plus a £1.7m amount and ‘gifted’ them another valuable parcel of land around the corner. Oh, and Steven Purcell took a position on their charity foundation, too.

Another deal saw former Rangers owner David Murray’s company paid £5.1m for land it bought for £375,000 a few years before.

Charles Price, (owner of Springfield Properties No. 1 Ltd) bought property along Springfield Road in 2005-2006 for an amount believed to be around £8million, and then sold it back to the Council for £17million in 2008. Council’s payment represented a 409% increase in the value of the land since Price’s 2005 purchase.

Some of these deals, plus others, are now being investigated by Strathclyde Police as reported by the BBC.

the Jaconelli family and local shop owners were forced out of their properties through the brutal use of (CPO’s) Compulsory Purchase Orders. But the draconian powers, (put in place by government to protect the public purse),  were designed to be used only as a last resort after all attempts at finding a solution, including arbitration had been exhausted which was not the case. Disgraceful in the light of other property business conducted by the Council.  (Gamesmonitor2014)

After-note: Ronnie Saez, getting £500k (from a charity) is a disgraceful use of Charitable funds and the sum does not include his pension arrangements. The land deals must be classified as incompetence or fraud. The forced removal of house/shop owners from their properties applying an extremely low settlement offer is an abuse of power.

 

 

 

 

 

20 Jan 2012: No action is to be taken against Steven Purcell

The Crown Office has confirmed that proceedings will not be brought against ex Council Leader Purcell or councillor Ruth Black. Prosecutors said there was “insufficient evidence” of criminality and “no further action is currently appropriate”.

A Crown Office spokesman said: “Strathclyde Police have fully investigated allegations made against Steven Purcell and Ruth Black. “The results of these investigations have been made available to Crown Counsel. “Crown Counsel agree with the conclusion reached by Strathclyde Police, that there is insufficient evidence of criminality at this time and that no further action is currently appropriate.”(BBC News)

After-note: Surely this is not the end. Note the use of the phrase “insufficient evidence of criminality at this time” 

 

 

 

 

 

Feb 2012: Lorne Hotel Fraud

A curry entrepreneur has been accused of stealing £1.46million of taxpayers’ cash after the £7.3million sale of his upmarket hotel and restaurant. Archie Sharif, 43, sold the Lorne Hotel and Bukharah restaurant in Glasgow after his business hit the rocks.But instead of handing over £1.46million in VAT from the sale, he is accused of transferring the cash to a bank in Pakistan. HM Revenue & Customs foiled the alleged fraud days after Sharif travelled to Karachi to try to access the money. Lord Advocate Frank Mulholland then took Sharif to the Court of Session where the judge agreed to freeze the businessman’s assets under proceeds of crime laws. One source said: “Glasgow criminals have been at the epicentre of the VAT fraud crimewave which has cost the UK economy billions of pounds. “It makes a welcome change if the taxman has managed to prevent one from taking place.”

Pakistan-born Sharif bought the A-listed Lorne hotel in Glasgow’s west end in 2007 after it had lain derelict for six years.Bankrolled with £11million from private investors and the Royal Bank of Scotland, he turned it into an upmarket 102-bedroom hotel, Indian restaurant and cocktail bar.At the time, he said: “This is the biggest thing I’ve taken on but I am proud to own this hotel and I want to restore it to its former glory.” Two years ago, he admitted trading conditions were tough but saw the Bukharah named restaurant of the year at the Scottish Curry Awards.Just three months later, HMRC petitioned to wind up Sharif’s trading company Lorne Hotel Glasgow Ltd and a liquidator was appointed.

Sharif later sold the building for £7.3million to Bellshill Ltd, whose director is well-known curry restaurateur Sohan Singh.Singh, has been chosen by Labour as a possible candidate in local elections later this year. He was jailed along with drug dealer Craig McAteer, and another man in 1999 for a £1.6million duty-free tax fraud but Singh’s conviction was overturned on appeal.

The Lorne Hotel and the adjoining restaurant has become a favourite haunt of north Glasgow crime clan head Jamie Daniel and his mob. It was also where the shamed former Labour leader of Glasgow City Council Stephen Purcell, held a party last week. The meal was staged to celebrate the Crown Office’s decision not to prosecute Purcell over alleged corruption and drug use. But Purcell spent the night of the party in a police cell following his arrest after a disturbance at his flat.

Afternote: Purcell rises from his slumber. What company he keeps. Singh is well versed in property deals and other business. I posted an article covering his activities. Well worth a read. The established link between Justin McAlroy, McAteer and Singh is of significance

 

 

Singh, was jailed for six years after being convicted of dodging £1.6 million of tax due on lorry-loads of booze in one ten-week period. The sentence was overturned on a technicality and he spent just 10 months in jail after being convicted along with James Sanderson, who got three years, and Craig McAteer, who got two and a half. They stood trial in 1999 after undercover Customs officers claimed they sold 16 lorry-loads of whisky – meant to be sent abroad duty-free – on the British black market. Customs claimed the staggering haul was enough to give every adult in Scotland two duty-free drinks.

More than 2500 cases of spirits were seized to add to 4400 cases that had been impounded. Officers also found documents showing that at least 15 lorry-loads traced to Scotland had gone overseas. A dozen export forms had false foreign stamps.During his trial, it was revealed that Singh had been a target for some kind of vengeance over a deal which went wrong. In July 1998, while he was on bail, three hooded men walked into his office and systematically clubbed him with baseball bats, breaking both of his legs.

The judge Lord Phillip told Singh: ‘You were in control in Scotland of a carefully-planned and efficiently-run operation designed to defraud the state and you were making huge profits.’ In 2000, Singh was released and when it eventually came to court, in June last year, the Crown told the court that they would not be resisting the appeals. Singh and McAteer walked free.

McAteer, one of Singh’s alleged lieutenants, was the best friend of murdered drug dealer Justin McAlroy, who was shot dead after attending a Labour Party fundraiser at his dad’s club.William ‘Tiler’ Gage was convicted of McAlroy’s execution last year but the man alleged to have paid for the hit has never been caught.

Full report on Councillor Singh here:   https://caltonjock.com/2016/03/05/corruption-graft-nepotism-glasgow-controlled-by-the-labour-party/

 

 

 

 

 

24 Jun 2012: ” Russell Findlay’s searing new book “Caught In The Crossfire lifts the lid on the bitter Glasgow gangland war

Following the death from cancer of his eight-year-old son Garry in 1991, Eddie Lyons was handed the keys to a derelict, council-owned community centre in Milton, which was renamed Chirnsyde Community Initiative. This provided him with a platform to grandstand about drugs ahead of the 1999 election for the first Scottish Parliament. His brass-necked appearance saw him air his views on the evening news apparently confident his true business would never be exposed. His confidence had been bolstered after years of building his respectable community-minded image and duping the police, council officials and politicians into backing his claims to legitimacy. His community centre had been built on taxpayers’ cash and official approval and he believed himself untouchable. He cultivated the support of Strathclyde Police, the Labour Party and Glasgow City Council and he was confident of their backing. And, despite the repeated warnings of campaigners, who were dismissed as “bampots” by officials, backing remained constant until the spiralling violence and crime linked to Lyons and his community centre could no longer be ignored.

Before long, Chirnsyde – Eddie’s Club, as it was known locally – became synonymous with drug dealing and violence as his teenage sons Eddie Jr, Steven and their cronies formed the Club Boys gang. Mums and dads looking for somewhere for their children to play sport and meet friends in safety were appalled that a man like Lyons was being given such official sanction. How, they asked, could a crime clan boss be held up by the police, politicians and council as a role model for children? Incredibly, £1.4million of taxpayers’ money ended up being channelled into Lyons’ den but the money was never properly accounted for.

One resident who demanded answers was dad-of-nine Johnny McLean. He was incensed at a council edict that all local primary school pupils should attend PE lessons at Chirnsyde. McLean was joined by a small but determined group of other brave parents who made a stand. The Lyons responded with petrol bombs and death threats. The authorities responded with bullying tactics and smears. The catalyst for the residents’ campaign was the attempted murder of dad Thomas McDonnell, whose sons had suffered a terror campaign at the hands of the Club Boys. When McDonnell went to Chirnsyde to plead with Lyons to end the violence, he was stabbed by a mob while Lyons himself allegedly shouted “Get the b******!”

Even the investigating CID team raised concerns about Lyons’ police connections. Witness intimidation came after the arrest of Lyons, his two sons Eddie Jr and Steven, brother Johnny and two Club Boys for McDonnell’s attempted murder. Eventually, all the Lyons walked free while just one Club Boy was convicted for the attack on McDonnell, whose family’s pleas for help to the police and Crown Office fell on deaf ears. Their suffering at the hands of the Lyons was matched by the official indifference and incompetence endured by the Milton campaigners.

The council director in charge of Chirnsyde was then First Minister Jack McConnell’s wife Bridget, who refused to take action. Inexplicably, the council did not demand to see enhanced Disclosure Scotland checks into Lyons’ background as a condition for funding. But the residents continued to write thousands of letters in which they raised the awkward but unanswered questions about Lyons, Chirnsyde and children’s safety.

In 2003, the Sunday Mail exposed Lyons under the headline “Would you let this man look after your children?” But still he was allowed to continue and Labour’s refusal to back down handed a council by-election victory to the SNP’s Billy McAllister who vowed that, if elected, he would fight to clear out Chirnsyde and return it to the community.

Meanwhile, Lyons was nurturing big ambitions for his Club Boys as he planned to take on established city mobsters to control the drugs trade. A major organised crime family headed by Jamie Daniel already controlled tracts of the north Glasgow drugs trade and they regarded the Club Boys with derision. The young Daniel gang, including Daniel’s son-in-law Kevin “Gerbil” Carroll, did not take kindly when a stash of their cocaine was stolen and sold on by the Club Boys. The theft sparked 10 years of tit- for-tat violence between the Lyons and Daniels. What began as a dirty fight over control of a multi-million-pound trade in pills and powders soon became personal.

Carroll made several strikes against the Club Boys, who were forced to shop for body armour and retreat from Milton. And the out-of-control gangster (later shot dead in an Asda car park) sparked revulsion when he toppled the gravestone of little Garry Lyons. But self-styled community leader Lyons still clung on to Chirnsyde. Only when the Daniel mob sent two hit-men to commit a triple shooting at the Lyons-owned Applerow garage were the council forced to act. The bloodbath, which claimed the life of 21-year-old Michael Lyons, finally saw Lyons evicted from Chirnsyde. After six years, the Milton campaigners were exonerated and hailed for their bravery in a Scottish Parliament debate.

As Glasgow City Council tried to justify their inexplicable refusal to move against Lyons, leisure director Bridget McConnell’s allies pointed the finger at an unnamed “senior councillor” for opposing attempts to evict the gang boss. That councillor was later revealed as Steven Purcell, the then council leader, who resigned after admitting taking cocaine. The revelation that he protected Lyons at Chirnsyde should spark fresh concerns that a man in control of a £2billion-a-year budget could have been compromised by serious and organised criminals.

 


The Lyons and Daniel Family feud

A self-styled community leader and busy-body, Eddie Lyons was a Mr Fix-It with his fingers in many pies. His was skilled at picking up snippets of information and his pirate video rental sideline gave him perfect cover as he kept his ear to the ground. Lyons spoke to police constable John Cameron so often that he was nicknamed The Special Constable.
Drinkers in Milton pubs would balance an empty pint glass on their head to deliver a mocking impression of Lyons by pretending it was a police blue light and many are certain that he was a registered police informant. Whatever the roots of the special relationship between Lyons and the police, it would have been unremarkable were it not for what followed his son’s funeral when there was a reservoir of sympathy for him. That was when Lyons took his first step towards legitimacy (with the backing of Strathclyde Police and funded by taxpayers’ cash.) He was given the keys to Chirnsyde. Maryhill MSP Patricia Ferguson knows the importance of being seen to be tough on crime (and getting her picture in papers.) That was why she pounded the streets for three hours one evening with PC John Cameron (the chairman of Lyons’ community centre.) Their first port of call was Chirnsyde. Not only did Lyons have Cameron as chairman and Councillor Ellen Hurcombe as a staunch defender but now the area’s new Labour MSP had given her seal of approval.

 


Ferguson later wrote a friendly letter to Lyons addressed “Dear Eddie”. Meanwhile, PC Cameron and other community officers were using a room at Chirnsyde as a base. As the Lyons crime family’s drugs laid waste to the local community, police were using the gang headquarters as an unofficial office. In the cold glow of the moon, the name of Garry Lyons was etched on the black headstone along with the inscription: “To the wee tough guy. Love you forever.” It was where he had rested in peace for 15 years. In the darkness, Kevin “Gerbil” Carroll and two other men looped a rope attached to their four-wheel-drive’s tow bar, over the large headstone. The vehicle’s engine revved, the rope went taut and the stone crashed down as the surrounding grass at Cadder Cemetery in Bishopbriggs was churned to mud. It was the early hours of November 6, 2006. The next morning, the Lyons family were due to visit the grave on what would have been Garry’s 23rd birthday. It was a desecration (and a very public declaration of the war that had been fought on the streets of north Glasgow for four years.)
Since 2002, the Daniel clan (led by mob boss Jamie) had attempted to drive the Lyons out of business as they muscled in on the street drugs trade. There had been car chases when the Lyons’ cars were rammed in high-speed pursuits through residential streets. On at least one occasion, Eddie Sr was targeted for bumper-to-bumper contact as he drove the Chirnsyde minibus. On January 12, 2003, Carroll was gunned down outside his mother’s home in Mingulay Street, Milton. He was the first shooting victim in the drugs war. He was 22 and lived in Drumchapel, on the western edge of Glasgow. On the day of the shooting, he had left his mum’s house with his Staffordshire bull terrier. As he put the dog into his friend’s car, a gunman sprang from the garden and chased after him before blasting him twice in the leg with a sawn-off shotgun. Carroll refused to co-operate with detectives ­probing the shooting. Nonetheless, ­inquiries led to the arrest of an 18-year-old suspect, Stephen Burgess. During Burgess’s trial, which quickly collapsed, Carroll told the High Court in Glasgow: “I was lying on the ground and the gunman was standing over me. “He ran away when my mum came running out. “My leg was hanging off. It must have been mistaken identity.”

Just 11 days later, Eddie Lyons’s brother Johnny was gunned down outside his home in Stornoway Street, a stone’s throw from Mingulay Street. two gunmen (one of them Carroll) pounced just as Johnny approached his house. Bizarrely, Johnny spoke to the press, even posing for photographs showing his wounds and the damage to his front door. Johnny said: “I’m not the nicest guy ever to walk the streets but my criminal days are behind me. “The wallet in my back pocket caught around 40 pellets and the doctors think that may have saved me.” It was thought that his brother, having enjoyed good publicity as the face of Chirnsyde, had urged Johnny to go public in a bid to dampen interest in his supposedly community-minded family.

 

Despite the increasing reports of crime and violence linked to the Lyons, Eddie was still allowed to run his community centre with the tacit approval of the elected representatives. Taxpayers funding his crime clan’s headquarters didn’t have a say in it. And so the chases, stabbings and shootings continued, until Carroll’s graveyard atrocity. He had crossed a line but was still not satisfied. Two days later, at 6.30pm on November 8, he struck again. A dealer in Bellshill, Lanarkshire, owed the Lyons money and Eddie Jr and another Club Boy were going to collect. The pair, both wearing body armour, drove slowly into the town’s Myers Court where the debtor lived. As Lyons stepped from his black BMW X5, Carroll popped up from behind a row of wheelie bins and dashed towards the car, gun drawn. Lyons tried to jump into the car but it started to roll forwards before he was inside, causing him minor injuries. His henchman was hit with at least one round but survived.

 

The Lyons, like many in gangland Glasgow, realised Carroll was veering out of control and, if they did not do something about him, he would eventually kill one of them. Eight days later Carroll and Ross Sherlock, 25, drove into Clelland Avenue, a residential street in Bishopbriggs, for a meeting with Craig “Rob Roy” Gallagher. At around 9.55pm, two cars which had been circling nearby swung into the street. A gunman emerged from one of the vehicles and started firing. Residents reported the sound of at least four shots in rapid succession. The target was Carroll, who suffered serious injuries as he was blasted in the stomach from close range. Sherlock was hit in the legs. Yet again, the police knew everything but could prove nothing. Carroll would be shot again and the final assault on his life would not fail. His death in a hail of 13 bullets after he was lured to an ambush at an Asda superstore in January 2010 shocked Scotland. But a massive investigation ended in tatters as the only man charged over Carroll’s murder walked free. The Daniels once laughed at the Lyons but after 10 years of stabbings and shootings, they were not laughing now.

 

It was December 6, 2006, and hitmen Raymond Anderson and James McDonald had been busy Christmas shopping. Two pistols with ammo, acquired via their Daniel paymasters from soldiers of the Royal Regiment of Scotland’s Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. Unregistered, pay-as-you-go mobile phones from St Enoch shopping mall in Glasgow. And two “old man” masks and wigs from Tam Shepherd’s famous joke shop in Queen Street. Kevin Carroll had just got out of hospital after taking a bullet from the Lyons. He was not fit to wreak revenge. So he contracted the job.

The Lyons gang (and brutal ally Robert Pickett) had been crowing since the shooting of Carroll in Bishopbriggs. They often met on the forecourt of Applerow Motors, an MOT station run by Eddie’s brother David Lyons in Lambhill. Anderson and McDonald were driving on the M8 towards the garage when they received a call from Anderson’s son, also Raymond, at 2.10pm. The hit was on. At 2.12 pm, Anderson and McDonald pulled up at Applerow. Wearing long, dark trench coats, the hitmen ( later jailed for 35 years) slid on their masks and pulled their guns. Michael Lyons Jr ( a nephew of Eddie Sr) was at the garage to fill the water tank for his mobile car wash business.

It was a typical day in the busy MOT station, tinny music blared from a radio over the clatter of metal and shouted banter. David saw the gunmen first and shouted a warning to his family members. Michael Jr began to run but a British Army bullet cut him down in mid flight, killing him instantly. David ran towards his nephew but quickly realised that, unless he wanted to be next, he should take cover. Moments before the gunmen had walked in, Steven Lyons and Robert Pickett had driven into the small yard in a Ford Focus. They (not Michael Jr) were the real targets. Just as David shouted his warning, Steven had glanced in the Ford’s rear-view mirror and seen the two men (their faces hidden by the grotesque latex masks) walking quickly towards the back of the stationary car. Steven brought his foot down hard on the accelerator as a shot blew out the Ford’s back window. In the confines of the yard, he had nowhere to go. He scrambled from the vehicle and attempted to seek refuge inside the garage but one of the gunmen picked him off with a round as he ran for cover. By 2.15 pm, it was over. But the drugs war, waged by Jamie Daniel in the 1990s would come back to haunt him more than a decade later.

Daniel had become the enemy of a criminal gang led by Stewart “Specky” Boyd which included Robert “Piggy” Pickett, George “Goofy” Docherty and Stewart Gillespie. Boyd’s gang was linked to FCB Enterprise (Security) Ltd, a firm set up with almost £200,000 of taxpayers’ money. They were feuding with the Paisley-based Rennie crime clan. In November 1995, three Rennie brothers received a visit from Gillespie, Pickett and Docherty and a bloodbath ensued. The violence escalated until six months later when Gillespie shot Mark Rennie dead. Gillespie, was jailed for the murder while Pickett and Docherty, were each convicted for earlier attacks on the three brothers. Daniel’s name was never publicly linked to the attacks but he had close links with many of those involved and was suspected of providing guns to the warring factions. As the Daniels waged a battle for control of the drugs trade in Milton, ghosts from Paisley came back to haunt Jamie when Pickett and Docherty formed a deadly alliance with the Lyons. The Lyons well understood the saying: “My enemy’s enemy is my friend.” Full story here: (Russell Findlay- “Caught In The Crossfire”

After-note: Purcell’s power over other Councillors was absolute throughout his tenure and it appears not to have dissipated over time. Police investigations must have been extensive but the absence of definitive proof of unlawful activity makes their task impossible.

 

 

 

 

 

 

12 Jul 2013: Anger as Purcell legacy City Parking hits negative equity

Glasgow’s City Parking (wholly owned by the council) is now sitting in negative equity. The firm today admitted its car parks are worth half as much as the loan it took out to buy them. The arm’s length external organisation, or ALEO, has been in the red under the weight of its mortgage ever since it was created by former city leader Steven Purcell in 2007. A recent revaluation revealed that it could not sell off the car parks (including major city centre assets) such as the parking facilities at Cambridge Street and Concert Square, to pay off the loan. The City Parking property portfolio was initially valued at £36million. It is now worth £16million reflecting an industry wide drop in all car park values as the recession scared shoppers away.

A council spokesman explained that the value of car parks across the UK had been downgraded significantly over the last five years. City Parking is not immune to that and is effectively facing a negative equity situation. He went on to offer that: “As many people who have experienced this domestically will understand; it only really has an impact if you intend to sell the property. It has no cash effect on the business, which reported an operating surplus at year end, or the council.”

However, the very fact City Parking has plunged so deeply into negative equity raises questions about how its car parks came to be valued so highly. Glasgow City Council “sold” the car parks and other properties to City Parking. The city then took a capital receipt from the transaction and left its AlEO to make payments on the loan, which is on what one insider called “sweet terms you would never get today”.

However, the deal, one of several similar schemes orchestrated under Mr Purcell, went down just as the bottom fell out of the financial markets and the economy shrank. In a market downturn, City Parking, which is also responsible for issuing parking fines, wasn’t able to cover the loan repayments from its operating profits and finished its first five years in the red. As a result, the council has had to bail out City Parking several times since it was created, including providing guarantees for an overdraft.

City Parking made a loss of £1.03million in 2011-12, according to accounts filed at Companies House. Full official figures are not available for 2012-13 but council sources said City Parking made an operating surplus of £241k in the last financial year.

Trade unions have previously called for City Property to be brought back in to direct council control. Other insiders have suggested the business could be taken over by, “City Property” another ALEO. However, negative equity, sources said, would make either option an expensive proposition. (Evening Times)

After-note: Another financial disaster inherited from Purcell’s stewardship of the Council. City Parking has been bailed out of a number of financial predicaments over the short time it has been in existence  management must shoulder the responsibility but the culprits are well retired now.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rev. Stuart Campbell Unfairly Taken to Task by Dugdale the Mundell’s Their Unionist Buddies and the Scottish Press and BBC – But Their Behaviour On and Offline is Markedly Worse But Unreported or criticized

 

 

wingsHomophobic or Toryphobic??

 

 

4 Mar 2017: David Mundell and son Oliver condemn “wings over Scotland” Tweet as homophobic and disgusting

The Scottish Secretary said: “This sort of behaviour has to be called out. We’re not going to face down homophobia unless we call out people who practice it.”

His son Oliver, who was elected to the Scottish Parliament last May, branded the “Wings Over Scotland” comment “absolutely disgusting and unacceptable” and added: “I get a lot of abuse online. There are certain individuals you don’t want to give oxygen to but sometimes comments people make just cross the line.”

The blogger insisted that the tweet was “Toryphobic” rather than homophobic.

Are the Mundell’s thin skinned??  Was their umbrage induced by the need of a photo opportunity??   Is the Unionist media upping the hype aiding the Tory party political agenda?? 

 

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FiFi La Bon Bon (Notorious Scottish female blogger supported the Mundell’s

 

 

23 February-2009: Oliver – Son of David and his time at Edinburgh University was not without incident

Edinburgh University Students Association President (Divinity Student) candidate, Oliver Mundell was forced to apologise after reducing a disabled student to a nervous wreck in an attack on less able opponents when he was running for President of the Student’s Union, (he failed).

(http://www.journal-online.co.uk/article/5478-mundell_apologises_for_liberation_jibe)

 

 

 

 

And what about Michael Gove? A supreme Stud mehaps

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10 Jan 2009: Young Tory Chairman caused outrage after boasting about dressing up as Madeleine McCann at a party.

Matthew Lewis bragged his costume would include a blonde wig, pink pajamas, teddy bear and vial of fake blood.

The student, 23,  a leading Young Conservative  was recently photographed with party leader David Cameron.

But in a series of foul comments, he joked with friends – two of them Tory members – online about his tasteless outfit..

Yesterday, the family of missing Madeleine, five, blasted his actions and said they had caused great hurt.

Spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: “The offensiveness of his comments is almost beyond belief.

It’s a disgrace Madeleine’s name and image should be made fun of in this way.”

Labour MP Steve McCabe added: “I’ve heard some pretty revolting things, but this takes the biscuit.”

Lewis had exchanges with friends on Facebook about how he needed a blonde wig to complete his outfit.

A fellow Tory asked him: “Is this a cunning (Baldrick style) plan to obtain the reward money?”

In one especially offensive exchange, Lewis was asked, “You like small girls, ey?” He replied: “I like to dress up as them, yes.”

On New Year’s Day, after the party, Lewis told another Conservative Future member online: “There was a brief moment I thought I might have gone too far with the costume, but it was OK.”

Unbelievably, one party guest was apparently dressed as Baby P, the boy who died in Haringey, London, after horrific abuse.

Last night, Lewis made a grovelling apology. He said in a statement: “I completely regret my behaviour and cannot express how sorry I am for the incredible hurt I have caused.

While my actions were not meant to be malicious, I understand the pain they brought.”

The fancy dress stunt outraged Deputy Prime Minister Caroline Spelman MP who, as Tory Party chairman at the time, said ‘This offensive behaviour is not only shocking but intolerable and completely unacceptable. There is no place for this sort of person in the Party”.

(http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tory-causes-outrage-for-sick-madeleine-370294)

 

article-1110727-0229620500000578-395_233x394Shows: Matt Lewis (Far Left) with David Cameron. Source: Facebook

Matthew Lewis with David Cameron

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2 Feb 2012: Young Conservative who sparked outrage after going to a party dressed as blood-stained Madeleine McCann is back working for the Tories

A Young Conservative who provoked outrage when he dressed-up as a blood-stained Madeleine McCann for a fancy dress party is back working for the Tories on European policy.

Matthew Lewis was supposedly expelled from the Party in 2009 by officials who were appalled by a series of entries about ‘my bad taste party outfit’ on his Facebook page.

But a biography next to a photo of a smiling Lewis on the Young Conservative Europe Group website states that he is in his second term as its chairman.

(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2094961/Young-Conservative-sparked-outrage-going-party-dressed-blood-stained-Madeleine-McCann-working-Tories.html)

 

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But supporters of the Union  are allowed to publicly state their views well knowing they will not be subject to criticism of Unionists of the Tory, Labour and Libdem Party’s 

 

Same sex marriage

It is really astounding that David Trimble should have had a man such as this giving him advice – and must surely cast grave doubts on his own political judgement.

I think these sorts of relationships are immoral, offensive and obnoxious.

Ian Paisley Jr, who won the seat of North Antrim and son of the party’s founder, on learning that David Trimble, the former first minister for Ireland, had a gay aide who just married his partner in Canada, in 2005.

 

I could not care less what people get up to in terms of their sexuality, that’s not a matter for me – when it becomes a matter for me is when people try to redefine marriage

The group’s leader Arlene Foster, speaking in 2016.

 

On LGBT+ people.

I am pretty repulsed  by gay and lesbianism. I think it is wrong. I think that those people harm themselves and – without caring about it – harm society. That doesn’t mean to say that I hate them – I mean, I hate what they do.

Ian Paisley Jr, who won the seat of North Antrim and son of the party’s founder, speaking to Ireland’s Hot Press magazine in 2005.

 

It wasn’t Iris Robinson [his wife] who determined that homosexuality was an abomination, it was the Almighty.

Peter Robinson, former first minister for Northern Ireland, speaking to BBC Northern Ireland Hearts and Minds in 2008, defending his wife, Iris Robinson former MP for Strangford for calling homosexuality an ‘abomination’.

 

I have a very lovely psychiatrist who works with me in my offices and his Christian background is that he tries to help homosexuals trying to turn away from what they are engaged in.

And I have met people who have turned around to become heterosexual.

Iris Robinson, former MP for Strangford, and wife of former First Minister for Northern Ireland, Peter Robinson, reacting to the news that a man had been assaulted because he was gay, in 2008.

 

There can be no viler act, apart from homosexuality and sodomy, than sexually abusing innocent children.

I cannot think of anything more sickening than a child being abused. It is comparable to the act of homosexuality. I think they are all comparable. I feel totally repulsed by both.

Iris Robinson, former MP for Strangford, and wife of former First Minister for Northern Ireland, Peter Robinson speaking in the House of Commons in 2008.

On Muslims. 

I’ll be quite honest, I wouldn’t trust them in terms of those who have been involved in terrorist activities. I wouldn’t trust them if they are devoted to Sharia Law. I wouldn’t trust them for spiritual guidance. Would I trust them to go down to the shops for me, yes I would, would I trust them to do day-to-day activities… there is no reason why you wouldn’t….Why are you so concerned about Muslims and not poor people like me?

Peter Robinson, former first minister for Northern Ireland speaking to the Irish News in 2014, where he supported a pastor who said in a sermon “Islam is heathen, Islam is satanic, Islam is a doctrine spawned in hell.”

 

On same-sex parenting. 

Envisage, down the road, a child going to primary school and being collected by two females or two males, and the bullying and abuse to which those children will be exposed; or going into their parents’ bedroom, as is natural for a child to do, and finding two women or two men making love?

I stand by my faith and the word of God that man was created in the image of God and that woman was created from the rib of Adam to be his help meet and companion. That is the natural progression of procreation.

The word of God says that procreation is through a man and a woman.

We are moving mountains to facilitate immorality and to bring the rights of lesbians above all others in this country.

It is a shame, and honourable Members ought to hang their heads in shame.

Iris Robinson,former MP for Strangford,  speaking in the House of Commons in 2008. 

 

The facts show that certainly you don’t bring a child up in a homosexual relationship … that a child is far more likely to be abused or neglected … in a non-stable marriage.

Jim Wells, former deputy speaker of the Northern Irish Assembly, speaking at a hustings in 2015.

On abortion.

I would not want abortion to be as freely available here [Northern Ireland] as it is in England and don’t support the extension of the 1967 act

The group’s leader  Arlene Foster, speaking to the Guardian in 2016. 

 

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Labour Party in Scotland – Masters of Misappropriation – Public Assets Sold for a Pittance – Need to be Made Answer the Question Where Did All the Money Go?

 

 

 

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The Labour party in Scotland and its abuse of power

From 1997-2010 the Labour Party ruled supreme at Westminster, the newly established parliament at Holyrood and had control of almost all of the local councils in Scotland. The health, wealth, welfare and future of Scots was very much vested with Labour party politicians and councillors.

Their performance was disgraceful and rightly the Scottish electorate turned away from them transferring their votes to the Scottish National Party which has provided good governance of Scotland in difficult financial times imposed on the country, first by the incompetent Alistair Darling then followed up with a vengeance by George Osborne.and the right wing extremists of the Tory party.

In the West of Scotland a number of Labour party politicians and councillors compromised their positions establishing links with unsavoury characters of the underworld.

The bubble burst for Labour at the time hints of criminal activity, in office, of the leader of the Glasgow City Council, Steven Purcell were exposed to public scrutiny. His subsequent departure, in disgrace provided opportunity for discussion of his record in office and this revealed a catalogue of misappropriation of public finance measured in £billions.

I posted a number of articles in my blog over the last 3 years, so that the misdeeds of the Labour party in Scotland, the depths of which are unfathomable will remain in the minds of voters.

The accompanying article outlines the unexplained loss of £600 million from a Hedge Fund managed by a man of business, well known in the West of Scotland. The content reveals the extent of links between so called legitimate business and person(s) of ill repute.

The disgraced Steven Purcell resurfaces together with characters linked to the Motherwell based Dalziel Country Club, (venue for the infamous 2002 Red Rose Dinner) Lack of space prevents  more detailed description of events but the full report is available.

 

 

gregory-kingGregory King

 

 

 

8 Jul 2007: Float is set to value Mathon man at £140m.

Scottish entrepreneur Gregory King is set to make a £140million paper fortune with the float of Mathon Capital, just two years after launching the finance company. Mathon, which specialises in offering short-term loans to property developers, plans to raise £200million when it joins the Alternative Investment Market. The Glasgow-based business is expected to be valued at about £350 million, making the 40 per cent stake that founder King will own after the float worth £140million. King, a lawyer whose family has run property finance businesses in Scotland for generations, founded the company in 2005. (https://www.highbeam)

 

 

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29 Mar 2010: Bridging Market Continues to Feel Squeeze as Mathon Collapses

The bridging sector was dealt a blow last week after it was revealed that commercial bridging lender Mathon Finance had been put into administration. Accountant and business adviser P.K.F. was appointed administrator of Mathon. The Glasgow based lender was established in 2004 as an asset based lender providing short term finance to brokers and firms in the commercial property sector. The company’s remaining assets have been sold to Juniper Property Finance by the administrator, which has secured the jobs of the five employees. As a result, the administrator received sufficient funds to enable all creditors to be paid in full with statutory interest. (highbeam.com)

 

 

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Heather Capital: How a £600 Million Hedge Fund Vanished – Big named Investors Ripped Off

A trail of land deals and loans linked to the collapse of a £400 million international investment firm led by Scottish businessman Greg King has been revealed.

In late 2008 and early 2009, amid the financial crisis, worried investors pulled their money out of hedge funds across the board. Heather’s clients were no different. Heather quickly stopped giving them their cash, and it was put into liquidation in 2010. Liquidators took control of Heather and began looking for investors’ money. An examination by the Journal has found that some of the money appears to have ended up back in Glasgow, far from the world of high finance.

A chief beneficiary appears to have been Mr. King himself. According to Heather’s financial reports filed at the Isle of Man’s companies registry, he personally took nearly £52 million in fees between 2005 and 2008. The money was paid to a British Virgin Islands company controlled by Mr. King, and the amounts were in large part justified by Heather’s supposedly sterling performance. But performance turned out to be anything but. In 2008, according to the accounts, Heather wrote down £76 million on its loans and £92 million on foreign-exchange losses. There was a pattern. Heather would make large loans, ostensibly for property development. The loans often wouldn’t be paid back, leaving the beneficiaries with the cash. Over the years, much of the cash Heather raised from investors appears to have been disbursed this way.

The probe centred on loans, to develop plots of wasteland and derelict buildings across central Scotland (valued at £336 million) made through Mathon Ltd, a firm linked to Heather Capital (later renamed Harvest Finance), which, it is claimed claimed were bogus and designed to hide evidence that cash had been stolen by “one or more of the directors”. . Liquidators demanded repayment of 42 loans and repossessed secured properties which had been valued at £161million. But they were shocked when the properties sold for just £8million.

Forensic accountants and police are scouring the loans and four men including King, 46, solicitor Andrew Sobolewski, 54, accountant Andrew Miller, 62, and Scott Carmichael, 41, have been reported to the procurator fiscal.

Heather Capital is registered on the Isle of Man where liquidators Ernst & Young have lodged a claim for £100 million against the fund’s auditors KPMG in a bid to claw back cash for investors from around the world. Papers lodged at the Courts of Justice claim that KPMG should have been aware that Heather was being operated in “a dishonest manner”.

Ernst & Young refused to comment on their professional negligence claim against KPMG. A spokesman for KPMG said: “We don’t think the claim has any merit and we intend to defend it vigorously. “We stand by the quality of our work.”

Civil proceedings in the High Court in London have raised the possibility of fraud. In a case in which Mathon’s liquidators sought disclosure of documents, the liquidators said properties valued on Mathon’s books at around £161 million had been sold for just £8 million. They alleged that the loan book was a sham concocted to hide the fact that money may have been embezzled.

The High Court judge hearing the dispute concluded there is strong indication that “fraudulent conduct exists even though the precise nature of the fraud and the identities of those involved still needs to be ascertained.” Investors, meanwhile, have been left with few answers.

 

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The under-noted West of Scotland businessmen secured major cash loans (against derelict land and rundown properties) from Mathon ltd:

 

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The Rea Brothers

Five companies that received 10 loans from Mathon listed boxing promoter Mario Rea as a director or secretary. Another loan was made to a company of which Mario’s twin brother, Carlo, was director and cousin Anthony was secretary. Regulatory filings show that 9 of these 11 loans are still outstanding. The twins were targeted by the Scottish police drugs squad in 2007 during a major money laundering investigation but charges were dropped by the Crown.

They ran several firms in Lanarkshire and formerly owned the Dalziel Park country club which went under owing £2.5 million in 2010. Mario was banned from being a company director for seven years. DMR Assets Ltd, which had Mario Rea, 36, as a director and his twin Carlo as secretary, was given a £4.84 million loan by Mathon, secured against a property in Belhaven Terrace, Wishaw in 2008. The house was later sold for just £425k. When DMR went bust in 2009, administrators were able to claw back just £1.85 million of the loan. Mario Rea was also a director and secretary of Glenavon (Scotland) Ltd which secured a loan from Mathon, against The Winning Post – an abandoned pub in Calderbank, near Airdrie – in 2008. The building was demolished in 2011. The land remains undeveloped. Mario was also a director of Rea Property and Developments Ltd which received a loan from Mathon, secured against waste ground in Main Street, Plains, in 2007. The firm went into liquidation a year after the loan was granted. (1) In 2012 Mario was told by police that IRA hit-men were plotting to kill him over claims he duped them in a tobacco deal.In 2013 both Mario and his twin were convicted of assaulting a member of the Lyons’ crime clan at a cinema a year.

 

gilmour_gilroy1_lxmario-reaMario Rea

 

 

 

 
Allan Stewart and Stephen McKenna

The pair once claimed that they wanted to give away 40 per cent of their income to good causes and boasted about their charity work. They gave a job to shamed council chief Steven Purcell in 2010 but denied the appointment was “payback” for a favourable land deal.

Stewart has been declared bankrupt twice. The duo secured a total of 11 loans from Mathon. Nothing paid back. Brechin Developments Ltd, another firm run by the pair, got two separate loans secured against St Columba’s and Maison Dieu churches in Brechin. These were never paid back. McKenna, of Pollokshields, Glasgow, was sequestrated last year over debts totalling £796k. Stewart was banned from being a company director for seven years in the 1990s. Stewart and McKenna Ltd were also taken to court in 2010 over an unpaid tax bill of almost £80k.

 

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Lawrence Gillick

The son a Glasgow Rangers legend, Lawrence, known as Larry, was declared bankrupt following the collapse of a greyhound racing track in Ayr.

He was a director of Towndale Glasgow (Ltd) when they received a loan, in 2006 against derelict land on Yoker Ferry Road, Glasgow – the site of the former Wharf pub. The firm went into administration in 2008.

He was at the centre of a Scottish Crime and Drugs Enforcement Agency operation which saw £6.5 million of Russian mafia money seized from Scottish bank accounts in 2010. Gillick, (who joined ex–England boss Terry Venables in a failed bid to buy Spurs in 1991) attempted to transfer the cash and claimed he was building an oil refinery in Iraq. But police suspected the money was part of a laundering scam involving transfers between accounts in Latvia, Hungary, Russia, America and Scotland and grabbed the cash. It later emerged that some of the money had been transferred to US firms with links to organised crime.

In 1995 Gillick was involved in a scheme which led to the Salvation Army being conned out of more than £8.8 million in an alleged fraud. The charity took legal action forcing him to repay the cash.  (manxforums.com)

 

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Follow-up

5 Feb 2015: Four Scots investigated over £400million collapse of hedge fund

Heather Capital director Gregory King and three associates are being probed over the firm’s collapse, which was related to loans made by Mathon Finance Ltd against a series of land plots in central Scotland. It is claimed the plots were often of low value, despite huge loans being made by Mathon for development which allegedly never happened. Police said the men are the subject of a report to the procurator fiscal. (Daily Record)

 

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8 Feb 2015: Whistle-blower It Was a Cover-Up Not an Investigation

Paul Delaney, a former SNP councillor in North Lanarkshire, is not surprised to learn the parcel of land in Plains is now part of the huge fraud inquiry. But blowing the whistle cost Paul his political career and he’s been out in the cold since. He said: “I wasn’t aware of the latest development but it doesn’t surprise me. I really hope that people in government listen to this now. “There have been things going wrong for years in the council and no one has the guts to deal with it. Other people were suspected at the time but everything was covered up. (highbeam.com)

 

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9 Feb 2015: HSBC helped wealthy clients cheat the UK out of millions of pounds of tax, whistle-blower reveals

Britain’s biggest bank helped wealthy clients cheat the UK out of millions of pounds in tax, a whistle-blower has revealed. Thousands of leaked accounts from HSBC’s private bank in Switzerland show bankers helped clients evade tax and offered deals to help tax dodgers stay ahead of the law. HSBC admitted that some individuals took advantage of bank secrecy to hold undeclared accounts but said it has now “fundamentally changed”.

The documents, stolen in 2007 by a computer expert working for HSBC in Geneva, contain details of more than 100,000 clients from around the world. Offshore accounts are not illegal, but many people use them to hide cash from the tax authorities. Though tax avoidance is legal, deliberately hiding money to evade tax is not. (Daily Record)

 

 

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15 Feb 2015: Scot Behind Pounds £150k Tory Donation in Police Probe over Alleged Embezzlement

One of the Conservative Party’s biggest Scottish donors is being investigated over “alleged embezzlement” at a finance firm linked to a collapsed £400m hedge fund, it has emerged. Lawyer Andrew Sobolewski, 56, from Bridge of Weir in Renfrewshire, is the subject of a police report to the Procurator Fiscal. He and three other men have been reported in relation to Mathon Ltd, a former finance company that loaned millions to Scottish property developers – deals later described in court papers as “a fabrication and a sham”. Sobolewski was a director and chief executive of Mathon Ltd for part of the relevant period. It has now emerged that, through a connected company, Sobolewski gave the Tories Pounds £150k on the eve of the last general election. (highbeam.com)

 

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22 Feb 2015: Almost £3m of Investors’ Cash Disappeared When a Plan to Convert a House into a Care Home Turned to Dust. The Man with the Plan, Ex-Drugs Suspect Barry Cushley

A former drugs and money laundering suspect is the latest businessman linked to dubious loans made by a £400 million hedge fund before it collapsed. Bankrupt Barry Cushley applied for planning permission at one of the 11 sites across Scotland whose owners were lent millions by Heather Capital, led by Greg King. Like the others, the ambitious plans for the site did not materialise but most of the money was never recovered. A major police investigation has been launched into Heather Capital, the offshore financial empire run by King, from Glasgow. His fund lent millions of pounds to develop plots of wasteland and derelict buildings across central Scotland. (highbeam.com)

 

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29 Mar 2015: Blue-chip bankers lose £210m in hedge fund that collapsed after investing in derelict land in Scotland

The biggest names in world banking and finance lost tens of millions of pounds after the collapse of an investment firm connected to Greg King’s Heather Capital hedge fund. The extent to which major investors had backed Isle of Man-registered Aarkad Plc, who channelled money into Heather, are laid bare in documents seen by the Sunday Mail. Some of Aarkad’s global investors held stakes valued at up to £50million.

The scale of the stakes can be revealed as the police ­continue to probe the ­collapse of investment firms led by King. His Heather Capital fund lent millions of pounds to develop wasteland and ­derelict buildings in central Scotland. But the sites remain empty while ­investors search for their missing millions. Aarkad was set up to act as a “feeder fund” – used by hedge funds as a tax-efficient way to pool investors’ cash – for Heather. After Heather’s collapse, a ­liquidator was appointed to wind up Aarkad in 2010.

Aarkad’s assets had been valued at £210million in 2008 before Heather ran into difficulties. Heather was thought to be worth £500million when it went bust. It’s thought investors are unlikely to receive any of their cash back.

King was listed as a director of Aarkad at the Isle of Man’s Companies Registry. Records show his address was in ­Gibraltar. The list of investors on the official ­register of shareholders from December 2009 includes major financial groups or their subsidiaries, such as UBS Credit Suisse, HSBC Private Bank, Bank Julius Baer & Co and the private banking arm of the Edmond de Rothschild group.

Dutch-based Citco – a specialist ­custodian bank – held a stake worth around £50million for ­clients. The list also includes private Swiss banks. In some cases, financial institutions will have invested in their own right. But in others they will have been holding shares for clients. A spokesman for Julius Baer – who held around ­£4million of shares– said: “The shares were ­purchased by the bank on behalf of ­clients.”

Last month, HSBC Private Bank in Switzerland issued an apology after ­helping their rich ­British clients to avoid paying tax and launder cash. One financial expert said: “The share register shows how much money was pouring into Aarkad and subsequently Heather. It’s staggering to think that these investors have lost all their cash.”

A number of ­private investors, ­including two US doctors, are on the shareholder list. Dr Paul Laraia, from New Hampshire and Dr Robert Hillberg, from ­Boston, each invested around £150k.

King, of Newton Mearns, Glasgow, is also on the list, although his stake, which was worth around £80k in 2008, was modest compared to most investors. Ernst and Young are trying to recover Heather Capital’s cash

Peter Watson,(suspended from his job as a part-time sheriff), also had shares worth around £200k. Lawyer Watson was a ­director of Heather’s lending arm Mathon Ltd for less than a year. He’s been de-benched pending a court case into the fund’s ­collapse. His former firm, Levy & McRae, is one of several being sued by Heather’s ­liquidator, Ernst & Young, in a civil case to try to find the missing millions.

Ernst & Young have also launched an action against the fund’s auditor KPMG. Lawyer Andrew Sobolewski also had a stake in Aarkad worth around £200k. King, Sobolewski, accountant Andrew Miller, and ­property developer Scott Carmichael have all been reported to the procurator ­fiscal in connection with allegations of embezzlement concerning Mathon.  A Crown Office spokesman said: “The report remains under consideration.” (Daily Record)

 

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17 May 2015: Scots tycoon Greg King at the centre of £400m hedge fund collapse refuses to apologise to investors on flying visit home

The elusive tycoon at the centre of a criminal probe into a £400million hedge fund collapse has jetted back into Scotland. But Greg King refused to apologise to investors after returning to his native Glasgow on a flying visit.Outside his parents’ mansion on the city’s south side, the multi-millionaire, who denies any wrong-doing, referred all questions to blue-chip legal firm Carter Ruck.It is the first time he has been seen in Scotland since the crash of his hedge fund Heather Capital was revealed in December.

King, 46, lawyer Andrew Sobolewski, accountant Andrew Millar and property expert Scott Carmichael were named in a police report sent to the Crown Office. Investors put money into the fund and Heather gave subsidiary firm Mathon huge loans for developments in Scotland. It is claimed the plots were low value and developments never happened. Asked about the collapse, King replied: “I am only back in Scotland for one day but any comment should come from my lawyers Carter Ruck.”

King lives in the gated La Zagaleta complex in Marbella, Spain, where properties sell for up to £20million. He is rarely in Scotland. He set up Heather in 2004. They went into liquidation six years later. He paid himself about £34million between 2005 and 2008.

Liquidators Ernst & Young claim the fund’s auditors KPMG should have been aware it was being run fraudulently. They claimed in court papers that many of the loans were “a fabrication and a sham”. They say properties valued on the firm’s books at £161million had been sold for just £8million. Investors are unlikely to see any of their money.

Yesterday, the Crown Office said a report in relation to four men “remains under consideration”. Ernst & Young declined to comment.

Investors’ £400m disappeared on financial merry-go-round When Greg King launched his Heather Capital hedge fund in 2004, clients flocked to invest. The fund then handed huge loans to developers through subsidiary firm Mathon.

When Heather went out of business in 2010, accountants found the hedge fund’s cash had been paid in loans to firms with links to controversial businessmen Mario and Carlo Rea, Lawrence Gillick and Allan Stewart.

The loans were secured against derelict land and rundown properties. Liquidators for Mathon, renamed Harvest, claim their loan book was “a sham designed to conceal the fact earlier funds borrowed from Heather may have been embezzled by one or more of the directors”.

A multi-million-pound writ was served on law firm Levy & McRae by Ernst & Young over their role in the scandal. Their ex senior partner Peter Watson, (who was suspended as a sheriff), was briefly a Mathon director.

 

kingGreg King

 

 

 

References:

(1)

8 Feb 2015: Whistle-blower – It Was a Cover-up not an Investigation

The whistle-blower who sparked a corruption probe into the planning decision says his allegations were covered up instead of being fully investigated. Paul Delaney, a former SNP councillor in North Lanarkshire, is not surprised to learn the parcel of land in Plains is now part of the huge fraud inquiry. But blowing the whistle cost Paul his political career and he’s been out in the cold since. He said: “I wasn’t aware of the latest development but it doesn’t surprise me. I really hope that people in government listen to this now. “There have been things going wrong for years in the council and no one has the guts to deal with it. Other people were suspected at the time but everything was covered up. “Of course I feel bitter. I lost everything for exposing something that the public should have known all about. I was hung out to dry.”

In 2010 Paul made public some information on a disciplinary case involving council planner Danny Welsh. Welsh had been lavished with gifts by Mario Rea while involved with his application to build a new housing development. He had holidayed in Rea’s plush Spanish villa and received free tickets for Celtic games as the businessman sought clearance to build 41 houses in Plains. Welsh was sacked when it emerged he had accepted the gifts. He took his bosses to an employment tribunal, claiming he had been unfairly dismissed. But a judge said Welsh lacked credibility and dismissed his claim. Judge Raymond Williamson added: “The inappropriateness of a planning official accepting gifts from property developers ought to be self-evident.”

Welsh and Rea were investigated for corruption by the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency and were reported to the Crown Office but a prosecution was not pursued due to “insufficient evidence”. Meanwhile, Paul found himself suspended by the Standards Commission for leaking confidential documents and he was marginalised by his own party till he lost his council seat. Now a carer for his elderly mother, Paul said: “I was brought up to believe that when you were honest and tried to do something decent, people would get behind you and push you on. “Not in this case. It was a case of, ‘You’re on your own, mate.’ “The SNP basically told me that I’d done something wrong and I would have to pay for it. As far as they were concerned, the Standards Commission were correct and I had no right to release this information.” The land in question, which has never been developed, is one of 11 sites in Scotland at the centre of a large-scale investigation into the activities of collapsed hedge fund Heather Capital. (Sunday Mail)

 

 

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New Labour – Led By Control Freaks – Interested Only in Asset Stripping Scotland’s Finances For Their Own Gain

 

 

 

indexLord Derry Irvine    blairsmos_468x552Tony & Cherie Lord Derry Irvine’s Trainee’s

 

 

 

 

21 Apr 2002: Scotland – A country In the grip of the Labour Party  

The most dramatic contrast between the establishments north and south of the Border is in the world of business. Although the late John Smith launched a famous ‘prawn cocktail’ offensive in the City of London to persuade business that Labour could be trusted, it was only with the advent of New Labour that the party south of the Border was able to lessen the impact of the business community’s traditional hostility towards Labour. However, Labour’s tentacles in Scottish business run deep, giving access to a variety of cut-price services during campaigns, and allowing the party to use business figures to attack the claims of opposing parties.
A key pro-Labour business figure is Baroness Goudie, the Labour peer and secretary of the Scottish Industry Forum. While the forum claims to be independent, critics accuse it of being too close to Labour. Baroness Goudie is the former organiser of the Labour Solidarity Campaign and is married to James Goudie QC, a barrister with Lord Derry Irvine’s chambers. John Reid, the former Scottish Secretary, employed Goudie to act on his behalf when he was investigated by Elizabeth Filkin, the Commons sleaze watchdog, in 1999. (The Scotsman)

 

 

 

gouldieJames Gouldie QC

 

 

 

 
Leading UK Counsel – James Gouldie QC – Office in London

He presents cases in a way that courts find helpful”. “He doesn’t sit on the fence, but gives his opinion, is very easy to deal with and is down to earth”. James is a “hard hitter, who always make eminently sensible contributions to a case” and is a man with “great intellect who has a real gift for providing straightforward, user-friendly advice on complicated problems”. “A very shrewd advocate” and “heavyweight public procurement barrister”. More here: (https://www.11kbw.com/barristers/profile/james-goudie)

 

12 Jul 2016: The Labour party legal advisor says Jeremy Corbyn must get MP backing to run again

Mr Goudie’s presented his legal opinion to today’s crunch meeting of Labour’s ruling national executive committee, which will rule on the row later tonight. The advice has never been made public until now, but a copy has been leaked to PoliticsHome. In it, Mr Goudie makes clear that in his opinion, the Labour rule book shows that Mr Corbyn must gain nominations to prove that he has “a measurable degree of support” among his parliamentary colleagues. (https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/political-parties/labour-party/news/77231/revealed-labour-party-legal-advice-which-says)

 

 

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2005: Misuse of the security services for private purposes by Tony Blair and his wife – Harassing Robert Henderson – A disturbing story of an abuse of power

On March 13 1997 Tony Blair and his wife made a complaint against Robert Henderson to Belgravia Police. The complaint concerned letters sent to the Blair’s by Henderson. The CPS rejected the complaint within hours but Henderson was placed under Special Branch investigation.

In 1997 Robert Henderson, a retired civil servant, wrote to the then leader of the Opposition Tony Blair to ask for his help. Eventually he wrote a dozen or so letters to Blair and Cherie Booth. Blair then tried to have him prosecuted but the legal authorities refused to act. Blair or someone close to him then set the tabloids on him and he was smeared in the Daily Mirror and Daily Record as a stalker and a racist.

The sequence of events that followed indicate an abuse of the power of the state, which had it been conducted against a lesser man than Robert Henderson might have had tragic consequences. I have extracted a small part of the story that is relevant to this post. A full transcript of events can be found here:. http://www.whale.to/c/blairs2.html

 

 

 

blair-brown_2677439bTony & Gordon_973669_dewar_300

 

 

 

 

 

The Data Protection Act (DPA)
The original Mirror story mentioned that Special Branch had been asked to investigate me despite the fact that the Crown Prosecution Service had declared unequivocally that I had committed no crime. Using the Data Protection Act (DPA) I have confirmed that Special Branch did take an interest in me. It took three years before they would reveal it, but eventually the Metropolitan Police admitted that Special Branch had a file on me. Use of the DPA has also resulted (after years of trying) in confirmation from MI5 that they have had a file on me since 1997.

 

 

article-0-03D2820A000005DC-250_306x423Derry Irvine and his wife Alison (previously married to Donald Dewar)blairs

 

 

 

 

 

The Data Protection Tribunal (DPT)

I made a subject access request to MI5 under the 1998 DPA act when it became ‘live’ in 2000. I received a reply which took the regulation Security Service ‘We can neither confirm nor deny’ line.

This appeared to be in direct contradiction of the 1998 DPA and the Human Rights Act (HRA). Accordingly I appealed to the DPT (now the Information Tribunal), challenging MI5’s right to neither confirm nor deny whether any data was held. (Under the DPA MI5 have the right to withhold data on security grounds but use of that power would confirm that data was held.)

My appeal was scheduled to be heard by a panel of three. One was a retired Appeal Court judge, Sir Anthony Evans. The other two members were Michael Beloff QC and James Goudie QC. Beloff and Goudie were not only closely connected with the Blairs but also the Labour Party.

These relationships were of prime importance because my appeal concerned data which, if it existed, could only have related to the Blairs’ attempt to have me prosecuted and the aftermath of that failed attempt.

Mr Beloff was joint head of Cherie Blair’s old chambers at 4/5 Gray’s Inn, Gray’s Inn Sq, where Mrs Blair was a member from 1991 until 2000 when she left to join a new chambers, Matrix.

Mr Beloff originally intended to join Matrix but withdrew at the last moment. He is also a personal friend of the Blairs and was the lawyer called in to sort out Geoffrey Robinson’s problems with his offshore trust. He is a former chairman of the Society of Labour Lawyers.

Goudie is also a personal friend of the Blairs and the Lord Chancellor, Lord lrvine; so is his wife, Lady Goudie, who was made a baroness by Mr Blair in 1998. Goudie is a former Labour leader of Brent Council and was once a prospective Labour parliamentary candidate. He has done legal work for the Labour party.

Lady Goudie is a major fund raiser for the Labour Party and acted as chief fund raiser for Frank Dobson when he ran for the post of mayor of London. Lady Goudie is a friend of Gordon Brown’s wife, Sarah Macaulay, and has done work for her PR agency Hobsbawn Macaulay. The Goudies attended the Macauley-Brown wedding.

That such a panel was allocated to my case is unsurprising because the Lord Chancellor appoints the members of DPT panels. The present Lord Chancellor, Derry Irving, is a very close friend of both the Blairs who were once pupils in his chambers.

Tony Blair also practised in lrvine’s chambers until he entered Parliament. Cherie Blair’s move to Beloff’s Chambers was initiated by lrvine, lrvine is also a personal friend of Goudie and Beloff and has had a professional relationship with Mr Goudie dating back over a quarter of century. Goudie is currently joint-head of Lord lrvine’s old Chambers.

Despite the links between Blair, Goudie and Beloff, the President of the panel, Anthony Evans, refused to disbar them from sitting. Consequently, I made a complaint to the then Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir John Stevens, accusing Evans and Irving of conspiring to pervert the course of justice in the most blatant fashion by deliberately packing a judicial panel.

Stevens refused to begin an investigation. I then submitted a complaint against Sir John Stevens to the Met. That complaint is still under investigation by the Met’s Department of Professional Standards.

In the end my appeal never came before the DPT because the Lib-Dem MP, Norman Baker, had an appeal on the same issue of neither confirming or denying upheld by the DPT which meant that my appeal fell as the precedent was established.

I then made a new appeal to MI5 and got an admission that they held data on me. However, the full data was not revealed

I suspect that the authorities ceased taking any interest in me once Blair announced he would be resigning as PM. Nonetheless I cannot be sure.

 

 

 

baroness-gouldieBaroness Gouldie

 

 

 

 
25 Oct 2009: Baroness Gouldie & Her Flat in Glasgow

A close friend of prime minister Gordon Brown, who lives with her husband in a £1.5 million house in London has claimed £230k in expenses by saying a flat in Glasgow is her main home. Baroness Goudie, a Labour peer and party fundraiser, has lived since childhood in London, where her two sons grew up and her husband works as a leading barrister. But when submitting House of Lords allowances, she claimed her main address was a Glasgow apartment. This has allowed Goudie to claim subsistence allowances intended as payments for those outside the capital, who need help to meet the cost of accommodation in London. Goudie acknowledged she did not spend much of her time in her £200k Glasgow flat, although she was there “frequently”.

Since public records of peers’ expenses were first published in April 2001, Goudie,63, has recorded that her main home is in Glasgow. Including an estimated amount for 2008-9 expenses, the Glasgow address has enabled her to recoup over £150k in accommodation expenses from the Lords over the past eight years. She also claimed an estimated £80k for travel between London and Glasgow.

Goudie has strong associations with Scotland. She is a former member of the Court of Napier University and used to serve on the board of a Glasgow hospice. She appeared on a newspaper list of “powerful women” in Scotland five years ago because of close links to senior Labour politicians and was secretary of the Scottish Industry Forum, which raised money for the party. Goudie herself has given £16k to Labour. On Friday, Goudie issued a statement saying she had stayed at the flat recently with her husband and would be there again “shortly”. She wrote: “If anyone says that much of the time I am not at my Glasgow apartment that is true. The same could be said of our London property. I do not count nights or days.” (http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/baroness-claimed-163-230-000-1-1362472)

 

 

 

tonyblair_young_cheesy_grin_yukyoung Tony derry-irvine-b-andq

 

 

 

 
27 Jan 2011: Baroness Gouldie let off despite ‘doubts’ about her expenses

Following a year-long investigation, the Clerk of the Parliaments, Michael Pownall, said he had “doubts” about the designation of the flat as a main residence. But no further action was taken after Lady Goudie apologised in writing. She also repaid £5.2k voluntarily which she had claimed for a three-month period when she had not visited the Glasgow flat at all because of ill-health. In total, Lady Goudie claimed about £168k in overnight expenses and £82k for travel to and from the property over a nine-year period. Three months ago, she sold the flat for a profit of £50k, and now designates her London address as her main home.
Lady Goudie’s apology and the report into her claims was slipped out quietly on the parliamentary website before Christmas. Investigations into nine peers with questionable designations were dropped after Mr Pownall, who is responsible for policing the system, ruled that it was sufficient for a peer to stay for just one night a month at a property for it to be their main home. The Clerk accepted that Lady Goudie had “extensive Scottish connections, familial, business and voluntary”. (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mps-expenses/8285114/Peer-let-off-despite-doubts-about-her-expenses.html)

 

 

 

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What’s the Difference Between The Labour Party in Scotland and the Italian Mafia – In All Aspects They are the Same – Only the Names are Different

 

 

 

_44054865_jackandwifebodyJack & Bridgett

 

 

 

 

13 October 2002: The Red Rose Dinner Affair

The night was wearing on and Scotland’s most powerful politicians and their supporters were chewing on cigars, sipping brandy and enjoying Andy Cameron’s stream of couthy jokes. Cameron probably didn’t know the one about the ministers, the millionaires and the soon-to-be-murdered. But this was a reasonable description of the latest Lanarkshire Labour powerplay taking place before his eyes. The guests had gathered at the tranquil setting of Motherwell’s Dalziel Park Country Club on a Friday night in March 2002 to drink, dine and sign cheques for the Labour party and other charitable causes.

The annual Red Rose dinner in Jack McConnell’s constituency, which typically raised around £7k, was a chance for players in business and politics to rub shoulders with the First Minister and Northern Ireland Secretary John Reid. That night they also mingled with MI5 minders, a retired police chief and under cover officers from the Scottish Drug Enforcement Agency (SDEA) and a drug dealer by the name of Justin McAlroy.

As millionaires such as James Mortimer, boss of Glasgow’s Victoria’s nightclub, bid around £2k for signed football strips, McAlroy’s champagne lifestyle was entering its final days. Six days later a hooded man would shoot the Porsche driver five times outside his luxury home in Cambuslang, in a killing which bore the hallmarks of a gangland hit.

McAlroy a well-known convicted drug dealer ( whose Labour-supporting father Thomas owned a stake in the country club) had been presented that evening with a commemorative plaque by McConnell’s close colleague, MP Frank Roy.

If senior Labour figures were later mortified by the criminal’s attendance they should not have been surprised. From ‘Monklands’ to ‘Lobbygate’, in recent years Lanarkshire has been a byword for Labour sleaze, for sectarianism, cronyism, nepotism and vicious party in-fighting.

This murky political culture is McConnell’s backyard. It is the poisonous backdrop against which reports last week of an £11k black hole in the three bank accounts run by the First Minister’s local party must be assessed. It is also why opposition politicians have seized on what might elsewhere have been written off as a little local difficulty and it is why McConnell’s aides, who held crisis talks on Friday, remain highly nervous.

One of the few things everyone who has seen the accounts can agree on is that they are in a state of chaos. One local party insider said: “There is a disturbing paucity of information. We are not talking in terms of a fiver or a tenner here or there. We are talking about gaps amounting to considerable amounts of money, into the hundreds and thousands.”

A source close to McConnell added: “The accounts are an absolute bloody shambles.” McConnell’s people believe details of the missing cash were leaked by hostile elements within Lanarkshire Labour circles.

The latest embarrassment for Scotland’s third First Minister is, however, about more than just Lanarkshire in-fighting. Having claimed the scalp of Henry McLeish after his “muddle” over office allowances, Tory and Nationalist strategists would lose little sleep over the downfall of a man who promised stability and transparency after three years of trauma for the Scottish parliament. For them this is the hunting season, and Lanarkshire has always proved good hunting ground.

McConnell, an Arran lad with a political background in Stirling, entered Lanarkshire, a land of massive Labour majorities, with his eyes open. He was fully aware that Helen Liddell, now Scottish Secretary, had only managed to win through as a by-election candidate in Monklands in 1994 after turning on the Labour council which had been accused of a “jobs for the boys” policy.

McConnell was at his best as a machine politician, three years after Monklands when he was Scottish Labour’s general secretary and worked with Liddell to secure the Motherwell and Wishaw seat for Frank Roy, despite strong local competition from front runner Hugh Mulholland.

Then McConnell himself managed to win by the narrowest of votes the Motherwell and Wishaw nomination for the first Scottish parliament election, snatching it in a bitter contest from Mulholland’s close ally Bill Tynan, now a Lanarkshire MP. Allies of the First Minister believe neither Tynan nor Mulholland ever forgave him and have suggested they could be behind last week’s tabloid newspaper leaks.

One source close to McConnell said: “Mulholland is the local auditor who has been kicking up all the fuss about these accounts. Is it a coincidence that he told us about the problem on Monday then we read about it in the Sun on Wednesday?” Another ally said: “It is a matter of fact that Tynan and McConnell do not get on. The same goes for Mulholland and Frank Roy. This was not the work of someone acting alone.” Mulholland denied he was involved in a smear campaign, and a source close to Tynan insisted he, too, had played no role.

It is not the first time McConnell’s character has been called into question as a result of his Lanarkshire connections. It was there that he was accused last year of trying to gag a local newspaper which was reporting on his office allowances. And it was his links with a Lanarkshire lobbying firm owned by Beattie Media that thrust McConnell into a “cash for access” row in 1999, in which he was ultimately cleared, and which led to former Beattie employee Christina Marshall joining his local office as a constituency secretary.

Marshall, the daughter of Glasgow Labour MP David Marshall, gave evidence in the cash for access investigation which clashed with another Beattie witness. She is also the centre of the latest allegations which have been laced with innuendo.

McConnell has had to account for the fact that one of three local accounts under investigation paid for a five-star room for Marshall at Edinburgh’s Caledonian Hotel during a Scottish Labour conference in March 2000. McConnell, then finance minister with ambitions for the top job, was staying at the hotel with his wife Bridget.

The scale of the sums involved in Labour politics in Lanarkshire has astonished activists in other parts of the country. One who was stunned by the money changing hands at Motherwell’s Red Rose dinner was “gobsmacked” by the latest irregularity. “Most local parties are lucky to have about three or four hundred pounds swilling around at a time, let alone £11k.” But the presence of Scotland’s most powerful politicians has long made Lanarkshire a honeypot for business and union donations on a scale that have raised questions and rumours.

Documents recently revealed that Frank Roy’s general election campaign had been funded almost entirely by Ian Skelly, famous for his successful car business. Skelly put up £5k of the 5.7k campaign fund.

Helen Liddell received a £5k election fund donation, courtesy of millionairess Vera Weisfield, the former owner of What Every Woman Wants. In 1999 McConnell’s Motherwell and Wishaw party received £5k from the Iron and Steel Trades Confederation – whose donations are also now being examined – while former cabinet minister Tom McCabe accepted a £1k campaign donation from the locally-based Doonin Plant Ltd.

Labour seems determined to close down the latest controversy before it blows up into something it cannot control. But it may be too late for that. While party insiders say the missing money is about nothing more than a woman who borrowed money to pay off crippling credit card debts, and that McConnell was not a signatory to the accounts, the episode has led to unprecedented scrutiny of Labour’s secretive financial practices in Lanarkshire.

McConnell will remain under tremendous pressure until the discrepancies are adequately explained. Allies are conscious that the downfall of Henry McLeish owed more to his subsequent explanation of the so-called ‘Officegate’ sub-letting affair than the act itself. They are smarting at SNP claims that McConnell misled parliament by claiming he became aware of local concerns only three months ago and reported them to Labour general secretary Lesley Quinn.

Nationalists believe McConnell was part of an initial investigation into the financial problems seven months ago and should have admitted this to parliament.  “You couldn’t make up this s**t if you tried,” chuckled one SNP insider. “And the great thing is the info isn’t coming from us. It’s coming from Labour’s own side.” Senior Labour figures are appealing for calm, concerned about whether devolution could survive the downfall of a third First Minister in three years.

Last night Alex Rowley, Labour’s former Scottish general secretary, said: “There is a real danger that people are starting to disengage with an institution we fought so hard to get. People are asking: ‘What are we paying these people for?’ We need real leadership not just for the Labour party but all the other parties as well.”

But there was little sign last night that McConnell’s problems were likely to go away. “The whole area is bubbling like a cauldron,” said one Lanarkshire council source. “If Labour cannot deal with sleaze in Lanarkshire why should we expect them to be able to run the country?” ( The Scotsman)

 

 

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Frank Roy and Jack

 

 

 

 

 

25 Feb 2003: Wishawgate exposes Labour’s ugly side

Wishawgate seemed a ludicrous name for it. Jack McConnell’s constituency party messed up their accounts; they apologised and no money disappeared. Where, it may be asked, is the scandal?

Yesterday’s verdict from the Electoral Commission – a slap on the hand for the Motherwell and Wishaw Constituency Labour Party – seemed to suggest a mild offence. Yet David Triesman, the Labour Party’s general secretary, is expecting the worst. His memo last month predicted that Mr McConnell will pay a price at the polls. Once again, a trivial matter has exposed something far more ugly and dangerous: the nepotism, feuding, and favouritism which still stains the Scottish Labour Party.

Wishawgate started when, in October 2002, leaked accounts of the party’s Motherwell and Wishaw branch showed a discrepancy of some £11K. The constituency is shared by Mr McConnell and Frank Roy, its Westminster MP. It also emerged that some of this money had been used to pay a hotel bill of Christina Marshall – then Mr McConnell’s personal assistant.

She was born into the Scottish Labour network through her father, David Marshall, MP for Glasgow Shettleston. She met Mr McConnell when they both worked for Beattie Media, the public relations company. Ms Marshall, 25, had already hit the headlines. In 1999, she testified during the “Lobbygate” imbroglio where Mr McConnell was accused – and later cleared – of facilitating special access to ministers for Beattie Media’s clients.

Paying the accommodation of a party worker is, in itself, no great sin. But it was disclosed that Ms Marshall had been treated to the Caledonian Hotel, Edinburgh’s five-star finest, running up a £168 bill. Here was the first damaging snapshot of Scottish Labour’s modus operandi. The bill was paid from a fund started by a trade union – which collects its cash from the working men and women Labour purports to represent. Here, such funds were being creamed off so the party elite – and their acolytes – can upgrade to a five-star hotel rather than endure the hardship of a Travelodge. Hardly the socialist ideal.

Back in April 2002, Mr McConnell was none too keen to elaborate on the missing money – even when it was discovered the First Minister failed to provide receipts for some £3K of expenditure. The Motherwell and Wishaw auditor asked plenty questions. But, he later claimed, the responses from both Mr McConnell and Mr Roy were either “contradictory or failed to answer the questions”. This was why, in September, the auditor sent his concerns to John Smith House, home of the Scottish Labour Party, where Lesley Quinn, its general secretary, promised to investigate.

Now for the next twist. This upstanding auditor was one Hugh Mulholland, a local party activist who lost out to Mr Roy in the selection process for the safe seat of Motherwell and Wishaw for the 1997 election. At the time, Mr McConnell was general secretary of Scottish Labour and vetting candidates. Mr Mulholland had been denied a sure ticket to Westminster; he had an axe to grind with both men. Hence his passing on of the matter to Ms Quinn – and her statement that there would be an inquiry.

So when the First Minister was questioned in the Scottish Parliament, he said the matter was being dealt with at headquarters. In an eerie echo of the defence given by Henry McLeish during Officegate, he said: “I would do nothing, absolutely nothing, that would ever bring this parliament into disrepute.”

The investigation, meanwhile, continued. Three funds had now come to light. The Development Fund account, started with a £5K donation from the salaries of members of a steel union. This was the one which paid for Ms Marshall’s hotel bill.

Then came the Motherwell and Wishaw Constituency Labour Party account, from which £11K was missing. There had been mysterious transactions between this and the Red Rose Dinner account – set up for a fundraising event attended by Mr McConnell. This leads to the most fascinating event of the affair. The Red Rose Dinner is a rum affair. Last year, it saw Mr McConnell and Mr Roy joined by luminaries such as John Reid, then Northern Ireland Secretary.

The host of the dinner was a convicted drug dealer named Justin McAlroy who was being investigated for his links to the Russian mafia. Six days after the dinner, he was shot dead outside his home in Cambuslang. His father was Tommy McAlroy, the part-owner of Dalziel Park Golf and Country Club. Justin passed a cash donation of about £11k to Elizabeth Wilson, McConnell’s local party treasurer.The money was subsequently deposited in the North Lanarkshire Municipal Bank which was run by Labour councillors, including Mrs Wilson’s husband. So close is the network that these people have set up their own banks.

The First Minister was, unsurprisingly, cleared of any wrongdoing by Ms Quinn’s probe. In a letter to Sir David Steel, he further blamed a “lack of communication” between Mr Mulholland and the former treasurer of his constituency.

This Scottish Labour structure was seen during the McLeish fiasco when it emerged he had let one of his offices to Digby Brown, a firm of lawyers which chases injury claims for trade unions and seemed to be hand-in-glove with the party. Former employees of this tiny firm include Douglas Alexander, now a Cabinet Office minister and Brian Fitzpatrick MSP . So it goes on.

Wishawgate again opened the lid on the bizarre clan system which is behind Scottish Labour – giving a snapshot which Scots voters may find deeply unappealing when asked whom should represent their country. Originally, no-one would believe that bungled office lets could bring down a first minister. But offices were not the issue then, in the same way that the dodgy accounts is not the issue now. Mr McLeish fell because he was a spider, not the fly caught in the web of Scottish Labour.

The Wishawgate affair, like Officegate, Lobbygate and Monklands before it, simply exposes the system which has always existed under this political establishment. Each of these scandals lifts up a garden stone, underneath which unpleasantness is found to be crawling. This is the purpose of devolution – to let Scots see for themselves the people who have been governing their country for decades.

In May 2017 Scots will be able to vote on whether they like what they see. And this is why the Wishawgate scandal can be such a danger to the Labour party. Voters do not care if a witless Lanarkshire accountant messed up. They do care if devolution has meant passing power to a small cadre of council hall stooges now forming a coalition with Scotland’s vested interests. (The Scotsman)

 

 

 

article-2429670-1be967d2000005dc-93_223x210Douglas Alexander 

Worked for Digby Brown, Solicitors to the Labour party, who rented an office from disgraced (bungled office lets) ex first minister Henry Mcleish 

 

fitzpatrickBrian Fitzpatrick

Worked for Digby Brown, Solicitors to the Labour Party, who rented an office from disgraced (bungled office lets) ex first minister Henry Mcleish. Served as Head of Policy in the First Minister’s Policy Unit for the late Donald Dewar, he is now one of Scotland’s top Advocates

 

 

 

 
15 Jun 2003: Jack McConnell’s former Personal Assistant in Suicide Attempt

The former personal aide of First Minister Jack McConnell told yesterday how she tried to kill herself with a cocktail of alcohol and drugs after being linked to a Labour cash scandal. Ex-secretary Christina Marshall, 26, drank a litre of vodka and took a week’s supply of anti-stress pills in the wake of Wishawgate – when an £11k black hole was discovered in the accounts of McConnell’s constituency.

Christina broke her silence on her torment last week after being cleared by the Fraud Squad of any blame for the missing funds. And she told how her life had been wrecked by the affair. She revealed how: Her lawyer boyfriend kicked her out when news of the cash scandal broke; A cancer charity she supported told her to quit because it feared being tarnished in the wake of the Wishawgate investigation; And how she decided life was no longer worth living and tried to kill herself.

Christina turned to the press to tell her side of the story – after her name had been dragged through the mud in the wake of the revelations that rocked McConnell’s Motherwell and Wishaw constituency. Distraught Christina said: “For too long, I’ve been the subject of one story after another. I don’t work for Jack McConnell any longer. I don’t work for the Labour Party. I want to talk about it for the first and last time. Then I can get on with my life.”

Her nightmare began when an £11k shortfall in the Labour leader’s Motherwell and Wishaw constituency was revealed last October, prompting senior party officials to call in the police. Christina had stopped working for McConnell a year before but was publicly linked to the scandal after being named as one of three signatories to the account. And Christina was embroiled in more controversy when McConnell was questioned by party auditors over why he had paid for a hotel room for Christina at a work-related function he attended with his wife Bridget.

Last night, an emotional Christina relived the moment she sat alone in her Edinburgh flat and decided to take her own life. She had not been working for McConnell or Labour for seven months and was studying for a degree in event management at the city’s Queen Margaret University College.On the day the accounts story broke, a cancer charity she was working with as part of her degree said it no longer wanted anything to do with her because they feared they would be tainted by association. Christina has chosen not to name the charity.

To compound her misery, live-in boyfriend Andy Lothian, 31, a lawyer, told her to pack her bags from their Edinburgh flat after reading the allegations. Christina was already on medication for stress-induced panic attacks.

With her father David Marshall, Labour MP for Glasgow Shettleston, and her mother Tina in Canada on business, she was desperate – and alone. She said: “I was under so much pressure. I split up with my boyfriend on the day the accounts story broke and I was having trouble at university. “To make matters worse, my parents were out of the country. “I had prescription pills for panic attacks. I took a week’s worth of them and drank a litre of vodka. “I felt like I was being accused of being a thief. I had lost my reputation, my boyfriend, I had reporters at my door and I wanted it all to end.” The next thing she remembers is waking up in Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. Her estranged boyfriend had found her drifting in and out of consciousness and took her to hospital.

She discharged herself from hospital in the middle of the night and was picked up by her parents who had flown back from Canada. They took her to their home in Glasgow. Yesterday, Christina explained that the months between the overdose last October and Christmas were a living hell as she fought back to full health with the help of her family. Hanging over her was the police investigation into the missing money.

During her time as McConnell’s personal secretary, Christina was one of three signatories on the Red Rose Dinner Account which managed cash raised at a Labour fund raiser in Dalziel Park Country Club, near Motherwell.

The club is co-owned by Tommy McAlroy, who was at the dinner in March 2002, along with his son Justin, who was shot dead just days after the event.

Red Rose VIP diners included McConnell and wife Bridget, the then Ulster Secretary John Reid, and Motherwell and Wishaw MP Frank Roy. Christina was at the dinner as a guest and volunteer – despite the fact she no longer worked for McConnell.

She explained that she felt totally powerless to prove she was in no way involved with any missing money. Christina said: “It felt like I had been tried and convicted before anything had happened with the police. “One of the biggest problems I faced during those months was wondering what people who read newspaper stories about me actually believed I had done. “I obviously knew I wasn’t involved and had done nothing wrong or illegal but I had no way of proving it. The fact that I was only ever a witness in the police investigation is evidence that I was never a suspect.”

But she knows that police are still searching for the truth behind the missing Motherwell and Wishaw cash. That could see her appear in court as a witness but it doesn’t worry her. She said: “I realise that because I was a signatory of the Red Rose Dinner Account, I might be called as a witness in a future court case. “But at least I will just be a witness in court and not under suspicion. The police have assured me of that. “It was comforting to be told by the Fraud Squad that I’m not – and never have been – under investigation in relation to allegations of missing money from the Red Rose Dinner Account.”

While the Strathclyde Police inquiry continues, Christina has finished her degree and is carving out a successful career in a Glasgow- based e-business agency. Wishawgate had brought back bad memories for Christina of being embroiled in the Lobbygate row over cash access to senior government ministers in the autumn of 1999. At that time, she was assistant to McConnell, then the finance minister. That October, both gave evidence to the Holyrood Standards Committee investigating Lobbygate. They were subsequently cleared by MSPs.

Christina remains loyal to the First Minister who, along with Bridget, she considers a good friend. When Bridget was recovering from a breakdown two and a half years ago, Christina was there to provide support and day-to-day help.

She said that she is now enjoying life a lot more after giving a witness statement to police on Wishawgate. Christina added: “I hope that now that I have assisted police and been told that I was never even a suspect over any missing money, I’ll be allowed to put this incredibly stressful period of my life behind me.”

Police are believed to be looking at the finances of a separate Development Fund and the Red Rose Dinner Account. Marshall was co-signatory to the Red Rose account along with Motherwell and Wishaw Constituency Labour Party treasurer Liz Wilson. As McConnell and his MP colleague Frank Roy were not signatories to any of the three accounts, no blame was levelled at them. An internal Labour inquiry cleared McConnell and Roy of any blame. (Daily Record)

 

 

 

steve please find enclosed pictures from red rose dinner at dalziel country club JIM DONNELLY 116 MORVEN AVE BLANTYRE G72 9JS TEL 07774.636318Christina Marshall (2)        article-0-01c7142700000578-772_224x423   David Marshall, Labour MP for Glasgow East (1)

 

 

 

 

 

09 Apr 2004: McConnell local party treasurer admits to £11,000 fraud

Jack McConnell’s former local Labour Party treasurer yesterday admitted embezzling £11,000 from the First Minister’s constituency office funds.

Elizabeth Wilson pleaded guilty to the crime, which came to light after Mr McConnell became embroiled in controversy as a result of the discovery of a “black hole” in his local Labour finances. A court heard Wilson, 62, the former treasurer of the Motherwell and Wishaw constituency party, took the money out of local party funds and from cash raised at a Labour supporting Red Rose Dinner.

For over a year speculation surrounding the missing money has dogged the First Minister. Suspicions were first aroused when local auditors investigated the accounts in November 2001. At the time, Wilson said she stole £7k and paid back the money within three months. But in November 2002, Lesley Quinn, the Labour general secretary, called in the police when another audit revealed more money had gone.

After a lengthy investigation, police officers went to Wilson’s home in Motherwell, Lanarkshire, and brought her in for questioning. When interviewed, she admitted stealing £11k in total and said nobody else was involved. The constituency accounts were managed by Wilson, a union official and Mr McConnell’s former personal assistant, Christina Marshall, 27. An internal inquiry by the Labour Party cleared Mr McConnell and Frank Roy, the MP for Motherwell and Wishaw who uses the same office, of any wrongdoing.

Eyebrows were raised, however, when it was disclosed that Mr McConnell used constituency money to pay for a five-star hotel room for Miss Marshall during a Labour conference. The First Minister’s local finances also attracted publicity when it was disclosed that one Red Rose Dinner, held in Lanarkshire to raise cash for the party, was attended by a drug dealer, Justin McAlroy, who was murdered in a gangland killing six days later.

Hamilton Sheriff Court heard that Wilson, a Labour member for 24 years, stole the money over five years by forging the signature of another trustee of the accounts at the North Lanarkshire Municipal Bank.

Wilson was in court with her husband, William, a North Lanarkshire councillor and chairman of the Motherwell and Wishaw constituency party. Fiscal depute Jenny Fitzpatrick said: “She was in charge of individual accounts one of which was called the Agenda for Scotland, which raised money by fund-raising dinners. Previously only small sums of money moved through the accounts but in time larger sums of money started to come through. “

The accused was a signatory of this account and she conducted her duties from home whereas the other signatories worked from the constituency office. She signed bank withdrawal slips by forging another signatory’s name.” Her lawyer, Henry Findlay, said: “In her words ‘there was an opportunity, a temptation’, to which she succumbed. She is deeply embarrassed about the humiliation and the scandal she has caused and the effect it has had on others. It should be noted all the money has been returned.” She was fined £2,400 . (The Telegraph)

 

 

 

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References:

(1)  29 Jun 2008: Labour’s Marshall in shock resignation after rumours over expenses

Scottish Labour MP David Marshall’s shock resignation came after rumours swept Westminster that he was about to be engulfed in a row over expenses payments to family members.

Senior Labour sources dismissed reports that the Glasgow East MP’s resignation was entirely the result of his health problems. They said privately that former bus conductor Mr Marshall, 67, was quitting his safe seat to avoid becoming the latest MP to be embroiled in allegations of misuse of expenses. During the past three years he has claimed nearly £220,000 to pay for staff, plus £7,000 for their travel expenses. He lists one member of staff on the Commons’ register of secretaries and research assistants – Christina Marshall.

But last night it was unclear whether that was his wife, known as Tina, or his daughter Christina. The mystery deepened when it was disclosed that he had not made any mention of relatives working for him on the new official register listing family members paid by MPs out of their Commons staffing allowance.

The list was introduced in April in the wake of the row over MPs employing close relatives at huge cost to the taxpayer. Yesterday, neighbours of Mr Marshall at his semi-detached home in Glasgow’s East End said they believed his wife Tina worked for him. Separately, former Labour Minister Brian Wilson told The Mail on Sunday that Mrs Marshall had ‘always been his constituency secretary’.

 

 

_526349_christinamarshall150Christina Marshall

 

 

 (2)    4 Dec 2011: Christina Marshall (she of the Lobbygate and Wishagate scandals) and her “top of the range” car fraudster husband take up the business once again

A convicted car fraudster is back in business selling second-hand motors to unsuspecting customers. James Doyle, 47, is the man behind the Glasgow Motor Company, based in Paisley. The father-of-two runs his new showroom with his wife Christina, 34, who is the daughter of former Labour MP David Marshall. They sell second-hand and luxury motors, including Maserati’s, Rolls-Royce’s and Audi’s. But people who flock to his forecourt will be unaware that Doyle served time in prison for duping past customers.

In February 2007 at Dumbarton Sheriff Court he admitted defrauding 57 people out of pounds 89,000 worth of deposits at his UK Vehicle Solutions Business in Clydebank and was jailed for eight months. The 57 victims had paid deposits in August 2005 for top-of-the-range luxury cars – but never received them. Trading standards investigators from West Dunbartonshire Council received 150 complaints about his firm the next month from furious customers. They passed the file to Strathclyde Police who launched a major fraud probe. But it took officers 18 months to bring Doyle to court because he disappeared after UK Vehicle Solutions shut down.

 

 

 

 

North Lanarkshire District Council – £20 Million Plus Corruption Report at Scandal Hit Labour Controlled Council – Add Cover-up of Child Pornography Allegations and other Incidences of Graft – In May 2017 the Voters Should Turf the Lot of Them Out of Office

 

 

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North Lanarkshire District Council Meltdown

North Lanarkshire is the fourth largest Scottish local authority, located in west central Scotland, between Edinburgh and Glasgow. It covers an area of 47,358 and serves a population of 328,000 people. Party insiders are on record as saying that: “if Labour lose North Lanarkshire then it would be fair to say in Scotland the party’s over.”

But one party domination of the politics of a region for many decades invariably ends in disaster and this is the case in North Lanarkshire where in fighting has destroyed the party. Old inter-region rivalries have resurfaced together with accompanying allegations of intimidation and a pervading and intense climate of fear and allegations of wrong doing has diverted councillors away from the business of service provision.

The foregoing is compounded by recently announced police investigations into criminal reported to involve a number of councillors and businessmen the scale of criminality of which, if it leads to prosecutions is so widespread that it could bring down the Labour party in Scotland. The report that follows provides evidence in support of my advice that the electorate should abandon the Labour Party and transfer their votes to the SNP.

 

 

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29 Feb 2016: Labour HQ asked to probe unexplained income and spending at Motherwell & Wishaw branch

Scottish Labour officials are being urged to investigate alleged financial irregularities in one of the party’s most marginal seats. A recent internal audit raised a series of concerns about the records of the Motherwell & Wishaw Constituency Labour Party (CLP) in North Lanarkshire.At a CLP meeting last week, activists heard around £4500 of unexplained income entered the branch’s account in 2015 and £2100 of unexplained spending left it. (The Herald Scotland)

 

 

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6 Mar 2016: Scottish Labour general secretary Brian Roy and father, ex-MP Frank Roy, in party cash row

Kezia Dugdale’s top official is at the centre of a cash row that has split one of Labour’s most marginal seats. Scottish Labour general secretary Brian Roy is facing questions over how his dad Frank Roy spent around £1400 owed to Scottish Labour HQ on his own re-election campaign. The money represented two years of affiliation fees owed to Labour HQ by Frank Roy’s constituency Labour party (CLP) in Motherwell & Wishaw.

First elected an MP in 1997, Frank Roy stood again in the seat again last May. At the time, Brian Roy had newly taken over as Scottish general secretary and treasurer. However a leaked internal audit shows the Motherwell & Wishaw CLP hadn’t paid its annual subscription to Labour HQ since 2013, despite having funds to do so. The report states: “No Labour affiliation fees have been paid since 2013 despite having a balance of £8737.70 in the CLP account in 2013. This leaves the CLP in debt of around £2000. The balance of the CLP account on 28/9/15 was £109.48.”

Although failing to pay the fees to HQ didn’t disqualify Frank Roy from standing, it did leave more in the CLP account to spend on the election. The fall-out from the audit is now dividing the CLP and the Labour administration on North Lanarkshire Council, with many members furious at Frank Roy’s election agent Paul Kelly, who has been accused of failing to explain the state of the CLP’s finances.

Kelly, last week elected the council’s deputy leader, was CLP chair during the election. The audit report says that in early 2014, the CLP’s general purpose bank account of around £3200 was merged with a previously separate election account of £2800. “There are no minutes recording that this change of policy was agreed by the CLP,” it says.

The resulting single account was then cleaned out in the election – again without any minutes of the CLP agreeing to it – as Roy defended his 16,800-vote majority. The report states: “There are no minutes of the CLP agreeing to the level of expenditure to be used on the General Election.” Roy’s campaign cost £13,701, compared to £6,852 for the SNP’s Marion Fellows, who nevertheless won by 11,900 votes.

Roy got £4703 worth of staff support from Scottish Labour HQ, but the bulk of his campaign money, around £8600, came from draining the CLP account. The total outlay was twice that of the 2010 election, when Roy’s campaign cost £6766. The political co-ordinator of Better Together, Roy is now campaign director of the Scottish arm of Britain Stronger in Europe.

The failure to pay affiliation fees emerged last week after an audit into Motherwell & Wishaw CLP, which found “total unknown deposits” of £4474 were paid into its bank account last year without explanation, and “total unknown expenditure” of £2108 left it.

The auditor noted: “These matters were raised by CLP members on several occasions from July 2015 and as far as I am aware the issues have not been properly addressed.” A senior Labour source said the draining of the CLP account in election, including affiliation fees, had left the local party struggling going into the Holyrood election,

When Labour MSP John Pentland is defending a 587-vote majority in Motherwell & Wishaw. The insider said: “There are very unhappy people here. The council Labour group is very fractious. We can’t even pay our bills far less run an election campaign.”  (The Herald Scotland)

 

 

 

untitled-design-1-jpg-galleryJim McCabe

 

 

 

 
29 Mar 2016: Labour slammed for backing candidate

The former depute leader of North Lanarkshire Council has slammed the Labour Party for allowing a Motherwell councillor to take the job. Jim Smith believes his former colleague Paul Kelly shouldn’t have been in the running to succeed him because of an inquiry into alleged financial irregularities. Councillor Smith says Labour’s failure to take action against the Motherwell West councillor was the reason he quit the party earlier this month. He dismissed new council leader Jim Logue’s claim that Councillor Smith and three colleagues resigned for “selfish, personal reasons” after missing out on top jobs during a reshuffle. Councillor Kelly, who was elected by Labour colleagues as Councillor Logue’s depute, is a former chairman of Motherwell and Wishaw Constituency Labour Party.

An internal audit of accounts during his time in charge raised concerns about unexplained income and spending. Much of this related to last year’s general election campaign when Councillor Kelly was the agent for MP Frank Roy. The matter was passed to Scottish Labour officials. Councillor Smith said the party had blundered by not preventing Councillor Kelly from standing for a senior council post while the investigation was taking place. He pointed out that the SNP suspended Coatbridge councillor Julie McAnulty pending an investigation into alleged racist remarks she made.

In his letter, Councillor Smith wrote: “The Labour Party has been in free-fall in Scotland for several years now and and it would seem to be gifting the opposition ammunition ahead of next year’s council elections.” Councillor Smith denied quitting because he didn’t get a key post under Councillor Logue. He said the “sole reason” for his decision was the party’s “lack of integrity” in sanctioning Councillor Kelly as a candidate for depute leader.

A Labour source said there was “disbelief” that Councillor Kelly had not stood aside. Councillor Kelly refused to be drawn on the comments, saying only: “I was pleased the Labour Party were assisting the CLP in this matter and I look forward to the report back to the CLP.” Three other Labour councillors quit the party following the new leader’s reshuffle. Helen McKenna, Sam Love and Peter Nolan were all conveners under former leader Jim McCabe, but lost their posts. ( Motherwell Times)

 

 

paul-kelly-2-jpg-galleryPaul Kelly

 

 

 

 

16 Apr 2016: Labour kingpin fears scandal over accounts

One of the giants of Scottish Labour has warned that claims of “electoral irregularities” in last year’s General Election could bring his party in to disrepute. Lanarkshire kingpin Jim McCabe is one of more than a dozen party stalwarts to warn the Labour leadership of the finances of a local constituency group in what some insiders describe as a “smear”.

The former North Lanarkshire Council leader – who stood down in February after 18 years in post – is one of several councillors to sign a letter to his party’s Scottish HQ flagging up concerns over discrepancies in the accounts of the Motherwell and Wishaw Constituency Labour Party (CLP).

The letter, written by Councillor Frank McKay last month, refers to reports that there were nearly £4,500 of donations to the CLP during the General Election year that it could not account for. That has sparked fears in the party that Labour could have breached spending limits as it fought, unsuccessfully, to save the seat of its MP, Frank Roy. However, an investigation ordered by the party’s Scottish general secretary, (who also happens to be Mr Roy’s son Brian) found no problem with election expenses.

Party sources, nevertheless, stress the the very fact a figure as prominent as Mr McCabe signed the letter reveals the “sheer depth of animosity” inside North Lanarkshire Labour. The main targets of the letter are Mr McCabe’s successor, Jim Logue, and his deputy leader, Paul Kelly, a previous chairman of the Motherwell and Wishaw CLP.

It accuses the new administration of “hypocrisy, aggression and cynical self-interest”. The letter, dated March 15, adds: “We are of the opinion that there are very serious question marks around the depute leader. We believe that the severity of these threatens to bring the party in Scotland in to disrepute. “As you are aware the Motherwell and Wishaw CLP has raised questions about the conduct of the accounts while he was election agent. “While we do not allege misappropriation, we do allege severe incompetence. “We are concerned that the deputy leader was allowed to stand… at a time when opposition colleagues are speculating on the possibility of electoral irregularities.”

This letter came after Mr Logue carried out a radical reshuffle of the council’s leadership, prompting four councillors to quit the party. Sources close to the administration described the allegations about the CLP finances as a “smear” by some of those who had lost out in fractional infighting. Asked about the allegations, Paul Kelly said “I was happy that the Labour Party offered to assist the CLP in this matter and I look forward to the report back to the CLP. “Understandably, a number of colleagues were unhappy at the radical but necessary changes within the council, however our number one priority must be to our local communities.”

Brian Roy, in a response to Mr McKay’s letter, also seen by The Herald, offers to mediate between the two sides in the North Lanarkshire party. Mr Roy said he had already verbally assured the new chairwoman of the CLP that he was “confident that once all expenditure and income was reconciled… that the accounts would be accepted”. The local party, however, had not been able to pay affiliation fees to the national party, Mr Roy confirmed. The CLP, he said, had therefore agreed to forego payments it would have expected to receive from HQ to make up the shortfall.(The Herald Scotland)

 

 

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27 Apr 2016: North Lanarkshire Council – Labour split over ‘corruption’ claim

Deep divisions within Labour have emerged again after an investigation began into alleged corruption at North Lanarkshire Council. Claims that councillors and officials benefited when authority contracts were being awarded to companies have been made in an anonymous letter. Council leader Jim Logue said the “detailed allegations, if true, are extremely serious”. He added: “An investigation, led by the council’s internal audit team, is already underway. Should the auditors find anything which substantiates these allegations that evidence will immediately be handed over to police. “It is essential the people of North Lanarkshire have full confidence in the way the council conducts its business and I am determined that we are transparent at all times.”

However, the decision by Councillor Logue to go public with the allegations was slammed by a Labour colleague who branded it “unprofessional”. The councillor, who claimed many Labour members are unhappy at the way the situation has been handled, said: “I’m disgusted. It’s crazy to give an anonymous letter such credence. People’s credibility is being sullied by an unnamed individual without any investigation having been done.”

The councillor said the position was in stark contrast to what happened two years ago when a member of staff made detailed allegations of misconduct within NL Leisure, the body which runs sports facilities for the council. The council dismissed those as “unsubstantiated and defamatory” and said it wasn’t policy to comment on anonymous claims. A Motherwell Labour councillor said any probe into the corruption claims should be carried out by an external agency and not “in-house”.

Councillor Logue has had a difficult start to his term as council leader after succeeding Jim McCabe. Last month four senior Labour councillors quit after his reshuffle of committee chairmen. A senior council source supportive of the leader said: “There was a great deal of animosity towards Jim Logue and Paul Kelly becoming the new leadership team by certain individuals. This was because people knew they would be very pro active in dealing with any serious allegations regarding the council and no stone would be left unturned. “Staff are no longer afraid to come forward with concerns.” (Motherwell Times)

 

 

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6 Oct 2016: North Lanarkshire Labour party District Council accused of cover-up over child porn charge councillor

Labour has been accused of hushing up a child pornography charge against one of its councillors ahead of a high-profile by-election. Airdrie councillor David Fagan was arrested over alleged child images on September 7, while his party was fighting a close-run by-election in neighbouring Coatbridge. North Lanarkshire Council last night said its chief executive learned of the arrest and “broad nature” of the alleged offences on September 8 and then informed council leader Jim Logue. Mr Logue then informed deputy council leader Paul Kelly, the council said.

Scottish Labour General Secretary Brian Roy was also told about Cllr Fagan’s arrest and the seizure of computer equipment – but not specific charges – on September 8, and wrote to Police Scotland for more information. However Labour did not suspend Cllr Fagan for another three weeks, until September 29, after the party had won the by-election on September 22.

The SNP last night said the sequence of events was “staggering”. The contest in Coatbridge North and Glenboig was a trailblazer for Labour, as its strategy was to defeat the SNP using local health cuts – a trial run for the 2017 council elections. Labour candidate Alex McVey gained the seat from the Nationalists by less than 200 votes. A North Lanarkshire Labour source said most councillors were kept in the dark until this week. “There was nothing said at all about David Fagan to the Labour Group. If that had come out before the by-election, the SNP would have won it hundreds of votes.”

The win was seized on by Labour as evidence of a revival against the SNP. UK leader Jeremy Corbyn, who posed for campaign pictures with Mr McVey in Lanarkshire a week after Cllr Fagan’s arrest, tweeted his congratulations following the victory. Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale cited it in her UK Labour conference speech. “When people say that the Scottish Labour Party can’t win elections, I say look to our victories in Coatbridge, in Fife and in Ayrshire this summer,” she told delegates in Liverpool. .” (Greenock Telegraph)

 

 

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19 Oct 2016: The leaders of North Lanarkshire Council have been told to quit over the alleged cover-up of a child pornography charge against a Labour councillor on the eve of a by-election

Labour boss Jim Logue and his deputy Paul Kelly are the subject of a no confidence motion promoted by one of their former party colleagues, Councillor Sam Love. It was recently revealed how David Fagan, a councillor in Airdrie, was arrested over alleged child images on September 7, but not suspended by Labour until September 29. At the time of the arrest, Labour was fighting a bitter by-election in neighbouring Coatbridge.

The council chief executive learned of the arrest and “broad nature” of the alleged offences on September 8, then told Mr Logue, who in turn told Mr Kelly. However most Labour councillors were not informed for another three weeks, when Mr Fagan was suspended by Labour HQ, fuelling speculation that the matter was kept quiet until after Labour had won the by-election in Coatbridge North on September 22.

The ward fight was a high-profile one for Labour, with Jeremy Corbyn appearing with the candidate and Scottish leader Kezia Dugdale boasting about the win in her UK conference speech as evidence of Labour’s ability to defeat the SNP. Labour beat the SNP by fewer than 200 votes – a margin that would have been wiped out by bad publicity over Mr Fagan if his arrest been widely known, opposition parties claim.

Cllr Love, a former housing convener who resigned from the Labour group in March, is now asking other councillors to sign a no confidence motion in Mr Logue and Mr Kelly. It calls for their “immediate resignation… for a wilful breach of trust and for failing to act in the best interests” of the council, and claims they “withheld information” given to them by the chief executive “regarding charges brought against a North Lanarkshire councillor”. It goes on: “It is entirely wrong that a serious disciplinary decision appears to have been delayed in an attempt to gain political advantage. As elected representatives we have a duty to be open and transparent. We therefore request that an emergency council meeting is called immediately and [Cllrs Logue and Kelly] should resign from their council positions forthwith.”

The council Labour group is due to discuss the situation next Monday. A Labour source said: “Monday is going to be a big day for the group. It’s going to be volatile. None of us came into public service for this kind of nonsense.” In a leaked statement, Cllr Kelly told other Labour councillors that Cllr Love’s motion was “pathetic” and “disgraceful”, and urged them not to respond. He said the statute under which Cllr Fagan was charged was not known until September 29, adding: “Even now, we are still not aware of the precise allegations against him. When we were informed that he had been charged – but not what he had been charged with – on September 8, both myself and the Council Leader sought assurances from the Chief Executive that he had taken all necessary measures. We were assured that this was the case. “David Fagan is subject to live legal proceedings.

It is pathetic that some would seek political opportunity when those proceedings are ongoing. It is disgraceful that those same people would suggest that either the council leader or myself would seek political advantage in the actions we have taken.” A Crown Office spokesman said: “The Procurator Fiscal has received a report concerning a 52 year old male in connection with alleged incidents said to have occurred between 25 and 30 June 2016. The report remains under consideration.” The council declined to comment. (The Herald Scotland)

 

 

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24 Oct 2016: Row brews as Labour ends careers of senior councillors

Labour has pulled the plug on the political careers of some of its longest standing front-line figures as it bids to retain power in the former stronghold of North Lanarkshire. Jim Brooks has not been selected as a candidate for next year’s local government elections. He has served as a councillor since 1974, led Monklands Council at the time of its 1990s cronyism scandal and been a kingpin in North Lanarkshire since it was formed.

Brooks was one of eight sitting members who were due to be informed at the weekend that they had been deselected. In a highly symbolic move, Jim McCabe, who led the council for almost two decades until standing down in February, has failed the party’s selection process, even though he had already decided to quit politics. His former chief whip, Tommy Curley, another who is standing down, has also failed. The others deselected include Cumbernauld’s Bob Chadha, John Higgins who represents Coatbridge, Wishaw’s Frank McKay, Peter Sullivan of Airdrie and John McLaren of Strathkelvin.

A senior source said the decisions were taken by a local forum of officials and factored in local ward work, adding most of those axed were “malcontents” and “lieutenants” of Mr McCabe during his time as leader. But Brooks said the decision had the “grubby hands” of council leader Jim Logue “all over the decision”, and that he had not yet been informed it. It will almost certainly intensify the deep political and factional divisions within North Lanarkshire.

Earlier this year, six other Labour councillors in North Lanarkshire, including ex-deputy leader Jim Smith, left the party after being demoted by Logue when he took the reins in March. The move comes amid more turbulence at the authority. Both Logue and his deputy Paul Kelly have faced calls to quit in recent days over the alleged cover-up of a child pornography charge against fellow Labour councillor David Fagan on the eve of a by-election.

The no confidence motion is being promoted by former colleagues Sam Love, one of those who quit in March. Kelly has described the move as “pathetic” and “disgraceful”. Earlier this month three officials were suspended as part of a corruption probe instigated after Logue received a whistle-blowing letter detailing a string of allegations. The letter named also McCabe, the 75-year-old telling The Herald: “Under no circumstances am I corrupt and I have never been corrupt. No way.”

A senior source said: “You’re talking people who’ve treaded water for too long and when they do have an input its to agitate against the leadership. We won an important by-election last month, the SNP are all over the place in Lanarkshire and we have a chance of winning. That’s only if we’re all pulling in the same direction.”

Another source said: “This will make things fraught internally, but it was always going to be anyway. It probably does Logue, Kelly and Labour in the area more good than harm if they’ve any chance of holding on to flush this out now.” But Brooks said: “This is like the old German show trials. It has Logue’s grubby hands all over it. He’s Airdrie and there’s always that enmity with Coatbridge. “He’s already made a statement that ‘yesterday’s men are finished’. “But I need to find out what’s going on.”

A spokesman for Labour’s local campaign forum in North Lanarkshire said: “Whilst some will, of course, be disappointed not to have made it through the initial selection panel of local party members, being a councillor is a privilege and not a right. “All unsuccessful candidates will be given the chance to appeal the decision.” (The Herald)

 

 

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27 Nov 2016: Revealed: £20 Million Corruption Report at Scandal Hit Labour Controlled Lanarkshire District Council

North Lanarkshire’s auditors reveal the sheer scale of multi-million-pound unsanctioned overspend at the authority, through massively inflated public contracts. One contractor was paid more than £9m on a contract valued at £1.5m. These contracts were awarded under the previous leadership of Jim McCabe and his deputy Jim Smith, who were ousted earlier this year. The authority is now led by Airdrie councillor Jim Logue. (The Herald)

 

 

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4 December 2016: Rebel Labour MP’s fail to bring down North Lanarkshire Labour Council in “no confidence” motion

Calls have been made for SNP Group leader David Stocks to resign after he opposed a motion to bring down the Labour administration in North Lanarkshire.

Independent councillors including former Labour members Sam Love, Gary O’Rorke and Frank McKay were set to back a motion of no confidence against council leader Jim Logue and his deputy Paul Kelly. But in a sensational twist at the SNP’s Group meeting last Monday night, SNP councillors led by David Stock voted 12 to six against the motion with one abstention. It is understood that Wishaw SNP members Rosa Zambonini and Jim Hume voted for the motion.

Former SNP councillor John Taggart, who became an independent last year, has called for Councillor Stocks’ to quit. He added: “David Stocks should resign as the leader. “The SNP had the opportunity to bring down the regime in North Lanarkshire by supporting a motion of no confidence and they didn’t do it. “The vote would have been carried by a maximum of four and minimum of two. I am afraid this time they bottled it. The reason came out with is they couldn’t trust the independents. “I don’t know why. It is an excuse. “The SNP have been saying for years they want to take over the administration in North Lanarkshire. They had an opportunity and bottled it.”

Councillor Sam Love also called on Stocks to stand down as leader. He said: “David Stocks’ own members in the SNP are telling me he is not up to the job and that he is a lackey for Labour leader Jim Logue. “His own people say that he is not fit to be leader of the opposition. “He should resign. “The SNP had the numbers with a four or five majority to take over the running of the council. “They had a chance to reverse decisions like the £5 per week community alarms charge and the huge hikes in the Garden Assistance Scheme which has gone up from £40 per year to £140.”
SNP leader David Stocks insists they do not want the support of ‘malcontented’ former Labour councillors.

Now the SNP are targeting a new administration in May next year. Councillor Stocks said: “The SNP Group on North Lanarkshire Council has no confidence in the current, ramshackle, Labour administration. “Every week they are in crisis, whether it be the sudden imposition of up to £15 on community alarms and day services for vulnerable pensioners, the 60 per cent cut in support for Citizens’ Advice Bureaus, the heartless closure of the One Stop Shop for autism or the cuts in four libraries and seven community halls. “However, the SNP decided not to push an actual ‘no confidence’ vote because we would have been relying on support from rebel Labour councillors who have themselves let North Lanarkshire down in the past.

“The SNP Group hope to form a stable administration serving the people of North Lanarkshire after May 2017 and running an efficient council. And 22 SNP councillors running a 70 member council would be numerically challenging at this time. “We would have to rely on 14 malcontented Labour councillors – the same people who have let down the people of North Lanarkshire over these past five years. “Labour are in a complete mess – six resignations, others threatening to stand as independents next May and accusations of corruption and police investigations. “They are no longer fit to run this council. There’s a complete breakdown in trust. “We want a clean break for the residents of North Lanarkshire,with a clear SNP administration coming in after May next year. The fresh-start prospects are good. “Back in 2012, the SNP took 40 per cent of the North Lanarkshire local election first preference vote. The dramatic rise of the SNP nationally over the last two years and Labour’s decline all points to big SNP gains next May.” (Daily Record)

 

 

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Independence – The Sweet Smell of Success Gladdens the Heart

 

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Keir Hardie founded the Labour Party and championed the cause of the working class who had been badly governed for many years. But political power in Scotland was vested with the Tory and Liberal Parties for nearly 240 years until the advent of change in the political scene, brought about by an awakening of the working class after WW2.

In the period 1945-1979 Party growth in Scotland was spectacular as factory workers, coal miners, shipyard and steel workers flocked to its banner. In the same period the Party sent many able politicians to Westminster ensuring Scotland’s voice was heard in Parliament.

Scotland became a one Party state as Labour dominated the political scene. In the West of Scotland Labour votes were weighed not counted. In heavily industrialised Lanarkshire it was said that the Party could put up a donkey for election to office and it would win.

But the first past the post voting system of the UK had ensured Scotland would be governed by the Tory Party ( apart from brief periods between 1960-79 when Labour governments were elected but often with small majority’s preventing effective policy delivery.)

The eighties brought twenty years of extreme right-wing government, introduced by Margaret Thatcher ending in 1997 with John Major.

Thatcher (misusing the oil revenue) set about asset stripping Scotland of its industrial base, (transferring it to England and Wales) since Scots refused to embrace her “dog eat dog” society.

Unemployment soared in the West of Scotland and many hundreds of thousands of workers aged over 30 would never work again. A lifetime on the dole, families at the mercy of the welfare state initially a safety net which she soon even denied the children.

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Twenty years in the political wilderness was not encouraging for aspiring Labour politicians. The Party in Scotland failed to attract students of politics of the grade it had previously and yet the Labour heartlands of Scotland persisted in voting less able individuals into office believing the alternative to be unpalatable. The capable “old guard” was no more being replaced with incompetent corrupt regimes akin to those in place in Eastern Europe.

The Thatcher years rekindled the fires of desire to be free of a political system that had eclipsed Scotland to it’s detriment. The Scottish National Party (SNP) started to make an impact at local and national level, But not in the West of Scotland which remained in the grip of the “Red Flag.”

In 1997 Tony Blair and Gordon Brown introduced “New Labour” to Britain and inspired the electorate to get rid of a Tory government mired in scandal and corruption. The motto of the party was “things will only get better” and people believed it.

But major policy divisions soon emerged shattering the media hyped illusion of unity and harmony within labour yet the Tory Party was still in disarray and unelectable and the electorate returned New Labour to office in 2001 and 2005.

The world financial crash in 2007-8 sealed the fate of the New Labour government which had proved to be a “basket case” entity controlled by a warmongering elite who took Britain to the gates of hell in just about every aspect of an abuse of the power gifted to them by a gullible electorate.

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In Scotland the SNP finally recaptured its purpose under the inspired leadership of Alex Salmond who had heeded the call of its members and returned to Scottish politics replacing the uninspiring John Swinney.

The response was electrifying and Scottish Parliamentary elections delivered an increasing number of MSP’s. Disappointingly the changes in the fortunes of the Party were largely in the the rural areas and in the East of Scotland. The Labour Party maintained it’s dominance over the West of Scotland.

The breakthrough came in 2007 when the SNP was returned by the Scottish electorate as the largest Party but without a majority and no offers of a coalition. Overcoming many obstacles placed in his way by truculent Unionist politicians Alex Salmond formed a minority government which performed admirably and completed a full term in office.

 

In 2010 many self penned Labour Party men of the people left their offices of state in a state of financial chaos contrasting their own futures which were guaranteed as peers of the realm holding positions of power and influence in big businesses (often linked to their previous employment as ministers). Multi-millionaires one and all and no looking back at the people of Scotland that they had promised to represent faithfully but cynically betrayed.

But lessons had not yet been learned by Scots and in the 2010 Westminster General Election the electorate in the West of Scotland sent a bunch of incompetent Labour MP’s back to Westminster.

The red coloured political mapping in areas such as Motherwell, Hamilton, East Kilbride, Airdrie, Coatbridge, Bellshill and Glasgow stood with the labour Party.

Scottish Independence Referendum Odds | 6/1 For 2021 Vote

 

The Scottish electorate was impressed by the competence of the government of the SNP and in 2011 the Party was returned to government with an unprecedented overall majority.

Once more it provided good governance despite the imposition by the UK government of  brutal financial austerity cutbacks which destroyed the hopes and aspirations of many thousands of Scots.

Poll: Support for independence hits historic high of 58% - STV News

 

The 2014 Independence referendum was lost by a small margin due to the Unionist Party’s joining together with other interested groups to deny Scotland its independence.

But Scottish desire for independence had been reawakened by their near success and the revelations of Unionist skulduggery in the 2014 referendum and the electorate was no longer accepting of mistreatment by Westminster politicians.

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The 2015 General Election just 6 months later provided Scots with the opportunity to send a message to politicians in England giving warning that any betrayal of the commitments made by Unionist politicians in the 2014 referendum “Vow” would be unacceptable and in a shot across the bows they sent 56 SNP MP’s to Westminster.

Unionist politicians at Westminster gave the impression that they recognised the new reality and reluctantly granted Scotland increases in the very limited devolution powers it already had in the belief that the measures would bring about the demise of the newly discovered national identity of a nation that had been absorbed by England in 1707 and was only recognised as a country by other nations of the World as a quaint wee place occupied by haggis eating, bagpipe playing, whisky drinking layabouts who existed only with the guarantee of financial handouts by the benign and ever generous English nation. 

Scottish Independence equals record 58% high in new poll – Business for  Scotland

 

The Scottish General election in 2016 provided opportunity for the people of Scotland to stand up for their rights and get rid of the corrupt, incompetent, crime ridden Labour controlled councils in the West of Scotland and Aberdeen. 

The lack lustre performance of the Party in the course of the campaign provided the Tory Party under the hi-profile leadership of Ruth Davidson with the opportunity to  take seats from the labour Party which was in meltdown. Which she duly did. Seats that should have been won by the SNP were lost to the Tory’s.

 Nicola Sturgeon indecisive  leadership very nearly brought an end to the SNP government but with the help of the Green Party it was returned to government but only after making significant concessions. Hardly inspiring!! and things would get worse.

The feud between Sturgeon and Salmond could derail Scottish independence |  Scottish politics | The Guardian

 

The 2017 General election was a disappointment for the Party.

The 56 MP’s elected only 18 months before had achieved absolutely nothing at Westminster.

The Unionist dominated House of Commons mocked, ridiculed and contemptuously dismissed the opinions, views and contributions of SNP representatives as irrelevant nonsense at every televised sitting of the House.

The embarrassing spectacle and daily humiliation of Scottish MP’ in the Commons was witnessed by viewers worldwide and  many Scots at home and the absence of any decisive leadership action by Nicola Sturgeon was reflected in the loss of 21 MP’s.

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In the UK 2019 General election campaign the SNP told Scots it was firmly committed to and would demand the right to another independence referendum if  the electorate indicated a desire for it by returning a majority of Scottish MP’s to Westminster.

The SNP subsequently gained a 45% share of the vote winning 48 and claiming second place in the 11 other seats. Nicola Sturgeon told Boris Johnson he had no right to stand in the way of another Scottish independence referendum adding that the overwhelming victory  reinforced and strengthened the mandate for  another independence referendum.

It is now 2021 and two years on from the General election and there is no indication a second referendum will be held

Boris Johnson hits out at Nicola Sturgeon and SNP over Scottish independence  | HeraldScotland

 
 

 

 

Good People Of Edinburgh Conned by Ruth Davidson and Her Tory Ratpack – The Poor Sods Will Learn the Hard Way – Never Trust a Tory

 

 

 

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Ruth Davidson Fails the Scottish Electorate who sent her to Holyrood

Gaining seats at the last Scottish election was paramount in the thinking of Ruth Davidson and Tory activists in Scotland. This entailed a public denial of Westminster Tory policies and (as did Judas) the Party Branch in Scotland embraced Davidson’s policy with gusto. An examination of Tory Party electioneering literature in Scotland confirmed party insiders statements that: ” Davidson distanced the Scottish party from the UK Tories in several key policy areas including campaigning in the recent Holyrood election under the banner “Ruth Davidson for a strong opposition” rather than the Conservative name. The gullible Edinburgh public and others in Scotland believed the hype, to their and Scotland’s cost.

In the EU referendum 74.44% of Edinburgh Central voters supported Davidson’s oft stated policy that leaving the EU would be a catastrophic mistake, very possibly leading to a sea change in the attitudes of Scots resulting in Scotland voting to leave the Union. Her decision (after the referendum) to strongly support the Westminster government and it’s Brexit policy revealed Davidson’s own personal agenda did not and never has included supporting the wishes of the people of Scotland that elected her and her Tory cronies to office.

 

 

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In support of the remain campaign Mundell said:

“those of us who are elected to positions of responsibility and who support these political institutions should be put on our mettle to defend them. Whether it is the United Kingdom or the European Union or whatever – if we believe sincerely that they are in the best interests of our country and our people, we should make the case for them with clarity and honesty.

The benefits which Scotland and the rest of the UK gains from EU membership are clear. Stepping away from the EU would be backwards step. We would be forfeiting our genuine freedom for a false freedom, which would impose real risks and dangers. In the end, it makes sense to be a part of the things which influence you. So let’s make the case for the real freedom which Scotland in the UK, and the UK in the EU gives to us all.

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/david-mundell-scotland-the-uk-and-a-reformed-european-union-speech

 

 

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND - MARCH 31:  Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, joins activists campaigning on March 31, 2015 in Edinburgh, Scotland. Scottish Conservatives reveal new figures in relation to the Scottish Governments widely criticised changes to stamp duty, during the second day of general election campaigning.  (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

 

In support of the remain campaign Ruth Davidson said:

Davidson savaged Boris Johnson when she argued that: “a Leave Vote would be a conscious decision to make Britain poorer which would hurt the poorest the most Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage would be OK; The wealthy are always able to fall back on their pension pots and savings. It would be ordinary workers who would suffer: the “Easyjet” air hostess who could lose her job because, after Brexit, the airline would be priced out from flying within Europe; the dad on the factory floor at one of our many car-makers whose job disappears because Europe has slapped a new tariff on British-made motors; the single mum on a zero-hours contract whose job is extinguished to cut costs.”

https://www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/news/politics/scottish-politics/210365/scottish-tories-split-uk-party-boris-johnson-becomes-leader/

 

 

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Davidson: A few days after the referendum – In support of EU nationals being allowed right of residence:

“That’s an assurance that I want from the Government, and I want it pretty quick. It’s not enough to say to people who have come here and made a home here, and have made their life here, that we want your labour, that’s all we want. We have got to be able also to say we want your brains, we want your culture, we want your passion, we want you in our country, making our country better, and giving these people security. This result is testing this country’s sense of unity. In Scotland, where people voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU, the result is testing the binds of the Union as well.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-second-eu-vote-theresa-may-scottish-referendum-ruth-davidson-t-a7133271.html

 

 

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Ruth Davidson and the Tory Party Surge in Scotland a load of Tosh – Yet Another Media Manipulative Headline Created by the BBC Assisting Their Westminster Paymasters

 

 

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11 Sep 2011: Only 6% of Scots think Scottish Tories put Scotland first

Polling of 1,500 Scottish voters for the Tory Party in Scotland before the Holyrood elections asked whether certain parties put mainly English, Scottish or British issues first. The Scottish Conservatives were seen as the most English and the least Scottish… and by some distance.

Murdo Fraser (MSP) said the finding strengthened his argument that the Scottish party needed a new identity: “No problem was ever solved by brushing it under the carpet. We have watched our vote decline at every election since the inception of the Scottish Parliament, and this polling tells us exactly why.

We have been fooling ourselves for almost 15 years and we must not allow it to go on. There is a belief amongst some that if we bide our time for another 10 years, things will get better. But we said that 10 years ago. It hasn’t got better, and it never will without radical change.

The anti-change approach will ultimately drag us down to a single-figure vote share, a single-figure number of seats in the Scottish Parliament, no seats at Westminster and effectively the end of the centre-right in Scotland. (conservativehome)

 

 

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10 August 2012: Ruth Davidson Castigates lazy Scots for being content to live off handouts from Westminster

Ruth Davidson, the leader of the Scottish Conservative Party claimed that nearly 90 percent of Scots households are currently “living off state’s patronage,” reports. At a Tory conference on Monday, Davidson cited that only about 283,080 households in Scotland – 12 percent of the total number – pay more in taxes than what they receive in public services from the state. In addition, due to the dominance of the public sector in Scottish life, she said that state spending now represents at least one-half of Scotland’s wealth.

She thundered: “It is staggering that public sector expenditure makes up a full 50 percent of Scotland’s GDP and only 12 percent of households are net contributors, where the taxes they pay outweigh the benefits they receive through public spending. The rotten system of patronage, which denies so many people real choices in their lives, has created a corrosive sense of entitlement which suits its political gang masters.”

Referring to the exalted 12 percent who are “responsible for generating Scotland’s wealth,” she rhetorically asked: “I wonder how many of them work on public sector contracts.”

Citing data from the Office for National Statistics, Davidson said that the average Scottish household uses £14,151 more in public services every year than it pays out in taxes. Even middle-income Scots, she noted, consume £20,000 more in state spending than they pay out. Only Scotland’s wealthy, that is, those who account for the top 10 percent of earners, pay £17,205 more in tax than they receive in public services.

She also alleged that over-dependence on the public trough has created a generation of Scots who are hopelessly loyal to the Labour and Scottish National Party, at the expense of the Tories. “If the gang master state is the only provider people can see for their housing, education and employment, it’s no surprise those who seek to break the stranglehold find barriers in their way,” she declared.

It contradiction, the Telegraph reported that on the whole Scotland paid 9.6 percent of the United Kingdom’s total tax bill, while accounting for only 9.3 percent of British public spending. (IBTimes)

 

 

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20 Jan 2010: Ruth Davidson, ex BBC journalist was shortlisted for the Ultra-Safe Bromsgrove Worcestershire, England seat. But was not selected as the candidate.

17 Apr 2016: Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson quit her well-paid job as a popular drive-time radio presenter with the BBC in 2009 in order to stand for Holyrood. (The Guardian)

 
Comment: The written word condemns the Tory party spin, Ruth Davidson’s political career was focused on gaining a seat at Westminster for an English constituency. Her failure to gain the trust of English Tory party activists altered her thinking and prompted a return to Scotland to stand for election to Holyrood an institution she had previously slagged off for being all spend and no accountability. She eventually managed to gain a place as a list MSP.

 

 

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12 May 2016: The Tory Party Surge- Yet another BBC fantasy designed to manipulate the outcome of the election

Using the 2014 referendum as a bench mark it is evident that Scot’s polarised their vote’s around one of two banners. The Green Party and the SNP voted “yes” and the Unionist party’s voted “no”.

Utilising the same benchmark, assessing the performance of each of the parties in the 2016 Scottish Parliamentary election is relatively straight forward.

The “New Labour ” element of the miscalled Scottish Labour Party returned to the Tory Party they had deserted (in preference for Tony Blair) nearly 20 years before.This had the effect of increasing the Tory Party vote by nearly 19%. No great effort was demanded of Davidson since voters had decided upon their choice of party some two year’s before.

Tory claims of a massive surge in their support enhanced by the popularity of Davidson is abject nonsense and they know it. The electorate had simply returned the Tory Party base vote to the pre-Thatcher days – between 24-25%.

The collapse of the Labour Party seems to be terminal, with their support amongst the electorate being reduced to a rump 18-20%. Two decades before, the base vote would have been much enhanced by voters loyal to the Party.

A resurgent SNP benefited from good governance and in retaining the confidence of the electorate laid claim to a substantial 49% of the overall Scottish vote and a historical third term in office.

The decline of the other Unionist Party, the Lib/Dem, by nearly 4% confirms well established pattern of rejection by Scottish voters, with only Orkney, Shetland and the largely rural North Fife sticking with it.

The Green Party’s common sense approach to opposition politicking ensured it’s love affair with the electorate also continued with a near 5% increase in their vote.

Applying the outcome of the election to the 2014 referendum provides the following result:

SNP + Green (Yes)  53.5%

Tory, Labour & Lib/Dem  46.5%

Ruth Davidson, in her after election victory speech made the silly claim “The increase in the Tory Party’s share of the vote sends a clear message to the SNP and their supporters that there is no appetite for another referendum.”

But her speech and that of other Unionist Party leaders betrayed their fear of another referendum since the SNP manifesto had not included any reference to another referendum.

The outcome of the election (without any campaigning by the SNP) also gave every indication that another referendum would result in a “yes” vote.

The first use of the term “Tory surge in Scotland” was introduced into the election coverage by the BBC in it’s balanced election coverage a couple of weeks before the election.

And was speedily picked up and given maximum coverage by the compliant Scottish Press. Another example of the blatant misuse of the power of media manipulation by the Westminster government and the BBC.

It was incredulous to many voters that the party of rampant “austerity”, and ever increasing levels of family and child poverty, had gained votes in Scotland despite the wanton freezing of the elderly fuel allowance (against a 20% depreciation in the allowance purchasing performance), and the reviled bedroom tax, ruthless attacks on the disabled and health and welfare benefits so much admired by many countries worldwide.

There is still hope that members of the Labour party in Scotland will “grasp the nettle” and get onside with their fellow Scot’s taking up the mantle of freedom, rejecting the “federalist” policies of Kezia Dugdale which will only result in total rejection of the Labour Party by Scot’s.

In any event the future is now much clearer, the polarisation of Scottish politics is complete. The die has been cast. The Unionist Party’s have been exposed as a bunch of bully’s with no interest in the Scot’s except as a source of income and armed forces. The future is ugly (without effective representation), for Scot’s unless they vote with their hearts and minds and break free from the oppressive yoke of Westminster.

 

 

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