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(回答先: ハットン卿は高位のフリーメーソンだった! 投稿者 戦争屋は嫌いだ 日時 2004 年 1 月 29 日 21:55:51)
ハットン卿がメーソンである状況証拠
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=34477
ハットン卿は「血の日曜日」やチリのピノチェント大統領追い落としにも司法分野で「貢献」していたとは知りませんでした。英国の司法組織はテンプル騎士団の末裔としての流れを持っているという記述も、この記事の下のリンクにあります。
ひょっとして、ハットン卿はメーソンの「大物」で嘘つき小僧をコントロールするために「指名」されたのかもしれません。
この記事は私の苦手な「司法英語」が多いので、もし気にとまるところがあれば解説していただけますかね。
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LORD HUTTON, THE MAN IN CHARGE OF KELLY INVESTIGATION
Posted By: UKmailbag
Date: Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 1:50 a.m.
From Andy: read all and form your own conclusions!
I posted this to my friends and the BBC
(radio 5 live in UK - they didn't comment on it all afternoon...)
begin snip
"This will be a whitewash.
Brian Hutton is an establishment freemason, he ran the same military
tribunal hanging courts in Northern Ireland that are identical to camp
X-ray! The Diplock courts, and he was chosen by blair and his advisors as
the most expedient way out...
This is what the poodle, representing the Ministry of Defence, said in
1973!!!
talk about conflict of interest!!!
1973: 'Bloody Sunday' inquest accuses Army
The coroner presiding over the "Bloody Sunday" inquest has accused the
British army of "sheer unadulterated murder".
The accusation came from the Londonderry City coroner, Major Hubert O'Neill,
after the inquest jury returned an open verdict on the deaths.
Thirteen people died on 30 January last year when members of the Parachute
Battalion opened fire on people attending a civil rights march in Derry.
Another man died later in hospital and 14 others were also shot and injured.
Major O'Neill said there had been no justification for the soldiers to open
fire.
He said: "These people may have been taking part in a parade that was banned
but I do not think that justifies the firing of live rounds
indiscriminately."
But Mr Brian Hutton, QC, representing for the Ministry of Defence told Major
O'Neill the inquest had heard only part of the evidence.
"It is not for you or the jury to express such wide-ranging views,
particularly when a most eminent judge has spent 20 days hearing evidence
and come to a very different conclusion," Mr Hutton said.
Andy : he was an establishment kow-tower in 1973, and still is, and that is
EXACTLY why Blair picked him to preside over this upcoming whitewash...
Catholic priests who were at the rally gave evidence to the inquest.
They said many of the dead men were unarmed and running away when they were
shot.
They also claimed the troops failure to stop firing prevented them from
helping the sick and dying.
The MP for Antrim North, Reverend Ian Paisley, has said he will ask the
Northern Ireland Secretary for Major O'Neill's removal.
"Mr O'Neill is not fit to be coroner for he has let his religious and
political feelings dictate his decision," Mr Paisley said.
================================================================
Lord Hutton was the former Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland where
Britain has been condemned internationally for human rights abuses;
snip
Shayler did not act in public interest, court rules
Staff and agencies
Thursday March 21, 2002
The country's highest court, the Law Lords, today ruled that the former MI5
agent turned whistle-blower, David Shayler, did not act in the public
interest when he disclosed state secrets alleging illegal activities and
incompetence in the security services.
Andy : LOL LOL LOL, Shayler acted *precisely* in the public interest!
The House of Lords unanimously rejected a human rights challenge tabled by
Mr Shayler and said he could not use "public interest" defence in his
forthcoming Old Bailey trial.
Mr Shayler is accused of disclosing state secrets in 1997 in a series of
newspaper articles about alleged illegal activities and incompetence in the
security services.
Five law lords said there was no incompatibility between the 1989 Official
Secrets Act, under which Shayler faces prosecution, and Article 10 of the
European Convention on Human Rights guaranteeing "freedom of expression".
Lord Bingham of Cornhill said: "Despite the high importance attached to it,
the right to free expression was never regarded in domestic law as
absolute." The European Convention recognised that it was not absolute and
could be restricted if a state could show that restriction was necessary in
a democratic society. The 1989 act imposed a ban on disclosure of
information or documents relating to security or intelligence by a former
member of the service "without lawful authority". Lord Bingham said: "The
crux of this case is whether the safeguards built into the Official Secrets
Act are sufficient to ensure that unlawfulness and irregularity can be
reported to those with the power and duty to take effective action, and the
power to withhold authorisation to publish is not abused and that proper
disclosures are not stifled."
He added: "If a person who has given a binding undertaking of
confidentiality seeks to be relieved, even in part, from that undertaking he
must seek authorisation and, if so advised, challenge any refusal of
authorisation. If that refusal is upheld in the courts it must, however
reluctantly, be accepted." Lord Hope of Craighead, Lord Hutton, Lord
Hobhouse of Woodborough and Lord Scott of Foscote unanimously agreed and
dismissed Mr Shayler's challenge. He is due to face a criminal trial later
this year after making claims in the Mail on Sunday in 1997 that agents in
the 1970s tapped the telephone of Peter Mandelson, later to serve as
Northern Ireland secretary, and kept a file on Jack Straw, now foreign
secretary.
================================================================
Profile of "Lord" Hutton
'A classic establishment figure'
If Lord Hutton's name has previously penetrated the public consciousness, it
would have been for his role in the extradition case against General Augusto
Pinochet, writes Matthew Tempest
Monday July 21, 2003
Lord Hutton: charged with investigating the death of David Kelly. Photo: PA.
Beyond the fact that he was born and spent much of his career in Northern
Ireland, Lord Hutton is a classic establishment figure: a lawyer, law lord
and Balliol man to boot.
Educated at an all-boys boarding school in Shrewsbury, the Ulster-born James
Hutton then took a first in jurisprudence at Oxford, continued his studies
at Queen's College, Belfast, before being called to the Nothern Ireland bar
in 1954.
A long and distinguished career across the Irish sea followed. The then Mr
Hutton became junior counsel to the attorney general in Belfast in 1969, a
QC (Northern Ireland) in 1970, and a senior crown counsel in Ulster from
1973-79.
Since this period was the height of the Troubles, where Northern Ireland
appeared on the brink of civil war, Lord Hutton will have crucial experience
not only of the judiciary, but also of Whitehall and even the security
services.
He was also a member of the joint law enforcement commission of 1974, and a
judge of the high court of justice before finally, in 1988, becoming the
lord chief justice of Northern Ireland.
In 1997 he became a law lord.
If Lord Hutton's name has previously penetrated the public consciousness, it
would have been as one of the law lords ruling on the extradition case
against General Augusto Pinochet. Lord Hutton ruled that the Chilean former
dictator was liable to be extadited for crimes of torture committed after
1988.
Andy : and then he was let go!
The 72-year old Baron Hutton of Bresagh in the County of Down is married,
with two daughters, and sits as a crossbencher in the Lords.
He lists no hobbies or clubs in his Who's Who entry, although he is a past
president of the Northern Ireland Association for Mental Health, and is
currently a vistor at the University of Ulster.
================================================================
Belfast Telegraph > News Publication Date: 21 July 2003
Ulster Judge with life and death experience
London Editor Brian Walker profiles LORD HUTTON, the law lord from Northern
Ireland who faces the greatest challenge of his career, to head up the
inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the suicide of the MoD weapons
inspector, Dr David Kelly
By Brian Walker
email: brian.walker@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
WITH the Prime Minister's future ultimately at stake, the eyes of the world
will also be on Northern Ireland's Brian Hutton, when Tony Blair enters the
box to give evidence in what will surely be the most sensational appearance
of his life.
This is one forum the Prime Minister will not be able to dominate easily.
Now 72, Lord Hutton, unlike most law lords, has presided over life and death
issues for many years.
He will surely keep Mr Blair on a tight rein and squash any attempts at
grand-standing by any of the considerable egos likely to appear before him.
He is known as a very reserved and private man.
Educated in England, but retaining traces of an Ulster accent, he has always
kept his political distance and a low public profile, but has shown a strong
personality in court.
"He is not afraid," said one senior Belfast solicitor who knows him well,
"and he is completely independent."
His experience as a trained prosecutor, also rare for a law lord, will stand
him in good stead in the essentially straightforward task of the inquiry,
that of establishing truth beyond reasonable doubt.
One of his early cases was to prosecute the then Bernadette Devlin MP after
the Bogside riots in August 1969, looking very uncomfortable as she mocked
the charges and the mandatory six month sentence.
As the last Lord Chief Justice of the province to experience life as a
so-called "legitimate target" of the Provisional IRA, he achieved a
reputation for fair and meticulous judgment.
Few of his verdicts were challenged, despite the unpopularity of the
non-jury Diplock courts.
Rising rapidly to the top in Belfast and then elevated with a great sense of
relief to the final Court of Appeal in the Lords, he has managed to keep his
slate clean of political controversy, building up his reputation as a
lawyer's lawyer who relies heavily on legal precedent.
While reckoned to be a small "c" conservative, he has not invariably sided
with the Establishment.
Two major decisions, one each from a criminal and a rights lawyer, appear to
confirm his independent streak.
In the early 90s, he ruled that the 11-plus marking system discriminated
against girls; and in a decision later overturned, he ruled that "subsequent
ill-treatment" while in custody could render a prisoner's original arrest
illegal - a decision which, if upheld, could have had momentous
consequences.
As a law lord, he upheld the detention in England of the former Chilean
dictator General Pinochet over attempts to extradite him for crimes against
humanity.
In one hotly political case last year, he agreed with Peter Robinson's case
against John Reid's extension of the six week time limit on the Assembly to
elect a First and Deputy First Minister in 2002, but was overruled.
================================================================
from SAOIRSE Irish Freedom February 1997
Six Counties Chief Justice a Freemason
Within days of taking up his position of Britain痴 new Lord Chief Justice in
Occupied Ireland Robert Carswell faced scrutiny from the former British
Labour Party spokesperson on the Six Counties, Kevin McNamara, to ascertain
if the senior member of the judiciary has ever been a member of the
Freemasons or the Orange Order.
Carswell was appointed in November 1996 as a successor to Lord Chief Justice
Brian Hutton. The Dublin administration was not consulted about his
appointment, despite precedent being set in the London-Dublin agreement of
1985.
Robert Carswell, an infamous anti-Republican, presided over many high
profile trials in recent years including the Casement Park show-trials into
the deaths of two British soldiers. Now Kevin McNamara has tabled a series
of House of Commons questions into the background and appointment of the new
court痴 chief.
He is being aided by fellow Labour MP, Chris Mullin, who is a member of a
Home Affairs Select Committee at Westminster which is investigating the
extent of Freemason痴 influence among politicians, the police and the
judiciary.
McNamara received written and evasive replies from the Lord Chancellor痴
department, 典he Lord Chancellor does not require candidates for, or holders
of, judicial office to declare membership of any lawful organisation.
McNamara referred to the description of the Orange Order as a 斗awful
organisation as 殿n unhappy reply given what happened at Drumcree when the
rule of law was challenged by the Orange Order.
Asked why he was pursuing the issue, McNamara replied 的 was never happy
with him [Robert Carswell] and his judgements on various things. I thought
it would be helpful if he was aware that people were keeping an eye on him.
Meanwhile in Britain the Association of Women Barristers has compiled a
dossier on members of the judiciary with links to the Freemasons and is
recommending to the Commons Home Affairs Committee that anyone appointed a
judge be required to resign membership of the Freemasons or at least
disclose it publicly.
Josephine Hayes, chairperson of the association, said there were probably
more judges who were Freemasons than those identified. The Masonic yearbook
for 1996/97 lists over 30 judges as high-ranking or 敵rand Officers of the
Masonic Order.
================================================================
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Messages In This Thread
* LORD HUTTON, THE MAN IN CHARGE OF KELLY INVESTIGATION (views: 2998)
UKmailbag -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 1:50 a.m.
* KELLY IS BRITAIN'S JFK (views: 567)
UselessEater -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 10:45 a.m.
* AHAH! BRITISH INTELLIGENCE (views: 458)
Aladdin -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 1:07 p.m.
* THE PURPOSE OF THE OFFICE OF SPECIAL PLANS? (views: 291)
Rosalinda -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 4:16 p.m.
* DR KELLY IS A BAHA'I (views: 609)
Aladdin -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 2:59 p.m.
* FREEMASON JUDGES: SILENT DESTROYERS? (views: 724)
Aladdin -- Tuesday, 22 July 2003, 12:37 p.m.