Wednesday, 30 January 2019

DHL v Fiona Onasanya MP




Disgraced MP Fiona Onasanya has been jailed for three months for lying to police after she was caught speeding.
The Peterborough MP was found guilty of perverting the course of justice by claiming someone else was driving her car on July 24 2017.
The 35-year-old solicitor appeared at the Old Bailey to be sentenced alongside her brother Festus Onasanya, 34, who pleaded guilty to three similar charges, including the July incident. Mr Justice Stuart-Smith jailed the MP for three months and sentenced her brother to 10 months in prison.
The judge said: "It is not one law for those in a position of responsibility and power and another for those that do not. It's a tragedy that you find yourselves here and in this predicament, but it is a tragedy that you have brought on yourselves."
He told Miss Onasanya: "You have not simply let yourself down, you have let down those who look to you for inspiration, your party, your profession and Parliament."
He told singer Mr Onasanya: "It takes some courage to face the music in cases such as this."
The judge said Miss Onasanya's case was out of the ordinary because the crime was "totally out of character" and possibly committed out of misplaced loyalty to her brother.
Her life as a new MP in 2017 was "extremely hectic and chaotic" and she had just been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when police began to pursue her.
After her brother falsely filled out her Notice of Intended Prosecution (NIP), she made the "disastrous decision" to keep up the lie from November 2017, he said.
The judge said jail could be expected for giving false information even in lesser cases because it "undermines the very system of criminal justice".
Mitigating, Christine Agnew QC said: "Regardless of the sentence it will have a disastrous effect on every aspect of her life and career, a career she has worked very hard for.
"She has already been expelled from the Labour Party. At the moment she continues as an independent MP and the reason for that is it is her only income.
"It is highly likely as a result of today's sentencing hearing that she will lose her seat as an MP.
"It's not just a fall from grace. It's a very public fall from grace. She will inevitably be struck off as a solicitor.
"Her life as a politician and as a solicitor have effectively come to an end.
"The point that has cried out from this case from the outset – why on earth put everything at stake for the sake of, at most, three penalty points and a fine?"
The court heard evidence that the MP was on her mobile phone as well as speeding on the evening of Monday July 24 2017, during the summer recess.
She was clocked going 41mph in a 30mph zone in her Nissan Micra in the village of Thorney, near Peterborough. The speed camera was near the home of her former aide Dr Christian DeFeo, who she had visited that evening, the court heard. She was sent an NIP to fill out, but it was sent back naming the driver as Aleks Antipow – a former tenant of her brother – who was visiting his parents in Russia.
When she was contacted by police, she stood by the false nomination.
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith said he was certain she had been behind the wheel on July 24 and had she accepted the speeding offence it would have had "no real or lasting embarrassment" to her as an MP.
He told her: "The impact of your conviction has been disastrous for you."
The court heard Mr Onasanya, from Cambridge, provided false details to avoid speeding prosecutions on two other occasions. He had nine points on his licence and faced losing his licence if he got any more, the court heard.
Mitigating for Mr Onansanya, Jonathan Barnard said his client had no reason at the time to believe he had not been driving on July 24. Mr Barnard said the former delivery driver had turned his life around since being sent to jail for robbery. He had been pursuing his "dream job" as a singer and performer and now makes a living from it – a "remarkable" achievement for a man with his troubled past, Mr Barnard said.
The court heard Mr Onasanya had a string of previous convictions dating back to 2008.
They included cannabis and cocaine possession, criminal damage, driving offences and one jail term for robbery.
His sister took the marginal seat from the Tories with a majority of just 607 at the 2017 election.
Parliamentary rules require the removal of an MP who is jailed for 12 months or more.
But with a lesser sentence, a recall petition can force a by-election if it is signed by more than 10% of the electorate in the Cambridgeshire seat.


That would be another win for DHL, they got away with lying.

DHL & Silence Of The Grave (Reykjavik Murder Mysteries Book 2)


Hi - I'm reading "Silence Of The Grave (Reykjavik Murder Mysteries Book 2)" by Arnaldur Indridason, Bernard Scudder and wanted to share this quote with you.

"Erlendur read the message.
“Dave got an Icelander or a soldier who spoke Icelandic to write the note for him.
Mum always kept it, and, of course, I’ll take it to the grave with me.”
Erlendur looked at the note.
Although written in clumsy capitals, the words were very clear.
I KNOW WHAT HE DOES TO YOU.
“Mum and Dave talked about her contacting him as soon as my stepfather got out of prison, and he would come to help her. I don’t know the exact arrangements.”
“Couldn’t anyone at Gufunes help her?” Elínborg asked.
“Plenty of people must have worked there.”
Mikkelína looked at her.
“My mother had suffered abuse at his hands for a decade and a half. It was physical violence, he beat her, often so brutally that she was bedridden for days afterwards. And it was psychological too, which was maybe a worse form of violence because, as I told Erlendur yesterday, it reduced my mother to nothing. She started to despise herself as much as her husband despised her; she thought for a long time of suicide, but partly because of us, her children, she never went further than contemplating it. Dave made up for some of this in the six months he spent with her, and he was the only person she could have asked for help. She never mentioned to anyone what she’d been through in all those years and I think she was prepared to suffer the beatings again if need be. At worst he’d attack her and everything would be back to normal.”
Mikkelína looked at Erlendur.
“Dave never came.”
She looked at Elínborg.
“And nothing went back to normal.”

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Psychological violence - That's a win for DHL

Suicide prevention: interim report

Suicide prevention: interim report

Government Response to the Health Select Committee's Inquiry into Suicide Prevention


Conclusion

Our evidence has made clear that suicide is preventable and that much more can and should be done to support vulnerable individuals. We look forward to the publication of the Government’s refreshed suicide prevention strategy and we hope to see the crucial points we have addressed in this short report taken into account. We will scrutinise the updated strategy and will hold a follow-up hearing with key stakeholders to hear their views before publishing a full report. 

https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201617/cmselect/cmhealth/300/300.pdf

Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 13 December 2016

This pre-dates the appointment of the suicide prevention minister.

Can't really see much in the way of action, unless reading the report twice means that they were thorough.



Formal Minutes

Tuesday 13 December 2016
Members present:
Dr Sarah Wollaston, in the Chair
Heidi Alexander
Dr James Davies
Luciana Berger
Andrea Jenkyns
Rosie Cooper
Andrew Selous

Draft Report (Suicide prevention: interim report), proposed by the Chair, brought up and 
read.

Ordered, That the draft Report be read a second time, paragraph by paragraph.

Paragraphs 1 to 37 read and agreed to.

Resolved, That the Report be the Fourth Report of the Committee to the House.

Ordered, That the Chair make the Report to the House.

Ordered, That embargoed copies of the Report be made available, in accordance with the provisions of Standing Order No. 134.


Adjourned till Tuesday 10 January at 9.45am.


And almost from an episode of Yes, Prime Minister


Conclusions and recommendations

Implementation
1. The refreshed suicide prevention strategy must be underpinned by a clear
implementation strategy, with strong national leadership, clear accountability, and
regular and transparent external scrutiny. In the words of a bereaved parent, “we
cannot allow more lives to be lost because we do not have effective governance and
implementation”. (Paragraph 11)
2. We recommend that the Government’s updated strategy should include a clear
implementation programme, with strong external scrutiny of local authority
plans and progress. Local areas also need a clear message from the top that suicide
prevention plans are mandatory. (Paragraph 12) 





Saturday, 26 January 2019

DHL and The Snow Girls


Hi - I'm reading "The Snow Girls" by Chris Mooney and wanted to share these quotes with you.



"He picked up a stack of files from one of the two chairs in the corner of the room. Darby looked out through the window, into the bullpen, where a handful of cops were openly staring at her in disgust and contempt. Years ago, back when she was working an investigation for Boston’s Criminal Investigative Unit, she had uncovered a decades-long string of police corruption that extended up to the commissioner and the FBI’s Boston office. These same people who had sworn to protect and serve had also orchestrated the murder of her father, Big Red McCormick, who had discovered the seeds of a criminal enterprise operating within the Boston PD. He had been shot while on duty. Her father was strong. He had lasted a month before her mother decided to take him off life support. Darby insisted on being at the hospital. She was thirteen. The reason for the vitriol she was witnessing right now was a result of her committing the cardinal sin of law enforcement: going public with the truth instead of playing the role of the good soldier and keeping the matter confined within Boston PD, where the bureaucrats and spin doctors would work tirelessly to bury the matter. She was branded a rat, ostracized for not following their rules. Then she’d lost her job. Kennedy saw where she was looking.
‘Ignore them.’
Don’t worry, I am. She said,
‘You must’ve made a helluva lot of friends, asking me to come here.’
‘You’re the best at what you do. Granted, you have the subtlety and grace of a wrecking ball, but you do get results.’ He chuckled.
‘Have a seat.’
Kennedy was well into his early fifties but except for his hair, which had gone from black to a steel-grey, and maybe an extra ten or so pounds, he still looked like the same beat cop she remembered from her days in Boston –the tough and crafty baseball catcher who’d earned a free ride to Boston College. He would’ve gone pro if he hadn’t suffered a devastating knee injury, one that tore both his ACL and MCL, during his junior year.
‘Who’d you piss off?’ Darby asked, looking around his office.
‘That’s a mighty long list. Could you be more specific?’
"‘You worked homicide; now you’re stuck in Bedlam working cold cases.’
‘I needed a change of pace.’
‘What’s the real reason?’
‘Doctor’s orders.’
‘High blood pressure?’
Every homicide detective she knew suffered from it. That or alcoholism. Depression. The list went on and on.
‘That and the two heart attacks that followed,’ Kennedy said.
‘Why didn’t you retire? You put your time in.’
‘And do what? Take up golf? Besides, my wife would kill me, having me around all day. Can I get you coffee? Water?’
‘I’m all set.’
Darby took a seat.
‘So,’ he said, hiking up his trousers as he lowered himself into the chair. ‘Claire Flynn.’
Two days ago, Darby had been in Long Island, New York, winding up her consulting gig on a possible serial killer who, over a three-year period, had dumped the bodies of six women, all prostitutes or runaways, in the dunes. Kennedy called her out of the blue, asked if she’d take a look at a case Darby had worked more than a decade ago, and one that still haunted her: Claire Flynn, a six-year-old Belham girl, who, on a snowy night eleven years ago, went up a hill with her slightly older friend and never came down. It had been Darby’s first case. She’d flown in yesterday morning and spent the next twenty-four hours poring over the evidence, the police reports, everything.
‘What’s your verdict?’ he asked.
‘She’s dead.’"


"‘You’ve got stacks of cold cases in here. Why Claire Flynn?’
‘Because I don’t like paedophiles,’ he said.
‘And I especially don’t like how the Catholic Church, under the leadership of that arrogant prick, Cardinal Law, may he not rest in peace, knew full well that Byrne and those other priests were paedophiles. What did he do? He shuffled them around for something like fifteen years, put the reputation of the Church ahead of stopping child rape.’
Kennedy was right. Boston’s Cardinal Bernard Law had, for nearly two decades, shuffled known paedophile priests to other parishes all over the Commonwealth of Massachusetts rather than reporting their crimes. It went on until 2002, when the Boston Globe broke the story, which went global. It seemed Law wasn’t the only one who’d put the needs of the Church above the needs of humanity: hundreds of similar stories kept popping up not just in the US but also all over the world. The Catholic Archdiocese of Boston had sold many of its properties to help defray the staggering legal costs and the nearly $ 100 million settlement for the victims of sexual abuse.
‘The state didn’t have a mandatory reporting law,’ Darby said.
‘Cardinal Law wasn’t under any legal obligation to come forward with any sexual-abuse claims.’ ‘Doesn’t make it right.’
‘Didn’t say it did.’ Kennedy waved his hands, as if surrendering.
‘But we’re not talking about that sick bastard Law. We’re talking about our sick bastard. Byrne abducted two girls before Claire Flynn.’
‘There’s no evidence that supports he –’
‘First church Byrne was sent to out of seminary was down in New Bedford,’ Kennedy said.
He was leaning forward in his seat now, elbows resting on his thighs, his eyes heated with anger, or frustration, or maybe a combination of the two.
‘He was an English teacher at St Bartholomew, taught first and second grades. Was there for something like fifteen years.’
‘Eighteen.’ ‘Right, eighteen. Sorry, senior moment.
"‘Now, we don’t know too much about what happened back then. Totally different time period –nobody would believe a priest was capable of molesting kids and, because the victims were underage, their parents didn’t want to go to the police, have it get around town. What we do know is that Byrne took a special interest in his female students, asked certain ones to stay after class, to come visit him alone in his office for talks that often involved their sitting on his lap. And now we know the Church, behind the scenes, came in and intimidated the hell out of the families, bought their silence. Cardinal Law didn’t put a stop to it, even after Byrne’s last year there, when Mary Hamilton vanished without a trace during a snowstorm.’
Darby had read the case file: how the Hamilton girl, who was roughly the same age as Claire Flynn, had been abducted while playing in a friend’s backyard. The friend’s mother, who had been out with the girl, supervising, had gone into the house to fetch her cigarettes. When she came out, Mary Hamilton was gone: her daughter told her that a man had come out of the bushes and grabbed Mary. She was never seen again. The friend told the police that the man who had grabbed Mary Hamilton wore a priest’s collar. She hadn’t seen the abductor’s face.
‘A few months after that,’ Kennedy said, ‘the Catholic Church sends Byrne for a little R & R at that private spa resort they’ve got in upstate Connecticut for treating priests who like molesting kids. Our man spends not even a month there and the Church decides that’s enough, he’s rehabilitated, and Law sends him to another church –this one up north, in Nashua, New Hampshire.
Year goes by, everything’s hunky-dory, and what happens next? Ten-year-old Elizabeth Levenson disappears, again during a snowstorm. Mother called the school: Byrne had offered to give the Levenson girl a ride home, and did. He admitted to that.’
‘The Nashua police found no evidence or eyewitnesses tying him to that crime –he wasn’t even a suspect at the time. Same deal in New Bedford.’
‘Then the Church ships him here and we know what happens next. This isn’t a series of coincidences –it’s a goddamn pattern.’
‘Any particular reason you’re so laser-locked on Byrne?’
‘You don’t think he’s our guy?’
‘I was wondering why you’re so heated up about him all of a sudden.’
‘It’s got to be Byrne. Who else could it be? And please don’t tell me Mickey Flynn’s old man. I don’t buy for one minute that Sean Flynn was behind his granddaughter’s disappearance.’
‘He made Mickey’s mother vanish into thin air.’
‘A theory that was never proven,’ Kennedy said.
‘I’m not saying it’s a bad one. After all, what sort of mother would abandon her kid, leave him to be raised by an animal like Sean?’"


"‘He’s not a priest any more. The Vatican finally stripped that from him. That was in the article right there on your lap.’
‘Yes, I know. The article also said he’s dying of pancreatic cancer.’
Dying. The word pressed against his chest like concrete blocks. It hurt to breathe.
‘I’m worried his impending death might cause you to confront him again,’ she said.
Mickey stared at the painting behind her desk and thought about how it didn’t matter that Byrne owned a winter jacket that was an exact match to the one described by the witness, the boy on the Hill, Danny Halloran. It didn’t matter that the next morning, Saturday, when the storm broke around nine, the bloodhounds had followed Claire’s scent through the trails to the boyhood home of Richard Byrne, an old weather-beaten Victorian house where his mother still lived. It didn’t matter that Byrne was a now-defrocked priest who had abducted three young girls, including Claire.
What mattered was evidence. Evidence, Mickey had learned, was the Holy Grail.
No evidence, no case. The Belham detectives and Boston’s top crime-scene investigators had gone in with all their collective forensic expertise and power. They examined every inch of Byrne’s mother’s house, the tool shed in the backyard and the battered Ford van he drove; yet they had failed to come away with the two most important elements: DNA and fibre evidence. That meant Richard Byrne could hold a press conference and play the victim, right down to asking the public to pray for the safe return of Claire Flynn. He could, if he wanted to, stand at the top of the Hill and watch little girls sledding. Byrne was a free man and free men could do anything they wanted. Building a case takes time, Mr Flynn.
You need to be patient, Mr Flynn.
We’re doing everything we can, Mr Flynn.
Your daughter’s case is our top priority. The police were good men, he supposed, but they didn’t understand what it was like, losing a child, even though a lot of them had kids of their own. Claire was his daughter, and to ask him to be patient while the motherfucker who took his daughter went about his daily life … Mickey had reached his limit, couldn’t stand the idea of dragging that knowledge with him to bed, waking up chained to it again the next morning. Something had to be done.
Something was done.
‘Mickey?’ she asked. ‘Did you hear what I said?’
‘Yeah.’ He swallowed, then cleared his throat. ‘Yeah, I did.’"


"Cullen turned his head to the side, his gaze darting back and forth across the tall pines, the sky. He looked as though he had aged a decade. Maybe it was the angle of the sun. He definitely looked troubled, though.
‘There’s this wonderful quote about the Devil that I believe is attributed to James Garfield, our twentieth president,’ Cullen said.
A brave man, he said, is one who looks the Devil in the face and tells him he’s the Devil. It’s a nice sentiment, very noble, and makes for a good story. But those stories don’t talk about the consequences a brave man or woman suffers for doing such a thing.
Cullen turned back to her.
‘I’d hate to see that happen to you.’
‘I’ve dealt with his kind before.’
‘And at significant physical and mental costs, from what I’ve read.’
‘I appreciate your concern, Father –’
‘But you’re going to talk to him anyway.’
‘The man is dying. If I can convince him –’
‘Richard isn’t going to give you what you want. He isn’t going to tell you anything about those girls. That he asked to speak to you tells me he has something he can use to hurt you.’
‘Such as?’
‘I don’t know. What I do know –what I can promise you –is that when you’re done speaking with him, you won’t be the same person. The man is evil, and that’s a word I don’t often use, Doctor.’
‘But that didn’t stop you from administering the last rites to him.’
‘I denied him the sacrament,’ Cullen said. ‘I won’t bore you with the specifics of canon law, but suffice to say that if someone refuses to show signs of repentance before death, the Church can refuse funeral rites, and a Catholic service. I denied Richard both. If he wasn’t willing to confess his sins to me and ask God for forgiveness, what on earth makes you believe he’ll confess anything to you?’"


‘They were right about you, what they said. You are a rat.’
She flinched at the last word.
Somewhere in the back of his mind he knew he had crossed a line –knew too that what he’d just said wasn’t entirely true.
She had exposed crooked cops and crooked politicians, one of them the Boston Police Commissioner, the first woman who’d ever held the job, for getting in bed with a well-known Irish gangster Sean had worked for once upon a time.
She had stood up and done the right thing, and she’d lost her job because of it.
Her voice was calm when she spoke.
‘You’re a good man, Mickey. I’ve always respected you, and I can’t even begin to explain how truly sorry I am for your situation. And you probably won’t believe me when I say this, but I’m on your side, and I’m trying to protect you. Which is why I’m going to ask you one last time to leave. I won’t ask you again.’
Mickey looked away from her, at the dimly lit windows of the house, and felt as though every inch of his skin were wrapped in barbed wire.
Get arrested and risk going to jail, or trust her to do whatever job she’s come here to do?
Darby’s gaze dropped to her phone.
She began to dial.
Mickey turned around, his heart tearing in half, and when he took that first step, heading back to his truck, he was so light-headed he thought he might pass out."

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Thats a win for DHL - They can get away with bullying


Monday, 14 January 2019

World Mental Health Day


Haven't seen any news from JDP yet

World Mental Health Day:
PM appoints suicide prevention minister
10 October 2018


A minister for suicide prevention has been appointed in England by the prime minister as the government hosts the first ever global mental health summit.
Theresa May said the appointment of Health Minister Jackie Doyle-Price to the new role will help tackle the stigma surrounding suicide.
While suicide rates are falling, 4,500 people take their own lives every year.
The appointment comes as ministers and officials from more than 50 countries assemble in London for the summit.
Wednesday's meeting - hosted by Health Secretary Matt Hancock and attended by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge - coincides with World Mental Health Day.
The government has also promised more support in schools, bringing in new mental health support teams and offering help in measuring students' health, including their mental wellbeing.
Ms May said: "We can end the stigma that has forced too many to suffer in silence and prevent the tragedy of suicide taking too many lives."
Alongside the announcement, the prime minister pledged £1.8m to the Samaritans so the charity can continue providing its free helpline for the next four years.
Hannah Lewis - who campaigns for improvements to mental health services having suffered from panic attacks, anxiety and suicidal thoughts as a teenager - said that it can be a year before someone who is referred for help actually begins treatment.
She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "Mental health is known to deteriorate when you are left without help, and you can only imagine how things got worse with me." said her mental health issues dated back to when she was a child
Ms Lewis welcomed the government's announcement - especially the proposals to bring more awareness of mental health into schools - but she added: "More joined-up working at schools and early intervention is great, but we need to make sure then there are sufficient services to be signposted to."
Mrs Doyle-Price, who has been an MP since 2010, will now become the minister for mental health, inequalities and suicide prevention.
As health is devolved separately to the UK's four nations, her role will include making sure each local area in England has effective plans to stop unnecessary deaths and to look into how technology could help identify those at risk. 2010
She said she understood the "tragic, devastating and long-lasting" effect of suicide on families, having met some of those bereaved.
"It's these people who need to be at the heart of what we do," she added.
Manchester University's Prof Louis Appleby, one of the country's leading experts on suicide, said having a minister for suicide prevention would "open doors" and make it easier to have conversations about the role such things as benefits and online gambling have in suicidal people's lives.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the appointment would also help with getting support for mental illness on a par with services for physical health.
"There is a long road to travel to get there. This is not something you solve overnight," he said.

But others criticised the government's record on mental health.  Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of mental health charity Sane, said there had not been enough improvements to services since Mrs May pledged to tackle the issue two years ago.
"While we applaud the intention [of the announcement], it is striking that the UK should be hosting such a summit when we hear daily about people left untreated due to a lack of nurses and doctors," she said.
"The prime minister must examine our own mental health system before addressing other countries."


Saturday, 12 January 2019

Free Doombar

More from Cask Marque

GRAB A FREE PINT OF DOOMBAR NOW!




Happy 2019! Do you want a free pint of Doombar to kick start the new year? Ei Group are doing a great promotion - giving away a free drink in pubs up and down the country!

Using a mobile handset only - simply find a participating pub near you, follow the instructions and take your voucher and phone with you to the bar to claim your free drink.

Be quick though - the offer is available 2/1/19 - 20/1/19 and there are only a limited number of drinks available in each pub - once they're gone, they're gone! Please note, the drinks do vary by pub and can be checked here.

T&C's apply.

More news from Cask Marque

THINKING DRINKERS' PUB CRAWL TOUR!




The Cask Marque team recently enjoyed a night out watching the Thinking Drinkers on their UK tour and thought it may be of interest to our ale trailers.

Thinking Drinkers have embarked on a bar-hop through history as part of their new show Pub Crawl– an interactive imbibing experience during which every single audience member tastes five fabulous drinks. For free!

As educational as it is entertaining, the Thinking Drinkers Pub Crawl is a riotous and intoxicating exploration of history’s greatest drinking establishments – an especially pertinent celebration given the fact that 18 pubs are closing every week.

The Thinking Drinkers are Ben McFarland and Tom Sandham - two of the UK's leading experts on all aspects of alcohol. Ben is the triple - crowned "British Beer Writer f the Year". He is also the author of several award - winning beer books. Tom was the editor at the industry spirits and cocktail magazine, CLASS, and launched the "World's 50 Best Bars" and "House Tonic" for the Soho House Group. He has lectured on spirits at the Wine Spirit & Education Trust and is author of the award-winning "World's Best Cocktails."

The tour is going up and down the country, and more details, including how to buy tickets can be found on their
website.


Hope you enjoy!