I see Bilderberg's UK 'Judge Dread' Ken Clarke
wants this fellow freemason and cop killer to have a second chance.
T
Kenneth Noye road rage murder conviction referred to court of appeal
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/oct/14/kenneth-noye-conviction-court-of-appeal
New appeal against 63-year-old's conviction for
M25 killing to be heard after Criminal Cases Review Commission decision
Press Association
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 14 October 2010 13.50 BST
Article history
Kenneth Noye has been granted a fresh chance to
appeal against his conviction for a road rage murder Photograph: Kent Police/PA
The road rage killer Kenneth Noye was today
granted a fresh chance to appeal against his conviction for murder.
The 63-year-old was jailed for life at the Old
Bailey in 2000 for stabbing 21-year-old Stephen
Cameron on the M25 at Swanley, in Kent, in 1996.
But the Criminal Cases Review Commission has
referred his conviction to the court of appeal
because of questions over the pathologist's evidence.
In June, Noye failed in a legal bid to have his sentence reduced.
A spokesman for the commission said: "Having
carried out a thorough review of Mr Noye's case,
which has included consideration of the pathology
evidence at trial and new expert evidence
acquired since the original decision in October
2006, the commission has decided to refer Mr
Noye's conviction to the court of appeal on the
grounds that there is a real possibility that the
court may quash the conviction as unsafe.
"The commission's referral of Mr Noye's
conviction to the court of appeal means that the
court will hear a fresh appeal.
"The court will decide whether to uphold the
conviction, whether to quash the conviction and
require a retrial, or whether to quash the
conviction without requiring a retrial."
Noye denied murder but was sentenced to life for
murdering Cameron during an argument on a motorway slip road in 1996.
He used a knife he kept in his car to stab
Cameron as the victim's 17-year-old fiancee looked on.
The killing sparked an international hunt for
Noye, who had already served 14 years in jail for
his part in the 1983 Brink's Mat bullion robbery.
Noye – who had previously been cleared of
murdering a police officer, was extradited from Spain in 1998.
His previous appeal to reduce his minimum term
failed after a high court judge, sitting at
Newcastle crown court, ordered that he must spend
at least 16 years in jail before he could be considered for parole.
The Independent
13 April 2000
Life and times of Britain's most infamous villain
By Kim Sengupta and Paul Lashmar
http://www.freemasonrywatch.org/noye.html
The life of Kenneth Noye has been one of
malevolence and corruption. It is an example of
how someone eagerly embracing crime as a
profession can accumulate enormous wealth and
frightening power. It is also a lesson on how
vulnerable society can be to such a single-minded predator.
Noye, aged 53, is the most infamous villain in
Britain. The essential difference between him and
other gangland figures such as the Krays and the
Richardsons is that he had the vision and the
means to infiltrate legitimate business.
From a suburban lifestyle and background in
Kent, Noye carried on, what appeared on the
surface, to be normal business activities,
dealing in cars, property and timeshares.
Behind this front, the burgeoning empire was
underpinned by an elaborate network of fraud. It
enabled his financial tentacles to extend outside
Britain to post-communist Eastern Europe, the
United States, Latin America, Spain and Cyprus,
with a rogues' gallery of partners ranging from the mafia to Asil Nadir.
At the same time Noye was involved in some of the
most high profile crimes in this country,
investing heavily in drug smuggling and
robberies, insurance scams and swindles.
Noye's success as a criminal is especially
remarkable because he survived two shattering
reverses - his trial in November 1985 for the
killing of undercover police officer John
Fordham, of which he was acquitted and his
subsequent 14 year prison sentence for laundering
gold from the £26million Brinks Mat robbery in 1983.
Apart from the aggravation of the prison term for
Brinks Mat, the two trials brought him something
he had studiously avoided - being in the public
eye. Unlike the self-aggrandisement of some
gangland figures, Noye eschewed publicity. There
would be no celebrity photos of him such as those
taken by David Bailey of the Krays.
Indeed, those who took pictures of Noye at social
functions were intimidated into handing them
over. As his cousin Michael Noye pointed out:
"Kenny didn't like any photos of himself floating
around. He knew that if people outside his own
circle didn't know what he looked like, then he
would be able to move around much more easily."
After his release from prison, in May 1994, Noye
was soon back in the crime business with his
financial empire flourishing more than ever. But
then came the fatal encounter on a slip road off
the M25 in June 1996 which resulted in the murder
of Stephen Cameron, Noye's flight to Spain and
the beginning of the end of his criminal empire.
There is little in Kenneth James Noye's roots to
suggest the path he would take. His family was
not from inner city Deptford or Lewisham, the
breeding ground for so many south London
villains. He was born in Bexleyheath on 24 May
1947. His father James was a GPO engineer and his
mother Edith, who worked three days a week at the
Crayford dog track, was from a church-going family.
Mrs Noye could never think ill of her little
Kenny, even when he was caught stealing money
from a till at the local branch of Woolworths. At
the age of 11, Kenny enrolled at Bexleyheath
Secondary Modern, and his juvenile criminal
activities took a more serious turn. His early
criminal career was responsible for his
distinctive broken nose - although it was
acquired in doing nothing more serious than
trying to steal apples from a neighbour's tree at the age of three.
At school, he showed the characteristics of his
later life, outwardly keeping out of trouble, not
attracting the attention of the teachers, but at
the same time running a protection racket among
fellow pupils and terrorising them with bullying.
One of them, Mick Marshall, now 51, recalled how
Noye revelled in violence: "He was vile. He
didn't give a damn who he hurt. But everyone knew
Kenny had a knack of getting away with blue murder."
Noye was soon attracting the attention of the
police for receiving stolen goods, shoplifting
even smuggling beef carcasses. It was while
waiting in legal chambers on one such matter that
he met his future wife, Brenda Tremain, who was
working as a legal secretary. The couple got
married on 12 September 1970. They have two sons, Kevin and Brett.
By now Noye was on the fringes of heavy crime. He
would regularly go to the Hilltop Hotel near his
home where the then aristocracy of gangland, the
Krays and the Richardsons, the Haywards, Frankie
Fraser and others would gather to drink Dom Perignon and watch the cabaret.
Noye built up a reputation as a "fence" who could
shift anything and an "armourer" who could
provide guns. He also began to take a keen
interest in gold, pumping his cousin Graham Noye,
who worked at the Bank of England, for
information on how it was traded. Soon he was
into VAT fraud on gold importation which had the
double advantage of enormous profit and a maximum sentence of just two years.
In 1977 after being arrested by Scotland Yard for
receiving stolen goods he joined a Freemasons'
Lodge which had a large number of police officers among its membership.
Business was going well for Noye, he was mixing
with " first division" villains such as John "
Little Legs" Lloyd and Freddie Foreman. He now
had access to enough money to be able to fly to
Miami with £50,000 in cash to invest in land.
That one deal alone resulted in profit for Noye
and his associates of £600,000.
But the really big money came from gold smuggled
in from Africa, from Kuwait and from Brazil.
Between 1982 and 1984 Noye ran smuggling
operations worth an amazing £35million. Noye's
own cut came to just under £4.5million. He was in his element.
Opening the front door of his house, Hollywood
Cottage, in West Kingsdown, Kent, triggered a
stereo blasting out Shirley Bassey singing the
theme tune to the James' Bond film "Goldfinger".
There were expensive clothes, jewelry and
limousines. Noye bought his wife Brenda a squash
club. For himself he acquired a procession of
blonde and brassy mistresses, some of whom were
partners of his friends and associates.
Making money, in however petty a way, remained
his obsession. Despite his millions he illicitly
extracted electricity for his house and stole a
piece of garden furniture from his 94-year-old neighbour.
On 26 November 1983 came the then biggest heist
in British criminal history - the Brinks Mat raid
at Heathrow Airport. The gang included notorious
London underworld figures "Little legs" Lloyd,
Micky McAvoy and Brian Robinson who were all
essentially robbers and did not how to shift such
a huge amount of loot. That task was Noye's forte.
There was general unease among some of the
robbers and their families. Kathy McAvoy, Micky's
second wife, explained: " Noye wasn't from
south-west London. He was from the suburbs and
that's just not the same. Noye wasn't the real
thing and he knew the rest of us thought that."
On the trail of the missing gold, the police soon
homed in on Noye and surveillance began on his
mock-Tudor home. The operation led to the death
of Detective Constable John Fordham, stabbed four
times by Noye, who was accompanied by gold
courier and fellow Brinks Mat suspect Brian Reader.
At his Old Bailey trial Noye pleaded
self-defence, the same defence used in the
killing of Stephen Cameron. He was acquitted.
Noye had told the court he had been alerted by
his Rotweiller dogs to intruders in his garden.
The intruders were actually Mr Fordham and
another detective trying to gather evidence. A struggle ensued.
Neil Murphy, who was Fordham's surveillance
partner on the night, said he had tried to
distract Noye by shouting. But to no avail. Mr
Murphy said: "Noye also had a gun, I could hear
him shouting 'we will blow your head off'. I
could see figures standing over John's body.
Afterwards, in the ambulance, I could see John's
chest going up and down. I said ' look, he is
breathing! ', but the ambulanceman said it was just the oxygen."
A search of the home uncovered 11 bars of gold,
copper coins used in smelting and, bizarrely, a
Guinness Books of Record with the entry on the robbery circled.
One of the officers who interviewed Noye after
his arrest was Det Chief Supt Brian Boyce.
Although not a freemason Mr Boyce greeted Noye
with a masonic handshake to put him at ease. Noye
offered Mr Boyce £1m to ensure he did not go to prison.
The detective declined, and reported the
conversation. Following Noye's acquittal on the
Fordham murder charge, Mr Boyce was one of the
guiding forces in charging him with the Brinks Mat handling.
Noye was then tried along with six others for the
Brinks Mat job. He was found guilty and sentenced
to four years for handling stolen goods. At the
verdict his mask of a legitimate businessman
slipped as he turned to the jury, his face
contorted with rage before spitting out: "I hope you die of cancer."
Once in Albany Prison on the Isle of Wight, Noye
quickly began to manipulate the system. He
offered information on the Brinks Mat robbery in
return for a reduced sentence. This was turned
down. He ended up getting a comfortable job as a
gym orderly, and cultivated prison officers,
giving a £600 wrist watch to one for his wife's birthday.
Such was the bonhomie that after Noye's release
he was visited by two prison officers escorting
another prisoner, a friend of Noye's Derek
Kandler, to a weight lifting competition. Noye
took them to a Thai restaurant for a meal.
While inside, Noye was planning his move back
into lucrative criminality. He had been forced to
return nearly £3million of Brinks Mat proceeds,
in return for no claims being made against his
home. The quick way back to illicit wealth, he decided, was drugs.
While at Latchmere, a 'halfway house' where he
finished his sentence, Noye was already involved
in a £50,000 cocaine deal with the Miami mafia.
He was almost caught, but managed to avoid arrest
thanks to a tip off from a corrupt officer in the
National Crime Intelligence Service.
But there were plenty of other opportunities. At
another jail, Swaleside, Noye had befriended Pat
Tate, a tattooed, muscle bound, 18 stone drug
dealer from Essex, who acted as his protector. At
Tate's suggestion, Noye invested £30,000 on an
ecstasy shipment. He made a quick £70,000 profit.
Police claim that ecstasy from part of this batch
which led to the death of the teenager Leah Betts.
Tate was killed soon afterwards, shot dead along
with two other men in a Range Rover parked in a
secluded country lane near Chelmsford in December
1995. This wasn't the only casualty among
associates of Noye. Nick Whiting, a car dealer,
went missing from his showroom in West Kingsdown
in 1990. His body was later recovered on Rainham Marshes, in Essex.
Immediately after his release, Noye spent a month
in Northern Cyprus where he met Asil Nadir, the
former boss of Polly Peck who is wanted in
Britain on fraud charges. Nadir allegedly offered
Noye a job working for him, which he turned down.
Various business opportunities were discussed to
exploit what was seen as the area's impending
tourist boom, and Noye invested in a timeshare development.
But other business opportunities beckoned back in
Britain, including a plot to swindle £1billion
out of cash point machines. It was led by "Little
Legs" . According to one former member of the
gang, Martin Grant, Noye put money into the
venture and then threw a pre-operation party at a
Kent hotel at which six high-charging prostitutes
were present. Noye boasted later that he had gone
to bed with each of them. The plot collapsed.
Other members of the gang went to prison. There
was not, however, enough evidence to charge Noye.
Yet again, it appeared, he had been warned off just in time.
In April 1996, Noye was once again in Northern
Cyprus, accompanied by his latest mistress, Sue
McNichol-Outch. She had become his regular
companion. He again met Nadir and visited his
timeshare development near Famagusta. The couple
returned in time to explore Noye's latest
business venture, importing £500,000 of the drug, Khat, from Africa.
But a month later came the murder of Stephen
Cameron and, then in 1998, his arrest in Spain.
His long suffering wife Brenda has now left him,
moving to Cornwall. She has a new man in her
life, fisherman David Collings, although she
turned up at the trial to give evidence on behalf of her husband.
Those who know Noye say that once again he will
try to manipulate his way through the system. But
this time the combination of charm, bribery and
menace is unlikely to work. The violence he so
readily unleashed against others was his final undoing.
+44 (0)7786 952037
http://tonygosling.blip.tv/
http://www.thisweek.org.uk/
http://www.911forum.org.uk/
"Capitalism is institutionalised bribery."
_________________
www.abolishwar.org.uk
<http://www.elementary.org.uk>www.elementary.org.uk
www.public-interest.co.uk
www.radio4all.net/index.php/series/Bristol+Broadband+Co-operative
<http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf>http://utangente.free.fr/2003/media2003.pdf
"The maintenance of secrets acts like a psychic
poison which alienates the possessor from the community" Carl Jung
<https://217.72.179.7/members/www.bilderberg.org/phpBB2/>https://217.72.179.7/members/www.bilderberg.org/phpBB2/
--
Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political power they wield?
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"PEPIS" group. Please feel free to forward it to anyone who might be interested
particularly your political representatives, journalists and spiritual leaders/dudes.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/pepis?hl=en