Daily Mail

Put the Nonce Finder General in the dock

-

THE outrageous Paedos In High Places panic has ruined the lives of many prominent men and their families. Innocent individual­s have been falsely accused of heinous crimes and left dangling in legal limbo for years.

We’re all familiar with the scandalous police inquiries into unfounded sex allegation­s against politician­s such as former Tory Prime Minister Edward Heath, ex-Home Secretary Leon Brittan and war hero Lord Bramall, a distinguis­hed past head of the Armed Forces.

But what I hadn’t realised until last weekend was that the fall- out from the insanely zealous investigat­ion, heavily influenced by Labour’s Nonce Finder General Tom Watson, had extended far beyond its Establishm­ent targets.

In a harrowing interview in Saturday’s Mail, Sue reid spoke to a young couple caught up in the madness who were threatened with the prospect of their baby daughter being taken away from them.

Their only ‘ crime’ was to live in a twobedroom flat in the same building as exConserva­tive MP Harvey Proctor, who was wrongly accused of three counts of murder, child sex abuse and male rape.

In February 2015, police and social services turned up at the property, on the Duke of rutland’s estate in Leicesters­hire, and ordered Adam and Charlotte Coxon to move out immediatel­y.

The couple were told that if they didn’t comply, three-month-old Francesca would be taken into care. To emphasise that this was no empty threat, a social worker had brought along a child’s car seat for that very purpose. Charlotte, 23, said: ‘The [police] officer made it clear we had no choice but to get out because Francesca was in danger from Harvey.

‘We said Harvey was our friend and we were happy living with him in the same building. We had separate flats under the same roof and only shared a kitchen.’

Terrified, though, they did as they were told. Adam Coxon said: ‘I think the threat of losing our baby was made to frighten us so we would get out of Harvey’s house quickly.’

The couple were asked if they knew Proctor had been convicted in 1987 of gross indecency with two men under the age of 21. That was before the age of homosexual consent was lowered to 16. The Coxons replied that of course they knew, ‘everyone did’.

Their enforced eviction was the prelude to a full-scale raid, straight from the Jimmy Savile squad songbook, which lasted for 15 hours. It’s a wonder the police didn’t invite along a BBC helicopter camera crew. Adam and Charlotte’s ordeal is detailed in legal papers prepared for Proctor, who is suing Scotland Yard and his accuser for £1 million damages.

The allegation­s, like all those levelled against others snared by this ludicrous investigat­ion, were made by a notorious fantasist — a middle-aged man we are still only allowed for legal reasons to refer to as ‘Nick’.

Credulous police swallowed wholesale Nick’s bogus claims of murder and rape by an alleged Establishm­ent sex ring. A senior officer described them as ‘credible and true’, without a shred of evidence. They even appealed for more ‘victims’ to come forward.

The inquiry, called Operation Midland, eventually closed without a single arrest, but not before police mounted a series of typically heavy- handed raids, which dragged the reputation­s of innocent men through the mud and left their loved ones distraught.

Coincident­ally, after news of Proctor’s lawsuit became public last week, the head of that inquiry, Assistant Commission­er ‘Fat Pat’ Gallan, announced her retirement. There was no mention, curiously, of Operation Midland on the otherwise laudatory press release. N

ick himself is now awaiting trial for committing child sex offences while police were treating him as a victim. He may also be charged with perverting the course of justice and fraud.

But although he will have to answer for his actions in court, the real villain of the piece has got away scot-free and continues to enjoy a high- profile political career. Few people would ever have heard of Nick, had it not been for Watson, now Labour’s deputy leader.

When he’s not trying to shackle our free Press, or cosying up to the odious Max Mosley — from whom he has accepted £ 540,000 in donations — Watson can be found pursuing a deranged vendetta against senior Tories he accuses of sex crimes.

He has repeatedly smeared leading Conservati­ves, dead or alive, as serial murderers, rapists and child molesters. It’s why I dubbed him The Nonce Finder General, imagining Watson leading a torchlit procession down Whitehall, burning suspected Tory sex fiends at the stake.

He worked in tandem with a thoroughly discredite­d, and now defunct, Left-wing ‘news’ agency run by a former Guardian journalist, which was pushing Nick’s claims. He was the prime mover behind the Paedos In High Places witch-hunt, claiming that there was a ‘ powerful paedophile network linked to No 10’ during the Thatcher years.

He compared Leon Brittan to Jimmy Savile and said the former Home Secretary was being protected by a high-level coverup. Brittan died before he could clear his name. At one stage it seemed as if Scotland Yard and the Crown Prosecutio­n Service were taking their marching orders directly from Watson.

While encouragin­g Nick to press his lurid, utterly fictitious allegation­s, Watson has generally hidden behind parliament­ary privilege to accuse Conservati­ves of serious crimes.

His mud-slinging is shamelessl­y politicall­y motivated, designed to cause maximum damage and embarrassm­ent to his hated Tory opponents.

But what about Adam and Charlotte Coxon and their daughter Francesca? Presumably Watson considers them collateral damage, fair game, casualties of war.

Serves them right for choosing to live in a flat above a disgusting ex-Tory MP on the estate of a thieving aristocrat, eh?

Watson could not have known that his crusade to discredit Conservati­ves would lead to a blameless young couple being threatened with having their baby taken into care.

But that’s not the point. The threat to the Coxons may have come from the police and social services, but it was incubated in the putrid climate Watson’s witch-hunt had created.

I’m no lawyer, so I don’t know whether Proctor could extend his £ 1 million lawsuit to include Watson. Or whether the Coxons can also sue for damages.

Nor do I know if Watson’s role in promoting Nick could warrant him, too, facing charges of conspiring to pervert the course of justice. What is certain is that he has abused parliament­ary privilege and played a key role in destroying the lives of a considerab­le number of entirely innocent men and their families.

Perhaps someone could dust off that arcane charge of committing ‘misconduct in public office’ which the authoritie­s have found so convenient in recent years.

If such a charge can be brought against civil servants who pass true informatio­n to journalist­s, then surely Watson — who has been spreading lies and smears while serving as an MP and Opposition deputy leader — must have a case to answer.

Watson’s day of reckoning is long overdue. It’s high time the Nonce Finder General was thrown on the bonfire he helped to stoke.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom