Daily Mail

VIP abuse: Now murder probe on brink of collapse

Yard won’t say it believes key witness’s claims

- By Stephen Wright Associate News Editor

A POliCE inquiry into alleged murders by ViP paedophile­s is in crisis as officers are no longer prepared to say that the key witness is ‘credible and true’.

An internal investigat­ion has been launched into the running of the £1million Operation Midland inquiry after police found no evidence that a string of senior Establishm­ent figures were responsibl­e for killing three boys in the 1970s and 1980s.

in an extraordin­ary volte-face, Scotland Yard will not now say publicly that it still believes the account of the ViP murders by the ‘main witness’ – known only as ‘Nick’.

Police plan to outline a new approach to the case as early as next week. This is likely to lead to the murder investigat­ion being scaled down.

last night the Metropolit­an Police suggested for the first time that the future of Operation Midland could be in doubt.

it said: ‘An internal review of Operation Midland was commission­ed on 8 April 2015. it is routine for investigat­ions of this nature to be reviewed. The review was carried out with the full report submitted on 25 August.

‘The product of this review is under considerat­ion. We are not prepared to comment on the review in any detail as Midland is an ongoing investigat­ion.’

Sceptics suggested the Met is preparing an exit strategy for the inquiry, which has seen the homes of d-day hero lord Bramall and former Tory MP harvey Proctor, also a suspect, raided by detectives and the pair interviewe­d under caution.

if, as expected, no charges are brought, Yard chiefs are expected to be dragged before a parliament­ary committee to answer allegation­s of pursuing a witch-hunt.

Operation Midland started nearly a year ago after Nick, 47, claimed he was abused by a murderous paedophile gang linked to the luxury dolphin Square apartment complex including former armed forces head lord Bramall, former prime minister Sir Edward heath, ex-home secretary lord Brittan and former heads of Mi5 and Mi6.

Nick claims he was abused at depraved sex ‘parties’ from the age of seven, and claims he witnessed horrific acts at dolphin Square – which is near Parlia- ment and is popular with politician­s and Establishm­ent figures – between 1975 and 1984. he claimed three boys were murdered. last december, weeks after the inquiry was launched, detective Superinten­dent Kenny Mcdonald, said his officers believed Nick to be a ‘credible and true’ witness.

Critics now say it was ridiculous for the senior Met officer to make such an assertion, before police had tested Nick’s account – let alone gathered any evidence. Asked yesterday whether his bosses supported his view, the Met pointedly dodged the question.

it said: ‘it is the role of the police to investigat­e, gather evidence and present that evidence to the Crown Prosecutio­n Service to be considered. if a case is put before the courts it is ultimately up to a jury to make decisions based on the evidence presented to them.’

Since Mr Mcdonald spoke out, detectives have found nothing to support Nick’s extraordin­ary allegation­s of ritualisti­c killings involving the top tier of the security estab-

‘Quaint and

historic’

lishment. As revealed in the Mail earlier this month, they have no idea who, if anyone, was killed, have found no bodies, have found no forensic evidence and have no reliable witnesses to back up the testimony of the main accuser.

One former senior Met officer predicted the case would cause ‘enormous reputation­al damage’ to the force and its boss, Sir Bernard hogan-howe. The doubts over the future of Operation Midland emerged as the daily Mail yesterday published an excoriatin­g critique of the police’s child abuse inquiries by former director of public prosecutio­ns lord Macdonald.

‘in this frankly disturbing climate, long- standing British traditions of justice have been cast aside,’ he wrote.

‘The presumptio­n of innocence before conviction is mislaid and any sense that the court should stand above the public pillory is regarded as quaint and historic.’

Earlier this week, it emerged that police had abandoned an inquiry into claims by one of the most outspoken ‘victims’ of the ViP child sex abuse scandal.

The man, known only as ‘darren’, said he was forced to attend sadistic sex parties at the dolphin Square complex. he said a girl may have been killed and named lord Brittan as one of his abusers.

But police confirmed that detectives had ‘fully investigat­ed’ the allegation­s and found them to be ‘unsubstant­iated’.

Comment – Page 16

 ??  ?? Named: Former home secretary Lord Brittan
Named: Former home secretary Lord Brittan
 ??  ?? Named: Former premier Sir Edward Heath
Named: Former premier Sir Edward Heath
 ??  ?? From yesterday’s Mail
From yesterday’s Mail

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom