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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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[2] "Bilderberg Announces 2008 Conference". businesswire.com. BusinessWire. 2008.<br />

http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20080605006246&newsLang=en.<br />

[3] "FREEMASONRY PROVEN TO WORSHIP LUCIFER.".<br />

Worshipful Master - Kenneth Noye<br />

- 266 -<br />

It‘s been shown how rewarding being a Freemason can be and an excellent illustration of how someone<br />

who enthusiastically adopts crime as a profession can soon accumulate enormous sums of wealth and<br />

funds, but only with the help from the boys in the brotherhood, go it alone as a crook, then you‘ve no<br />

chance. Noye was involved in laundering the proceeds of the Brinks Mat robbery in 1983-4, when 6,800<br />

[1] gold ingots were stolen from the Brink‘s-Mat high security warehouse in Heathrow on the 26th<br />

November 1983. [2] While he was being investigated for his part in the robbery, he stabbed undercover<br />

police officer John Fordham, who had been observing Noye from the grounds of his home, and died as a<br />

result of the stabbing. Though Noye was acquitted of murder on the grounds of self-defence, he was<br />

sentenced to 14 years in prison in 1986 for handling the stolen gold. He was released from prison in 1994,<br />

having served 8 years of his sentence.<br />

Two years later in 1996, Noye became involved in an argument with 21-year-old motorist Stephen<br />

Cameron on the M25 motorway during what was described at the time as a ‗road rage‘ incident, but has<br />

also been suggested that the real reason was a dispute over a drug deal, Cameron was a small-time drug<br />

dealer who allegedly owed Noye money. During the fight, Noye allegedly stabbed and killed Cameron<br />

with a knife. Noye fled the country, sparking a massive police hunt, and in 1998 he was tracked down in<br />

Spain. Cameron‘s 17-year old girlfriend Daniella Cable, who had witnessed the killing, was secretly flown<br />

out to positively identify him, in which she did. Despite the obvious risks involved, she opted to testify<br />

against Noye, who at his trial in 2000 again pleaded self-defence. He was found guilty and was convicted<br />

of murder and given a life sentence. Cable was given a new identity under the witness protection<br />

programme.<br />

It‘s interesting to note and bear in mind how easy it is for people in general to be able to adopt new<br />

identities and start completely fresh lives, as it‘s been suggested this could well have been the case for<br />

some covert and under cover secret service men and women, who may well have acted as being passengers<br />

on the alleged four flights on 9/11, and who then mingled with some of the genuine passengers/victims,<br />

before disappearing from the scene and leaving the ―real passengers‖ to perish on Flight 93. I cover this<br />

subject extensively in my next book about 9/11.<br />

Another eyewitness, Alan Decabral, declined protection and was shot dead in his car in Ashford, Kent<br />

on the 5th October 2000. However, police sources stated that he was himself involved in drug and gunsmuggling,<br />

and that his death was detrimental to Noye‘s forthcoming appeal, which would have<br />

concentrated on discrediting him.<br />

Noye was a police informant for many years, and he was also a Freemason, a member of the<br />

Hammersmith Lodge in London. The trial judge [not a Freemason by any chance was he?], at Noye‘s trial<br />

for murder did not make any recommendation as to how long Noye should spend in prison, and it is<br />

unknown whether the Home Secretary or Lord Chief Justice has ever set a minimum term. But the then<br />

Home Secretary David Blunkett then set a minimum term before Noye may apply for parole of 16 years in<br />

2002. Though in 2007 Noye challenged the Criminal Cases Review Commission‘s [CCRC] decision not<br />

to refer his case to the Appeal Court as ―legally flawed‖. On the 7th March 2008, Noye took another step<br />

toward a fresh legal challenge, when Lord Justice Richards and Mrs Justice Swift granted permission for a<br />

one-day judicial review hearing, covering the CCRC‘s October 2006 decision not to send his case back to<br />

the court of appeal.<br />

Then on the 14th October 2010, Noye was granted a fresh appeal. The CCRC has referred the case to<br />

the Court of Appeal because of questions over the pathologist‘s evidence. [3] The CCRC said: ―Having<br />

carried out a thorough review of Mr Noye‘s case, that has included consideration of the pathology<br />

evidence at trial and new expert evidence… the commission has decided to refer Mr Noye‘s conviction to<br />

the Court of Appeal on the grounds that there is a real possibility that the court may quash the conviction<br />

as unsafe‖ [4] .<br />

I must admit I‘ve often wondered what might have happened to all the gold. The police reckon around<br />

half of the treasure was melted down and turned into jewellery, or sold back to the original owners of the<br />

gold, - bullion dealers Johnson Matthey. Eleven bars of the gold were found in 1985 and melted down,

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