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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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- 267 -<br />

and a further £1m of gold was later recovered from [2] , believe it or not, at the Old Lady, alias the Bank of<br />

England, after it had re-entered the legal market! Three tons of the gold, worth around £30 million at<br />

today‘s 2011 prices, is still missing. Detectives trying to untangle Noye‘s network of corruption, now<br />

believe that at least one prominent MP was on his pay roll, and who that is, we‘d love to know.<br />

The Independent newspaper in the 14th April 2000 claimed to have seen documents which showed that<br />

Noye; ―...has an association with an MP by the name of S---. They have been seen at Windsor Works [a<br />

business owned by Noye] and it is alleged they have a business association.‖ [5]<br />

Such was the apprehension and nervousness created by the extent of Noye‘s corruption of the police<br />

that during the investigation into Stephen Cameron‘s murder, officers were given around-the-clock<br />

protection from their own colleagues. Others even changed their telephone numbers. The Noye file on the<br />

case was restricted to less than a dozen senior officers. In 1977 after being arrested by Scotland Yard for<br />

receiving stolen goods, Noye joined the Hammersmith Freemason‘s Lodge in west London [5] . He was<br />

proposed and seconded by two Police Officers. He eventually rose to be the Master of the Lodge with the<br />

support of the membership of which the police made up a large proportion. Other Freemasons included<br />

dealers in gold and other precious metals. A little while later Noye was being helped out of an arrest by a<br />

detective who was a fellow Freemason.<br />

One of Noye‘s police contacts was prepared to intervene on his behalf not just with fellow officers, but<br />

other organisations as well. The detective approached a Customs officer investigating Noye in the early<br />

80‘s and pressured him to; ―Lay off‖. - For the M25 murder trial, Kenny Noye got free legal aid worth<br />

around £250,000 to the Freemason solicitor and barristers who represented him. [2] His eventual appeal,<br />

too, will be underwritten by the taxpayer and another good screw for the judicial boys and girls in their<br />

fine wigs, stockings and black capes, who love getting their hands on a dirty pair ‗briefs‘.<br />

I too was once represented via legal-aid, and the solicitor representing me, blatantly boasted to another<br />

colleague that my case had almost paid-off the mortgage on her house. It‘s not as if it‘s the public, or<br />

anyone else who might unfortunately be in need of legal aid, who charge and demand such extortionate<br />

fees, and if it wasn‘t for the greed of all those involved in the Judicial Industrial Complex to begin with, -<br />

then the taxpayer wouldn‘t have to be expected to foot such astronomical bills in the first place.<br />

[1] "Road rage killer Kenneth Noye 'was the victim of an unfair ..." .<br />

[2] "The mystery of Kenneth Noye's gold .<br />

[3] "New Vision Online: Awori's rival appeals to Supreme." .<br />

[4] "Road rage killer Kenneth Noye could walk free from jail in ..." .<br />

[5] "Noye's tangled web of corruption." .<br />

Freemason‟s - It‟s Not Difficult to Ruin a Man<br />

Extract from Stephen Knight‘s book; The Brotherhood. – Christopher, a senior Whitehall Civil<br />

Servant and Freemason explained that Masonry‘s nationwide organisation of men from most walks of<br />

life provided one of the most efficient private intelligence networks ever imaginable. Private<br />

information on anybody in the country could normally be accessed very rapidly through endless<br />

permutations of Masonic contacts - police, magistrates, solicitors, bank managers, Post Office staff,<br />

[very useful in supplying copies of a man‘s mail, and especially if you say the ―target‖ is a sex offender –<br />

Julian Assange comes to mind [1] ], doctors, government employee, bosses of firms and nationalised<br />

industries etc., and a dossier of personal data could be built up on anybody very quickly.<br />

When the major facts of an individual‘s life were known, areas of vulnerability would become<br />

apparent. Perhaps he is in financial difficulties; perhaps he has some social vice - if married he might<br />

retain a mistress or have proclivity for visiting prostitutes; perhaps there is something in his past he<br />

wishes keep buried, some guilty secret, a criminal offence [easily obtainable through Freemason police<br />

of doubtful virtue], or other blemish on his character: all these and more could be discovered via the<br />

wide-ranging Masons network of 600,000 contacts [2] [this number has perhaps increased by at least a<br />

third since this article was originally written in 1984, though it‘s normally accepted by the UGLE that<br />

there are 400,000 members in the UK, though as I say, I believe the figure to be much higher. Perhaps<br />

Knight was also referring to other Freemasons further abroad, or other affiliations such as the Rotarians,

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