Thursday, July 05, 2012
Never Post Pissed.
I am.
But eh ?
Me - Reread this in the future and get bit into your head.
'People are crazy, do crazy things and rarely make sense.'
Grace may fairclough, though your real name is nelson,
(look at your birth certificate)
you appear to have inherited your mothers brains and her heart.
I now let you go completely - and i am free.
For those who have supported the mother ?
May God grant you all you deserve.
r - let it go...
no comments please - just prayers and positive thought.
MURDOCH: Leveson: Matt Sprake ex -met - part of his agency’...
MURDOCH: Leveson: Matt Sprake ex -met - part of his agency’...:
Police
and other public officials are still being offered thousands of pounds
for information about the private lives of celebrities, The Independent can reveal.
An investigation by Exaro, the investigative website, www.exaronews.com,
found that officials such as probation and prison officers are being
targeted by a former Metropolitan Police forensics and surveillance
officer now running a news agency selling pictures and stories to
newspapers.
This
is despite the current police investigation into the alleged bribing of
public officials by journalists, and the Leveson inquiry into media
ethics.
Today
a prison officer and two other people were arrested in connection with
the police probe into corrupt payments to officials by journalists.
So
far a total of 37 people have been arrested in connection with
Operation Elveden, the investigation into suspected corrupt payments to
public officials.
But
despite this Newspics, a press agency based in Shenfield, Essex, still
appears to be offering four-figure sums for ‘scoops’ through its
website.
The
agency claims endorsements from the picture desk of The People, the
red-top Sunday tabloid, OK magazine, the celebrity title, and the Press
Association, the national news agency. The Independent has published legitimate photographs taken by Newspics photographers.
“Do
you know of a story, a scandal, something that made you interested,
chances are that a newspaper will pay for that information. Do you know
where a prominent person is living or what they get up to, is a
celebrity having an affair that you know of, do you know anyone who’s on
reality TV? You can earn yourself good cash now by calling.
It
then adds: “All sorts of people have been paid thousands of pounds by
us for giving information that leads to a picture being sold or a story
being written, are you a doorman, police worker, civil servant,
probation officer, prison officer, nurse? Make some extra money without
anyone ever knowing…”
Newspics
is run by Matt Sprake a former forensics and surveillance officer for
Scotland Yard who carried out anti-terrorism duties during his 10-year
police career.
Sprake runs the agency with his wife, Marion, a banker who has been working for Barclays.
He claims to have a network of 35 photographers, and a discreet studio
“just 20 minutes from the City of London” for celebrity client
portraits.
Part
of his agency’s website is devoted to its “surveillance photography”,
offering a menu of services, including “covert foot follows”, “covert
vehicle follows” and ”remote technical surveillance”.
“You can utilise the very same skills that are used by the security services and the police,” clients are promised.
“Our
surveillance team has worked for and been trained by various police and
government surveillance agencies within the UK. If you need it
photographed without being seen, we are your experts.”
When
contacted by Exaro, Sprake defended himself, saying that he had never
paid a police officer or “anyone in authority” for information.
He
said that he had wanted to remove the wording discovered by Exaro, but
he was unable to do so because the website was “broken”.
“I
wish I could change this website,” he said. “It was by three different
companies and when one of them went bust, we could not change the
website. It was a pain.”
But
he told Exaro that he exercised caution with tip-offs: “I would not
touch anything that is operational or compromising. We had people
contact us on stories like the royal family, for example. My first
question was, ‘How do you know that?’
“‘Well, I have heard it in a briefing.’
“‘Sorry, can’t touch it.’”
On the social-media website, Myspace, he puts his income at between £100,000 and £150,000 a year.
Sprake
continued: “I used to work for a specialist department at the Met in
Scotland Yard looking, basically, at terrorism work. The level I was
working at involved very covert stuff.
“I
got out after 10 years. You are limited on the number of years you are
allowed to do, so I am now doing other work. But I have still got all
that training that is very handy to have.”
He says that police officers contact him to “moan” about their conditions.
He also claims that his agency is “monitored by some departments in the Met for where some of our stories have come from.”
“You have got to be very careful whenever you get information from a police officer.
They are not going to be paid because it is obviously illegal.
The story will only be put forward if they have obtained that information through something that would be general information.
“If
they ring up and say I have seen this bit of paper and this story is
going on, well, we do not touch that because that would be highly
illegal. So we are very careful.”
He said that most of the agency’s press work came directly from newspapers rather than information given by sources.
Mr
Sprake said that he “adhered” to the code of conduct of the Press
Complaints Commission (PCC), which is a claim made by his agency on its
website in relation to its surveillance work.
However,
a PCC spokesman said that the code did not apply to picture agencies or
freelance photographers. “This highlights the same issue that Lord
Leveson has already raised: whether agency photographers or the
paparazzi, as well as editors, should be covered by the code.”
Exaro's full report of the investigation can be found by clicking here.
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