Sunday, 17 July 2011

Police Get Sack Update

On the 2nd of June we wrote a post called 'POLICE GET SACK', not the first time that we have written about the police. [1] Well what do you know, front page news. Met chief faces questions over spa stay.
Sir Paul Stephenson accepted a 12,000 pound freebie while both he and Champneys spa employed ex-NOW  deputy editor Neil Wallis.

Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson has been under fire since it emerged, just hours after Neil Wallis was arrested in connection with phone-hacking inquiry, that he had hired Wallis as 1,000 a-day-advisor. 

Oh those were the days, its all coming out in the wash just like we told you that it would. The LORD God said that they would fall like a pack of cards, and I say Newscorp with it.

Abba also spoke about the PAPER earlier this year and we posted it at the time. 

Rebekah Brooks resigns and is then arrested. [3] Miliband calls for the break up of the Murdoch empire.

I knew what would happen when the RAB and Michael M Mauldin became a combined force. Divine justice is sweet. When the corporates take on the light of pure intention, they receive the full force of the light of the cosmos and its spiritual law. They are now reaping what they have sown. 

At the same time there are sackings going on in Egypt. A good clear out as begun. 

1 comment:

Eliakim said...

Good news

Met Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson quits

Sir Paul Stephenson announced his resignation in a short, filmed statementContinue reading the main story

Phone-hacking scandal

Brooks arrested by hacking police
Call to cut back Murdoch empire
What next for News Corp?
Q&A: Phone-hacking scandal
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson has resigned following the phone hacking scandal.

Britain's most senior police officer has faced criticism for hiring former News of the World executive Neil Wallis - who was questioned by police investigating hacking - as an adviser.

Sir Paul said his links to the journalist could hamper investigations.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14180043