The Everard murder case has the whiff of the Krypteia about it

When Wayne Couzens went to court for the first time on Saturday, March 13th, the magistrate asked the prosecutor to state details of the matter for which all there were present. Thus it was that a very important fact in the case of the abduction and murder of Sarah Everard became public, although alas known only to a minority who would happen across, More...

The Sarah Everard Disappearance; An Introduction: The strong sense of something awry
There are reasons to believe that all is not as it seems with the news story of the moment, which is not the ridiculous race-baiting psyop emerging out of appearances on a TV talk show by royal periphery, but the More...

State Crime And Police Cover Up; A Reappraisal Of Infamous Cases: Twickenham Attacks; Part Three: McDonnell’s silent assassination
The Metropolitan Police say that they received a tip-off that Levi Bellfield owned a Ford Courier, and this is how he became the suspect in the Delagrange murder case (see the second part of this mini series). That More...

State Crime And Police Cover Up; A Reappraisal Of Infamous Cases: Twickenham Attacks; Part Two: getting Delagrange to the killing zone
On August 19th, 2004, 22-year-old Amelie Delagrange was attacked as she crossed Twickenham Green. The strange thing about the case is the very little, incongruous, and conflicting information that was put into the More...

State crime and police cover up; a reappraisal of infamous cases: Sarah Payne
If the reader has never before thought about it, please now consider the remarkable similarities between false flag terror and high profile crime cases. The instant beatification of the victim and the victim’s More...

First anonymous Andy is stabbed, then he isn’t; naturally, the Fishmongers’ Hall inquests stink already
Following the publication here at FBEL of some of the transcript from the review hearing of the Fishmongers’ Hall inquests , which will be investigating the deaths of three people in the supposed 29th November More...

National Action Series; Part Nine: They don’t like it up ‘em! The suspicious activity of (“Corporal Jack”) Jones†
At the retrial of four people charged with being members of a proscribed organisation contrary to section 11 of the Terrorism Act 2000 (National Action), Alice Cutter, one of the defendants, evidently suffered from More...

National Action Series; Part Eight: Once, never a member, next, Roman saluting on the steps of Leeds Town Hall
Christopher Lythgoe, jailed for 8 years; Matthew Hankinson, jailed for 6 years; Alex Deakin, jailed for 8 years; Mikko Vehvilainen, jailed for 8 years; Nathan Pryke, jailed for 5 years, 5 months; Darren Fletcher, More...

National Action Series; Part Seven: the UK Government’s pyrrhic victory precariousness
In March, when four people were convicted (with jail sentences handed down in June) for being members of the so-called proscribed terrorist organisation, National Action, it was a news landscape incident that was More...

Covid-19: utterly false perception of great danger created by letting some old and ill people die
While one or two articles are due on the topic of a possible link between prescription drugs for high blood pressure and related conditions, and levels of ACE2 in a body, with the intuitive assumption being made More...