Max Clifford
This is a follow up to the article "Pedophilia
At The BBC Comes To Light Just As The Site Predicted With Arrests In
Jimmy Savile Scandal" where the Judiciary Report broke
the story first regarding pedophiles at the BBC, due to
criminal conduct
buy Madonna and her pedophilic Kabbalah Center.
Beginning in 2009, the Judiciary Report began making claims that
there is a problem at the BBC regarding select people and pedophilia (Top
BBC Executive Charged As Pedophile, Another
BBC Exec Busted, Madonna
Violates The Privacy Of Minors
and Aisha v. FBI).
In 2013, PR agent Max Clifford was arrested in the
aforementioned BBC Jimmy Savile scandal. This week Clifford was
found guilty on 8 counts of “indecent assault” on minors, as young
as age 11, under the Metropolitan Police’s Operation Yewtree. Well
done to the police, prosecution, judge and jury on the conviction.
The Judiciary Report would like to commend the brave
victims who came forward and gave their testimony in the case. It
could not have been easy for them reliving the trauma for court
testimony, but it has helped other victims and means Clifford has
been brought to justice, sparing other kids from abuse.
STORY SOURCE
Max Clifford trial: public relations guru guilty of eight
counts of indecent assault
2:14PM BST 28 Apr 2014 - Britain's best known public
relations supremo becomes first to be convicted as a result of
Operation Yewtree, the police inquiry set up in the wake of the
Jimmy Savile scandal. Max Clifford, the public relations guru, has
been found guilty of indecently assaulting teenage girls over nearly
20 years. Clifford, 71, is facing jail after an eight-week trial in
which he faced 11 counts of indecent assault against seven
teenagers. He was convicted of eight charges, cleared of two and the
jury was unable to reach a verdict on one other.
Clifford became the first high-profile defendant to
be convicted as a result of Scotland Yard’s Operation Yewtree, which
was set up in the wake of the scandal surrounding Jimmy Savile, the
BBC entertainer who was unmasked as Britain’s worst paedophile
following his death in 2011. The outcome will go some way towards
restoring the Crown Prosecution Service’s reputation following
widespread criticism over its decision to take a series of public
figures to trial only for them to be acquitted on all charges.