Director of Public Prosecutions
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Director of Public Prosecutions | |
---|---|
Leader of | Crown Prosecution Service |
Abbreviation | DPP |
Leader of the Crown Prosecution Service. |
The Director of Public Prosecutions is an important job for the UK Deep state to control.
Activities
In 2019, documents emerged which revealed Peter Hayman escaped prosecution in 1978 after his solicitor personally lobbied the director of public prosecutions.[1]
Office Holders on Wikispooks
Name | From | To | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Max Hill | 1 November 2018 | ||
Alison Saunders | 1 November 2013 | 31 October 2018 | Despite the collapse of an unprecedented number of abuse cases during her tenure as Director of Public Prosecutions, she still insisted she had done a good job. Let Greville Janner go. |
Keir Starmer | 1 November 2008 | 1 November 2013 | |
Ken Macdonald | 2003 | 1 November 2008 | |
David Calvert-Smith | 1998 | 2003 | |
Barbara Mills | 1992 | 1998 | |
Allan Green | 1987 | 3 October 1991 | Decided not to prosecute Greville Janner for child sexual abuse. Resigned after being spotted curb crawling |
Thomas Hetherington | 1977 | 1987 | First head of CPS. |
Norman Skelhorn | 1964 | 1977 | |
Theobald Mathew | 1944 | 1964 | Longest serving DPP |
Related Quotation
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Kincora Boys' Home | “It is clear that there is a continuing cover-up of the unsavoury activities that took place at the Kincora boys' home in East Belfast during the early seventies. After studying a Royal Ulster Constabulary file, the Director of Public Prosecutions recently decided that there are to be no further prosecutions in connection with allegations of homosexuality involving civil servants, military officers and Ulster politicians.” | Stephen Dorril | September 1983 |
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