Police spies stole identities of dead children
sickened | 03.02.2013 22:29 | Policing
(Guardian) Exclusive: Undercover officers created aliases based on details found in birth and death records, Guardian investigation reveals
Britain's largest police force stole the identities of an estimated 80 dead children and issued fake passports in their names for use by undercover police officers.
The Metropolitan police secretly authorised the practice for covert officers infiltrating protest groups without consulting or informing the children's parents.
The details are revealed in an investigation by the Guardian, which has established how over three decades generations of police officers trawled through national birth and death records in search of suitable matches.
Undercover officers created aliases based on the details of the dead children and were issued with accompanying identity records such as driving licences and national insurance numbers. Some of the police officers spent up to 10 years pretending to be people who had died.
The Met said the practice was not "currently" authorised, but announced an investigation into "past arrangements for undercover identities used by SDS [Special Demonstration Squad] officers".
Keith Vaz, the chairman of parliament's home affairs select committee, said he was shocked at the "gruesome" practice. "It will only cause enormous distress to families who will discover what has happened concerning the identities of their dead children," he said. "This is absolutely shocking."
The technique of using dead children as aliases has remained classified intelligence for several decades, although it was fictionalised in Frederick Forsyth's novel The Day of the Jackal. As a result, police have internally nicknamed the process of searching for suitable identities as the "jackal run". One former undercover agent compared an operation on which he was deployed to the methods used by the Stasi.
Two undercover officers have provided a detailed account of how they and others used the identities of dead children. One, who adopted the fake persona of Pete Black while undercover in anti-racist groups, said he felt he was "stomping on the grave" of the four-year-old boy whose identity he used.
"A part of me was thinking about how I would feel if someone was taking the names and details of my dead son for something like this," he said. The Guardian has chosen not to identify Black by his real name.
The other officer, who adopted the identity of a child who died in a car crash, said he was conscious the parents would "still be grief-stricken". He spoke on the condition of anonymity and argued his actions could be justified because they were for the "greater good".
Both officers worked for a secretive unit called the Special Demonstration Squad (SDS), which was disbanded in 2008.
A third undercover police officer in the SDS who adopted the identity of a dead child can be named as John Dines, a sergeant. He adopted the identity of an eight-year-old boy named John Barker, who died in 1968 from leukaemia. The Met said in a statement: "We are not prepared to confirm nor deny the deployment of individuals on specific operations."
The force added: "A formal complaint has been received which is being investigated by the DPS [Directorate for Professional Standards] and we appreciate the concerns that have been raised. The DPS inquiry is taking place in conjunction with Operation Herne's investigation into the wider issue of past arrangements for undercover identities used by SDS officers. We can confirm that the practice referred to in the complaint is not something that would currently be authorised in the [Met police]."
There is a suggestion that the practice of using dead infant identities may have been stopped in the mid-1990s, when death records were digitised. However, the case being investigated by the Met relates to a suspected undercover police officer who may have used a dead child's identity in 2003.
The practice was introduced 40 years ago by police to lend credibility to the backstory of covert operatives spying on protesters, and to guard against the possibility that campaigners would discover their true identities.
Since then dozens of SDS officers, including those who posed as anti-capitalists, animal rights activists and violent far-right campaigners, have used the identities of dead children.
One document seen by the Guardian indicates that around 80 police officers used such identities between 1968 and 1994. The total number could be higher.
Black said he always felt guilty when celebrating the birthday of the four-year-old whose identity he took. He was particularly aware that somewhere the parents of the boy would be "thinking about their son and missing him". "I used to get this really odd feeling," he said.
To fully immerse himself in the adopted identity and appear convincing when speaking about his upbringing, Black visited the child's home town to familiarise himself with the surroundings.
Black, who was undercover in the 1990s, said his operation was "almost Stasi-like". He said SDS officers visited the house they were supposed to have been born in so they would have a memory of the building.
"It's those little details that really matter – the weird smell coming out of the drain that's been broken for years, the location of the corner Post Office, the number of the bus you get to go from one place to another," he said.
The second SDS officer said he believed the use of the harvested identities was for the "greater good". But he was also aware that the parents had not been consulted. "There were dilemmas that went through my head," he said.
The case of the third officer, John Dines, reveals the risks posed to families who were unaware that their children's identities were being used by undercover police.
During his covert deployment, Dines had a two-year relationship with a female activist before disappearing from her life. In an attempt to track down her disappeared boyfriend, the woman discovered the birth certificate of John Barker and tried to track down his family, unaware that she was actually searching for a dead child.
She said she was relieved that she never managed to find the parents of the dead boy. "It would have been horrendous," she said. "It would have completely freaked them out to have someone asking after a child who died 24 years earlier."
The disclosure about the use of the identities of dead children is likely to reignite the controversy over undercover police infiltration of protest groups. Fifteen separate inquiries have already been launched since 2011, when Mark Kennedy was unmasked as a police spy who had slept with several women, including one who was his girlfriend for six years.
On Tuesday the select committee will hear evidence from lawyers representing the 11 women who are suing the Met after forming "deeply personal" relationships with the spies. Kennedy, who worked for a sister unit to the SDS, is not believed to have used the identity of a dead child.
Vaz said MPs were now likely to demand answers from the Met police about the use of children's identities. "My disbelief at some of the tactics used [by undercover police] has become shock as a result of these latest revelations. It is clear that inappropriate action has been taken by undercover police in the past. But this has now taken it to a new level," he said.
"The committee will need to seek answers from the Metropolitan police, to find out why they allowed these gruesome practices to happen."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/feb/03/police-spies-identities-dead-children
sickened
Comments
Hide the following 11 comments
Wow
03.02.2013 23:07
Open
Jail them
04.02.2013 12:25
Those using such obscene tactics - and those responsible for authorizing them, should be summarily kicked out of any police positions and jailed.
'Just doing my job' has never and never will be any excuse.
K. Harris
My big red Toyota.
04.02.2013 12:44
Seems odd to that one of these nark would celebrate the birthday of the child he has stolen and then described the feeling he had as 'odd'...most decent law abiding people would describe it as ''sickening'.
Still, it gives the Guardian and the BBC an opportunity to gobb off about how righteous they are and that helps them take ownership of the difference between right and wrong so I would imagine that makes the nark and their masters the heirarchy very happy indeed.
Well done everybody for taking control of your own stupidity and then claiming that somehow means something in the world you claim to inhabit.
anonymous
Morally bankrupt
04.02.2013 18:41
It's so objectionable you'd have to be a person of bankrupt morals to be able to go through with it, these are certainly not the sort of people that should be trusted with any sort of power. This is probably just the tip of the iceberg.
A vegan
video of 'Pete Black'
04.02.2013 20:17
seems to be showing contrition for the camera, so he can wriggle out of any 'public enquiry'.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/video/2013/feb/04/police-spy-how-we-stole-childrens-identities-video
M
What next?
05.02.2013 00:08
Could it get worse? Obviously. They were stealing the identities of dead children. I can't even begin to imagine the effect this must have on their parents. I can't even begin to understand what it must be like to bury your child. And then to discover that the death of your child has been exploited by some copper, all for the goal of oppressing peaceful campaigners. Difficult to write more as I'm so angry.
These bastards brought children in the world to use as a cover story. What sort of sick individual does that? How is the other parent and the child to cope with that?
To the victims - keep strong. You have more support than you realise and that support is wider than you realise. I was delighted to hear recently that a Daily Mail reading ex-Colonel that I know is as outraged about this as I am.
A N Other
sex abuse?,
05.02.2013 12:22
Many people have heard of the scam to set up another identity using that of a deceased person, no one should really have to be doing that especially the police.
As for accusations of sex abuse, hold on, thats a vserious accusation, unless someone was chained up, beaten up& or intimidated into sex, thats not true, these undercovers shouldnt be used against activists, in fact a senior ex serving officer in nottingham came out to the media in person repeatedly& said so.
perspective
sick and vile
05.02.2013 15:56
acab
Yes, sex abuse
05.02.2013 16:18
They seem to have found a cosy little niche where they could run around, amuse themselves and not do any of that police work stuff (which can get nasty at times), all the time relieving taxpayers of money to pay their wages. A nice little earner. They must have thought they had struck lucky, other than the risk of occasionally being beaten up by their colleagues (as Kennedy says he was). As well as the abuse of the victims there are serious questions about the competence of their managers.
"unless someone was chained up, beaten up& or intimidated into sex, thats not true"
It is not necessary to physically imprison or attack someone to be a sex abuser. There are more subtle ways to do so too. The days when the victim had to be "ideal" and abused by a stranger are over, society accepts to some extent the true extent of sex abuse. I have been careful to avoid the term rape, I'm not sure it is possible to go that far.
Let's see if the legal process manages to hold these criminalsto account. I suspect it will not, the police never lifted a finger against mass murderer Tony B Liar. Neither have the courts. The police lied about Hillsborough. Several legal bods failed to get to the bottom of the matter. It was only when there was a proper enquiry led by a bishop that the truth was accepted.
A N Other
Corrupt
05.02.2013 18:54
Filthy Pig
filhy rats
06.02.2013 03:34
ebe