By Anon
It has been suggested that Lord Hutton might be a child abuser.
http://ukchildabuseinquiry.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/is-lord-brian-hutton-paedophile.html
“A letter written by Lord Hutton, who chaired the public inquiry into Dr Kelly’s death, shows he was asked to do the job just three hours after the Iraq weapons expert was found dead.
“At that point he had not been identified and no cause of death had been established.
“Hutton was contacted by Lord Falconer, Tony Blair’s former flatmate who was Lord Chancellor and played a key role in the events leading up to the Iraq War, and the handling of Dr Kelly’s death.”
At Edge of Nonceness – Political Paedos on Parade, we observe:
Brian Hutton and Kincora. Come on. Come on. Fall out of the woodwork, damn you.
Though [he is] a dour Presbyterian, there were spectacular acquittals of some very grisly IRA terrorist suspects when he was a judge in the Diplock era.
Belfast
Lord Hutton has been regarded as being a ‘fixer’ for the Powers-That-Be.
On 30 March 1994, as Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, Hutton dismissed Private Lee Clegg‘s appeal against his controversial murder conviction.
On 21 March 2002 Lord Hutton was one of four Law Lords to reject David Shayler‘s application to use a “public interest” defence as defined in section 1 of the Official Secrets Act 1989 at his trial.
Jimmy Savile at Belfast’s Europa hotel. SEX AT THE EUROPA HOTEL
Lord Hutton represented the Ministry of Defence at the inquest into the killing of civil rights marchers on “Bloody Sunday”.
Later, he publicly reprimanded Major Hubert O’Neil, the coroner presiding over the inquest, when the coroner accused the British Army of murder, as this contradicted the findings of the Widgery Tribunal.[3]
Hutton also came to public attention in 1999 during the extradition proceedings of former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet.
Pinochet had been arrested in London on torture allegations by request of a Spanish judge.
Five Law Lords, the UK’s highest court, decided by a 3-2 majority that Pinochet was to be extradited to Spain.
The verdict was then overturned by a panel of seven Law Lords, including Lord Hutton[4] on the grounds that Lord Hoffmann, one of the five Law Lords, had links to human rights group Amnesty International which had campaigned for Pinochet’s extradition.
In 1978 he defended Britain in the European Court of Human Rights when it was found guilty of torturing internees without trial.
He reportedly sentenced 10 men to 1,001 years in prison on the word of “supergrass” informer Robert Quigley, who was granted immunity in 1984.
Lord Hutton was appointed by the Blair government to chair the inquiry on the circumstances surrounding the death of scientist David Kelly.