Scotland Yard photograph

Scotland Yard

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First episode date1953
Final episode date1961
Number of episodes39
Networks American Broadcasting Company
GenresCrime
Crime Fiction
Drama
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2361068
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About Scotland Yard


Scotland Yard is a series of 39 half-hour episodes produced by Anglo-Amalgamated. Produced between 1953 and 1961, they are short films, originally made to support the main feature in a cinema double-bill.

The Laird of Tomintoul: £5m police fraudster who lorded over village

The Laird of Tomintoul: £5m police fraudster who lorded over village
Nov 26,2023 9:21 pm

... Ill-gotten gainsAs a finance officer at Scotland Yard, Williams had been able to defraud the Met for more than a decade...

Senior Stephen Lawrence officer Ray Adams was corrupt, says secret Met report

Senior Stephen Lawrence officer Ray Adams was corrupt, says secret Met report
Nov 14,2023 8:41 am

... But the secret Scotland Yard report, now uncovered by the BBC, concluded he was corrupt and detailed how the 1980s investigation against him was manipulated...

Rishi Sunak condemns violence on day of protests in London

Rishi Sunak condemns violence on day of protests in London
Nov 11,2023 7:31 pm

... Scotland Yard said many of the counter-protesters arrested were connected to football hooliganism, and some of them had previous convictions for football violence...

London Gaza rally: Commemoration, protest, freedom of speech - and yes, politics

London Gaza rally: Commemoration, protest, freedom of speech - and yes, politics
Nov 8,2023 10:31 pm

... Sources at Scotland Yard said they wouldn t respond to the home secretary s remarks and their focus was on planning for events this weekend...

Senior Met officer Julian Bennett faces sack for refusing drug test

Senior Met officer Julian Bennett faces sack for refusing drug test
Oct 31,2023 4:51 pm

... His former flatmate Sheila Gomes accused him of using it daily before heading to work at New Scotland Yard...

Hate crimes in London see big jump, police say

Hate crimes in London see big jump, police say
Oct 20,2023 10:31 am

...By Dominic CascianiHome and legal correspondentThere has been a significant increase in hate crimes in London, predominantly antisemitic incidents, since the Hamas attacks on Israel, Scotland Yard says...

Man charged over racist comments at pro-Palestine rally

Man charged over racist comments at pro-Palestine rally
Oct 15,2023 12:21 pm

... Scotland Yard said on Saturday that 15 people had been arrested for alleged offences at the protest, including assaults on emergency workers and setting of fireworks in a public place...

Israel attack: London police patrols increase amid celebration claims

Israel attack: London police patrols increase amid celebration claims
Oct 8,2023 4:50 am

... Right to protest In a statement, Scotland Yard said: " We are aware of a number of incidents, including those that have been shared on social media, in relation to the ongoing conflict in Israel and the border with Gaza...

Torture charges against former Liberia leader's ex-wife dismissed

Sep 25,2023 7:51 am

Agnes Taylor (far right) faced allegations that she conspired to use rape to torture women during The War in 1990

Torture charges against the ex-wife of former Liberian president Charles Taylor have been dismissed at the Old Bailey.

Agnes Reeves-Taylor, 54, was charged in 2017 over a string of offences - Some involving children - during The West African country's Civil War .

The university lecturer, from Dagenham in East London , denied wrongdoing and

But after a technical appeal, judge Mr Justice Sweeney dismissed all charges.

Ms Reeves-Taylor was due to face a trial for torture and conspiracy to torture relating to events alleged to have taken place in 1990, during Liberia's bloody Civil War .

Up to 250,000 people are believed to have been killed during civil conflict between 1989 and 2003.

Ms Reeves-Taylor's and is currently serving a Life Sentence for war crimes in Sierra Leone .

However, Mr Justice Sweeney ruled that the case against Taylor's former wife could no longer continue.

He said there was a lack of evidence that the Taylor regime had governmental control over the areas where Ms Taylor's alleged crimes happened. This was a key test for conviction for torture in UK Law - and therefore Ms Reeves-Taylor had to be released from remand in prison.

What was Reeves-Taylor accused of? Agnes Reeves-Taylor previously worked as a lecturer and head of department at Coventry University

The Eight allegations Ms Reeves-Taylor faced concerned events in 1990 as the Civil War raged across Liberia.

She had denied she had been involved in any crimes.

In his ruling, Mr Justice Sweeney said: "I have asked myself in relation to each count whether there is sufficient evidence taken at its reasonable height upon which a jury could properly conclude that at the time and location of each offence, the NPFL [Charles Taylor 's forces] was exercising governmental function in the relevant area.

"In my view The Answer in each instance is clearly in the negative. "

Ms Reeves-Taylor smiled as she appeared in a video link from Bronzefield women's prison in Surrey to hear the ruling.

Detectives at the Metropolitan Police 's war crimes unit began looking into her background in 2014 after receiving allegations from investigators working for two justice campaign groups in West Africa .

The Business lecturer was then arrested and charged in June 2017.

Since then she has fought to have the case dropped - and her lawyers have previously told the court that she had no official position in Charles Taylor 's regime.

Ms Reeves-Taylor has lived in the UK since 1998 but her future is now uncertain.

War crimes, torture and British Law

While she is legally resident having claimed asylum, her application to settle permanently was refused under a Home Office rule that there were serious reasons to consider that she had, amongst other things, committed A Crime against peace, A War crime, or A Crime against humanity.

Her appeal against that decision remains outstanding.

Emmanuelle Marchard, of Civitas Maxima, one of the two campaign groups that had assisted the Scotland Yard investigation, said the end of the case was "heartbreaking" for those who wanted their stories to be heard in a British court.

She added: "However, as a legal organization, we recognize the legal achievements of this case. In this sense, we welcome the decision that the UK Supreme Court delivered in November, which confirmed as a legal principle that members of non-State armed groups may be prosecuted for crimes of torture under UK Law . "

And Charlie Loudon from Redress, a UK charity campaigning for war crimes justice, said while the result was "difficult" it was clear that armed groups such as ISIS and the Taliban could now be prosecuted for torture in a British court.

"The priority is that the UK continues to invest in prosecuting cases like this. For many victims across The World their only hope for justice is through a British court," Mr Loudon said.

A spokesperson for The Crown Prosecution Service said the "landmark case" had helped define the boundaries of torture Law in the UK.

In a statement, Bark & Co Solicitors, which represented the lecturer, said: "Agnes Reeves Taylor is now free to get on with her life and rejoin her loving family. She has been in prison since 1 June 2017, over two-and-a-half -years for A Crime she did not commit. At all times she has strenuously denied the allegations against her. "



dagenham, sierra leone, liberia

Source of news: bbc.com

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