JerryChicken wrote:I have mentioned this point several pages back and several times since, Mitchell has his evidence in the public domain that he was apparently the victim of a police conspiracy.
The point that you are swerving is that its only the second installment of the story, he and his team are now very careful about NOT mentioning what was actually said on the fateful night and so is David Cameron for he does not mention it either - the public domain evidence of what happened on that night cannot be the only evidence that Cameron was presented with for you would not insist on your Chief Whips resignation on the strength of that alone.
The possible conspiracy and police cover up is the main story now but you do not seem to realise this.
Your point about what was actually said is a red herring. Mitchell has not been charged with any offense or indeed has not been cautioned either. It was a police officer who leaked the police log which was supposed to record what was said. Mitchell was on his bike at the time and was not making notes. The original issue was about three phrases that were in the leaked police log which Mitchell has consistently and strenuously denied. He underwent a 45 minute question and answer session with three police officers from the Federation at which he fully and firmly answered ALL of their questions.
What else is there to know about what was said? Other than Mitchell asking for the gates to be opened and the police saying "Ello Ello Ello what ave we got ere then.... etc etc"
Because there is no actual recording of the conversation the politically leaked log to the Sun hit the headlines and of course mud sticks, to the glee of his political opponents.
JerryChicken wrote:None of which has helped him get his job back, why did he resign and why did Cameron accept so quickly on the strength of three poor quality non-audio videos that show a different storyboard to what was described, is Cameron so in hock to Murdoch that he bows to one of his news rags so eagerly and swiftly ?
I have explained why he resigned in detail and the crucial effect of the police Federation false briefing on TV which said Mitchell had not explained himself fully and called for him to resign. The negative political spin of this was enormous and he had at that stage no choice but to resign.
JerryChicken wrote:All of which is the police conspiracy element and does not address the issue of what was said, and what happened in those forty ro so seconds that caused Cameron to accept the resignation so swiftly, christ, this is a Prime Minister who leaves his kids in a pub, you'd think he wouldn't be all that worried about a Minister who uses one "F" word in a sentence after a long day in office.
See above reasons.
Mitchell resigned on 19 October. He stated that "it has become clear to me that whatever the rights and wrongs of the matter I will not be able to fulfill my duties as we both would wish. [...] Nor is it fair to continue to put my family and colleagues through this upsetting and damaging publicity". He continued to maintain that he had not used the word "pleb".
JerryChicken wrote:Again, you speak of the conspiracy and not of the actual event, we've covered the conspiracy from top to bottom and most of the evidence is in the public arena, the pertinent evidence of what was recorded at the gate is not for no audio recording exists in the public domain.
Again the consiracy has overtaken the actual event and is far more serious than the original allegations. If there is a recording of the conversation at the gate it would be in the police hands and if they have not released it this would be one more nail in the police coffin on this issue.
JerryChicken wrote:You also mention again that most of the resultant outcry came from The Sun, do you think that Cameron jumped to attention when Murdoch shouted his name and started stirring things ?
No.
JerryChicken wrote:And finally you reach the pertinent part.
I've done a Google streetview of Downing Street, you should do too, its quite revealing really if only for the fact that the Google car was allowed through the gate and a short way up Downing Street.
The streetview shots clearly show the three cctv camera positions which supplied the extremely cheap amateur tapes, two are on the Whitehall facing wall of the two government buildings that are adjecent to the security gate and the other is actually on the wall of the security lodge 20 or 40 yards into Downing Street, unless they are very covert there appears to be no other security coverage on the main entrance to the seat of government , I'm trying not to believe that this could be the case or that we rely totally on the type of cctv image that, if you'd produced them on your home door entry camera you'd be taking the kit back to Maplins for a refund, but I'm starting to believe that the public domain films could be the be all and end all of the protection offered to the whole of the cabinet when they meet at No 10 every week.
So are you saying your much repeated theory, that there are secret recordings hidden in the PM's bottom drawer, is now wrong?
Police logs and the supporting email had both claimed that "several members of the public" were present, that they had heard the exchange and were "visibly shocked". The email alleged that "Other people/tourists standing with us were also shocked and some were even, inadvertently, filming the incident". However, the CCTV footage shows only a single member of the public stopping to look on from an otherwise empty section of street immediately outside the gates.
No attempt by you to malign the exisiting CCTV tapes can contest the absence of these 'invisible shocked members of the public.