Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 24, 2014
For the second time now, the head of the British government’s historical child abuse panel set up to investigate the links between politicians and child abuse has been exposed as being connected to the Jew being investigated.
Fiona Woolf is now facing demands to step down after she admitted dining with Leon Brittan five times, living on the same street as him and having sponsored his wife’s fun run.
These panels set up to investigate the government are a great way of showing how corrupt and nepotistic that level of society is, all of them are connected to the Jews involved in one way or another.
The only way to truly find someone capable of doing the job who is not connected to the people concerned would be to import a gentile from somewhere like Australia or New Zealand.
In a letter to the Home Secretary, Theresa May, Fiona Woolf, a lawyer, said that she had hosted three dinner events for Lord and Lady Brittan and dined twice at their home since 2008.Despite other connections with the couple, including living in the same street, she said this did not amount to a “close association” with the former minister.
But concern at her relationship with the couple is mounting, particularly as Ms Woolf was only appointed after the original choice to head the inquiry – Lady Butler-Sloss – was herself forced to step aside over Establishment and family links to Lord Brittan.
The peer faces questions about what actions he took, while serving as Home Secretary in the 1980s, after being handed a now-missing dossier by the late MP Geoffrey Dickens that included claims of the involvement of VIPs in a child sex ring. In her first public grilling since she was appointed head of the inquiry, Ms Woolf – the Lord Mayor of London, former Law Society president, and member of the RAC club – repeatedly denied that she was a member of the Establishment.
She said that she would rigorously seek answers for the “victim community” during the wide-ranging inquiry charged with looking into institutional abuse back to 1970.
But she faced further questions about the independence of her inquiry, after she revealed that she sent an original draft of the letter detailing her links with the Brittans to Home Office officials before it was passed to Ms May. The letter was published today on a new inquiry website.
Ms Woolf – a corporate lawyer with no history of child abuse investigations – revealed that she had not raised the issue of her links with Lord Brittan with Ms May until it first emerged in the media.