KEEP IT CLEAN

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“Football has to rely on the game being clean. That’s what maintains interest, whether it’s with our business partners or the fans themselves.” SFA chief executive Stewart Regan

Earlier this month the SFA launched in conjunction with the SPFL, PFA Scotland, the Managers and Coaches Association and independent charity Crimestoppers, THE ‘Keep It Clean’ initiative.

Let me just say that this is the way, a more holistic way, the more adult and intelligent way to deal with what appears to be a huge problem with rule breaking and Gambling in football, than the way that Compliance officer Vincent Lunny, who is becoming more and more a joke figure in the world of Scottish football had of tackling the issue of Footballers betting on games.

You may remember dear reader the Lunny way from this blog

ALWAYS BET ON BLACK

ALWAYS BET ON BLACK

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That way was to single out a Rangers player again this time Ian Black and ignore the evidence out there of the many other footballers who like a gamble on football.

This I found by a simple little social experiment by simply searching for a player in the same league as Rangers on Twitter.

The result returned evidence of apparent betting on football games by Ayr Uniteds Michael Moffat

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who probably from the evidence from this blog was dragged up before the SFA beaks.

Now it gives me no joy that the likes of Ian Black and Michael Moffat where made examples off. In the case of Moffat I would be more worried about his apparent love and glorification for Irish Terrorists, because when it comes to pros gambling on Fitbaw….

THEY ARE THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG!

But is that what the once world wide respected SFA is conducting its business now? on tit bits from overheard conversation in Taxi cabs and bitter Gambling firm employees with a hatred of a certain team?

Thats the only problem I have with the new ‘Keep It Clean’ initiative.

It is the 24 hr hot line. No doubt the internet bampots have the number tattooed on their forearm.

What I do like is the man they have brought in to spearhead it. An ex-Strahclyde Finest, former superintendent Peter McLaughlin. Though I dont know why he had to replace David Brand a former Strathclyde Police officer himself?

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Maybe it was his head that had to roll for the Lunny fiasco?

Who knows?

But I like the cut of this man former superintendent Peter McLaughlin jib, to Keep Scottish Football clean.

Looking at his C.V you will see that not only was he a high ranking Police officer, he also Compliance Manager for Disclosure Scotland.

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For those of you that don’t know what disclosure is, its a an Executive Agency of the Scottish Government that sorts of looks into the background of employees and gives that information for employers and voluntary sector organisations.

Well maybe former superintendent Peter McLaughlin could look into this gentleman Jack McGinn’s past

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From the Daily Record  19th of August 1996

The secret deal which protected a sex pervert for five years was struck in an American airport cafe.

Hours before Celtic Boys’ Club were due to fly home, five men sat around a table at bustling Boston airport.

There they sealed the shameful pact that has haunted them since.

Frank Cairney – the man who WAS Celtic Boys’ Club – agreed to resign and a dingy chapter in Celtic’s history was born.

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A young player had claimed he had been touched sexually by Cairney while in bed.

Now the other four men who were part of that airport deal, former chairman Jim McNally and officials Bill Gilfillan, John Gallacher and Willie Hampson, have decided to speak about it for the first time.

They talked to the Daily Record which last week lifted the lid off the sex abuse scandal at the boys club.

Jim McNally, speaking for all four, said: “Apart from sworn statements to Celtic and the police, none of us has ever spoken about what happened.

“It has been painful and has taken a great toll on all of our lives.”

Players had been staying in the homes of ex-pat Celtic fans in Kearney, New Jersey, in 1991 for a showpiece tournament. Two were living with exiled Scot, Pat Brannigan.

Jim said: “Pat Brannigan told me that a boy had made a serious allegation against Frank Cairney. I interviewed the boy after Pat Brannigan came for me very early in the morning.

“Pat and his wife Diane were there. I asked a second boy who was also staying at Pat’s house to leave the room.

“The first lad was very distraught. He repeated the allegation of a sexual nature against Frank Cairney.

“He said it happened in Pat Brannigan’s basement where the boys were sleeping.

“Frank had been staying at a hotel nearby. But it wouldn’t have been unusual for him to be in the house because he always went around to where the boys were staying, to make sure they were all right.

“Initially I found the whole thing hard to believe. I had never experienced anything like that before in my life.

“I honestly thought and hoped it was horseplay that had got out of hand a wee bit. Immediately I talked to the other three officials.

“I told them what had happened. We were visiting a theme park that day and I got the senior players together and told them what had happened. They already knew.

“I asked them if they would keep their eye on this lad until we got things sorted out.”

He continued: “We decided that we would talk to Frank Cairney and we did. He very forcibly, strenuously denied the allegation. He was very angry. He said nothing happened.

“While we were talking about it, Pat Brannigan arrived and said he had spoken to his lawyer and the police.

“I also spoke to Pat’s lawyer about the procedure and what we would do.

“I asked him what would happen if the boy made a formal complaint. And what he told me was the real shocker of the whole thing.

“He said that Frank Cairney would be charged and that the boy, and the other boy who was staying in the house, would be put in protective custody.”

Distraught Jim and the officials were terrified to bring in police in case the boys were taken away from them.

He said:”I was absolutely shattered about that. There was no way I could have landed at Glasgow Airport and told two sets of parents that their boys weren’t there.

“After that meeting I immediately contacted Celtic, but it was the Glasgow Fair and I had a terrible job trying to get a hold of people.

“I tried Jack McGinn, Jimmy Farrell (Celtic directors), but could not get them. I then phoned Sean McMullen and Bobby Creilly, two other boys’ club officials.

“I told them what had happened and I told them of my fear that the boys would be taken into protective custody and that this wasn’t for me or even the boy to decide what they should do. I felt his parents should make that decision.

“This was the Thursday and we were due home on the Sunday.

“We also booked three tickets to be held just in case the boy wanted home early.

“I spoke to the lad at regular intervals and he opted to stay at Brannigan’s. He seemed to be coping.

“He continued to play in the tournament. I’ve always admired the boy and how he coped with all of this.

“He was only 16 at the time. He actually started officially playing for Celtic on the Monday after he returned home.”

Jim McNally didn’t call in the police, but Pat Brannigan may have brought them in. Jim said: “If the police interviewed the boy I wasn’t aware of it. I think Pat Brannigan felt we weren’t handling it correctly. But the reason we handled it the way we did was because I didn’t believe it was up to me to decide what to do.

“Eventually there was a meeting with the boy’s parents which Creilly and McMullen had been trying to arrange .

“We left Kennedy airport, New York, on Sunday, but still there was no word. We stopped over at Boston and this is where it all happened.

“There was a message at Boston for me to phone home.

“I was told the meeting had concluded and the outcome was that the boy’s parents were quite happy to leave the matter in Celtic’s hands, provided Frank Cairney resigned from the boys’ club on returning.

“Myself, Willie Hampson, Bill Gilfillan and John Gallacher, the four officials, met in the cafe at Boston airport and we told Frank Cairney what we had been advised.

“He agreed to resign when he went home. We arrived at Glasgow and went straight to the park.

“Jack McGinn organised a meeting at 11am with Frank Cairney and a meeting with me at 2pm.

“At that meeting, he gave me a copy of Frank Cairney’s resignation which said he had resigned because he had got promotion in his company and the pressure of work.

“We were still concerned that we weren’t quite covered, so we individually consulted lawyers and collectively spoke to a QC for advice.

“He asked if we could produce any more boys who could quote incidents from anywhere at any time. But we knew we couldn’t do that.”

The deal they had to be part of has left them sad, jaundiced men. All have since left Celtic Boys’ Club.

Jim added: “The boy told me what happened. I cannot say what happened.

“But the parents wanted the boy to get on with his career and get on with his life, once they had been given assurances he was coping.”

He added: “We were never sworn to secrecy. The boy asked us not to talk about it and we respected his wishes.”

Jack McGinn as honorary vice-presidents is on Scottish FA Council. Its a debating forum of the game’s governing body. It is representative of all aspects of Scottish football, with members invited from the Scottish Premier League, Scottish Football League, six Affiliated National Associations and nine Affiliated Associations as well as the senior leagues.

These members are elected in a two-year cycle and are responsible for raising issues of national and regional importance.

The thought that this man Jack McGinn is entilted to and is still allowed to influence all aspects of Scottish football sickens my stomach and chills me to my bones!

Maybe if Strathclyde Police superintendent Peter McLaughlin wants to really cleanse the game he could start by looking at this, and I quote from the Daily Record “dingy chapter in Celtic’s history”

If he really wants to KEEP IT CLEAN!

 

 

 

RANGERS TAX CASE UNCOVERED

Moykill Bloom

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From David Leggat’s blog

Monday, 11 February 2013

BBC MAN, DALY AND THE POLICE PROBE INTO DUFF AND PHELPS

A very interesting piece that got Mark Daly tweeting

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a bit like the Celtic “Preposterous” Spokesperson after the Scottish press eventually had to recognise the Celtic Labour Land deal E.C story after some pesky Rangers fans forced their hand.

but it was not the main story that caught my eye it was one of Leggos little subheadings at the bottom that caught my eye.

AND……

LIES damned lies, statistics and the figures being trumpeted in the Herald about how many folk read Odious Creep on line.

All four categories fall under the banner of fiction. And not even the quality stuff as produced by James Ellroy and John Le Carre. No, more like Jeffrey Archer pap.

However, I am indebted to one of Odious Creep’s new Twitter pals, the wonderfully exotically named Moykil Bloom, who was asking him about me on Twitter, for drawing my attention to the matter. She? – is Moykil Bloom a she? – was positively orgasmic when she Tweeted Odious Creep that he had two of his online pieces at numbers one and two in the top five most read on the Herald’s on-line site last week.

But wait! Let’s inspect that claim closely, as the Herald operates a pay wall which means that you are only allowed to view a certain number of articles for free. After that you have to register, cough up cash and get behind the pay wall.

To comment on any stuff published on line you have to register and be behind that pay wall.

And guess what? In the hard copy of the Herald on Friday – relax, I read it in my favourite coffee shop where it is available, free – none of Creep’s pisspoor pieces, published on-line, appeared in the Herald’s five most commented on.

The thing is, folk are willing to click onto Odious Creep’s stuff on line when it free, in order to keep track of what bilious hatred he is spewing in the direction of Rangers supporters, but they are not willing to pay to get behind the Herald’s pay wall or buy the extremely expensive print edition.

That print edition is, of course, no longer a national newspaper – a proud status the Herald boasted of since the paper was founded in 1873. Now, just like the Falkirk Herald and the Milngavie and Bearsden Herald, it was a mere wee local rag.

Tim Blott, the man who has employed Odious Creep and the managing director who has presided over the Herald’s fall into oblivion, has a lot to answer for. Odious Creep is, indeed, toxic to any brand.

And final point. In answer to the question she – again I work on the basis that Moykil Bloom is a lassie – posed to Odious Creep about how I am, this weather.

Braw, hen. Just braw! Especially for a man so well advanced into his 60s. Everything still in fine working order. Thanks for asking, hen.

Leggo 25th October 2012

Now I looked at this twitter account at the time of this blog and indeed it appeared to be very friendly with Graham “the Odious creep ” Spiers. But another thing that struck me was the bee in the bonnet… no down right sectarian chip it had on its shoulder about Rangers and what he perceived it stood for.

Alas the twitter account disappeared Dear Reader, but not before I took some handy screenshots of said sectarianism and bigoted views

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Well this Blog Can exclusively reveal that Moykil Bloom is not a she or is…… no it is not a she but a he non other than……

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Dr Michael Higgins Senior Lecturer of Journalism and Creative Writing at Strathclyde University

He also is a member of University Senate. Michael has also been Visiting Professor in Political Communications at Libera Università Internazionale per gli Studi Sociali (LUISS) in Rome, and is currently a member of the Ross Priory Broadcast Talk Group.

He serves on the editorial boards of Communication Theory and Journalism Education, as well as the advisory boards for the IB Taurus International Library of Gender and Popular Culture and LUISS’s Centre for Media and Communication Studies “Massimo Baldini”.  In addition, Michael has acted as referee for more than thirty journals, publishers and funding bodies across media and language analysis, and political science. 

Now there was one thing that the Rangers Tax case hated nearly as much as the mighty Glasgow Rangers and that was the what he thought was the standard of Main Stream Journalism.

Maybe thats why he was so interested in Leggo?

You know the auld saying my auld Presbyterian granny used to say….

“Those who can do, those who cant teach”

Micheal Higgins is well known on the social media networks there is no question he had input in Rangers Tax case with its anti mainstream journalistic bent!

But why did he feel the need to vent his sectarian bile on this twitter account and not this one he had at same time?

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Your guess is as good as mine dear reader.

Also have a look at this video DOCTOR Michael Higgins has such ignorance that he dosnt know who “those blokes are on the horses in George Square”

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http://news.stv.tv/west-central/111695-does-george-square-need-the-statues/

Aye right! you know fine well those are the statues of of our Glorious Empress Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.

When asked who he would put up for a statue in George Square he suggest Henrik Larsson!

A multi Millionaire who the Tax man was after for a £500,000 tax bill after the glamour friendly that brought down the curtain on his Celtic career.

STATUE INTEGRITY INDEED!

In the end he plumps for Alex Salmond!

I think thats a warning for us all.

Now not only is Dr Higgins a good friend with Rangers hating Graham Spiers hes a good friend with Rangers hating and Channel 4 colleague of Alex Thomson Stuart Cosgrove on facebook.

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where you can find such perils of wisdom as this

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What a sad individual, that has such views about the Flag of the country of his birth. The country that many British men laid down their lives so that he could be fed, clothed and educated in peace.

I’VE GOT 99 PROBLEMS WITH LENNON, BUT A TIM AIN’T 1.

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HIS LAND DEALS WITH EX BUSINESS PARTNER WHO HAD HIS HOUSE SEIZED AS PART OF AN I.R.A MONEY LAUNDERING CASE

Dear Reader you will be saying to me

“No this cant be right if Celtic Manager Neil Lennon had LAND DEALS WITH EX BUSINESS PARTNER WHO HAD HIS HOUSE SEIZED AS PART OF AN I.R.A MONEY LAUNDERING CASE surely we would have read about it in the good auld Scottish press”

And that is where you would be wrong!

You see you probably did read about Neil Lennon’s financial land deal woes but the IRA part of the story was mysteriously missing from the Scottish editions but was not in the Irish and English editions. His Business partner in question was a

MR Julian Dowe

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Julian was Celtic  boss  Neil  Lennon former  City  youth  team  colleague. He had his £0.5  million  house  in  Sale confiscated in  2006 as a  result  of  suspicions  he’d  been  involved  in  IRA  money  laundering. This  stems  from  the  property  firm  he  set  up  with  Neil Lennon.

Now its a mystery to me how this northern English lad with no apparent links to Ireland could find himself mixed up with the Mr Bigs of the IRA criminal terrorist underworld.

Neil Lennon on the other hand has very strong links with Ireland. in fact he was born there, Lurgan, County Armagh to be precise. A hotbed of Irish republicanism and where Colin Duffy, described by the BBC as the most recognisable name and face among dissident republicans in Northern Ireland, has his base.

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So one has to ask oneself how a Lad from the North west of England wound up in business with IRA sectarian terrorist FILTH? Lets have a look at Mr Julian Dowes Business records. He first pops up on my radar with this company Gallow Gate Developments Limited

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Now if this company is named after the in-famous district/GCC Licensed IRA theme park that is mere speculation.

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He seems to be in business with a certain Pepper family. Then he pops up with Rocket Developments Limited

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Who along with Mr Julian Dowes has Neil Lennon and Paul Pepper from the aforementioned Pepper Clan

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Thomas “Slab” Murphy

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is believed to be the former Chief of Staff of the Provisional Irish Republican Army. His farm straddles County Armagh and County Louth, the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. One of three brothers, Murphy is a lifelong bachelor ( Aye) who lives on the Louth side of his farm.

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Murphy was allegedly involved with the South Armagh Brigade of the IRA before becoming Chief of Staff of the IRA Army Council. Toby Harnden (ex-correspondent for the Daily Telegraph) has named him as planning the Warrenpoint ambush of 1979, in which 18 British soldiers were killed.

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and was also allegedly implicated in the Mullaghmore bombing the same day, which killed four people including Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma. A man so close to our present Royal Family that our future King Prince William, Duke of Cambridge was named after him and he in turned named his son Prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge after him too.

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Murphy was involved in smuggling in huge stockpiles of weapons from Libya in the 1980s and was part of the IRA army council that decided to end its first ceasefire with the London Canary Wharf Docklands bomb in 1996 that killed two men.

Accused by the Sunday Times of directing an IRA bombing campaign in Britain, in 1987 Murphy unsuccessfully sued the paper for libel in Dublin. The original verdict was overturned by the court of appeal because of omissions in the judge’s summing up and there was a retrial which he also lost. At this retrial both Sean O’Callaghan and Eamon Collins, former members of the IRA testified against him, as did members of the Gardaí, Irish Customs, British Army and local TD Brendan McGahon.

Collins, who also had written a book about his experiences entitled Killing Rage, was beaten and killed by having a spike driven through his face near his home in Newry eight months later. In 1998, an Irish court dismissed Murphy’s case after a high-profile trial during which Murphy stated that he had: “Never been a member of the IRA, no way” and claimed not to know where the Maze prison was. The Irish jury ruled, however, that he was an IRA commander and a smuggler.

The Sunday Times subsequently published statements given by Adrian Hopkins, the skipper of the boats which ferried weapons from Libya to the IRA, to the French authorities who intercepted the fifth and final Eksund shipment. Hopkins told how Murphy had met a named Libyan agent in Greece, paid for the weapons importation and helped unload them when they arrived in Ireland. According to Ed Moloney’s A Secret History of the IRA, Murphy has been the IRA Army Council’s Chief of Staff since 1997. Toby Harnden’s Bandit Country: the IRA and South Armagh also details Murphy’s IRA involvement.

So how does a man like this fit in?

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DUNDALK CENTRE OF CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION,

Looks like the criminal empire of another IRA leader is coming crumbling down, this time due to the big mouth of one of those involved.For some time now Brian Barney Pepper a native of Coxes has been heard mouthing about his property interests in the UK. No doubt someone would start asking questions as Pepper was pennyless when he left Dundalk to “play football” in the UK in the late 90s. He began taking large quantities of fake and damaged designer clothes back to Dundalk for his family members to sell. His brother Paul sold alot of this gear down in the Army barracks were he works as a soldier along with another brother. A sister Sinead Pepper also sold some of this gear in some of the factories were she worked, she was found guilty several years ago of stealing handbags in several Dundalk bars. It is also known that Pepper boasted about being related to Tom Slab Murphy when he was in the company of Irish people in the UK. Pepper was also seen in the company of Francis and Paddy Murphy, brothers of Tom in Dundalk on several occassions. Gardai began looking into the connections between Pepper and the Murphys and struck gold. It is believed that authorities on both sides of the border waited until the IRA was powerless after decommissioning its weapons before moving on Murphy and his criminal empire. Local TD and senior Fianna Fail member Seamus Kirk is married to one of the Murphy sisters and may have also invested in some property in the UK.

So

Brian Pepper of the Pepper clan that was in buisness with Celtic Boss Neil Lennon was pennyless when he left Dundalk to “play football” in the UK in the late 90s.

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It is also known that Pepper boasted about being related to Tom Slab Murphy when he was in the company of Irish people in the UK.

hmmmm I wonder who those Irish people in the UK were?

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RANGERS TAX CASE UNCOVERED

Does the Rangers Tax Case Blog reach all the way to the Corridors of power at Celtic Park?

Dr Jim Hamill

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As you may know from previous post dear reader, that there was a Glasgow City Council funded Rangers hating propaganda fest complete with PIRA mouthpiece held that attracted internet bampots to it.

Not many to be fair (as you can see from the picture below) but Internet bampots they came.

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As has been previously published on this blog those in attendance was non other that Disgraced solicitor Jim McGinley. But Jim had another partner in crime so to speak, on that day another Jim. Dr Jim Hamill among other things was a university lecturer at Strathclyde University.Teaching, research and management development programmes in International Marketing and Social Media.

Now Dr Jim Hamill intrigues not just me but also the presenter of Celtic podcast that is posted below, as he was the first person Celtic football club employee P.R man Anthony Hamilton followed on Twitter.

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As you can see from the following Podcast excerpt

The Celticunderground Podcast 137 – Celtic and Fan Engagement

Dr Jim Hamill from Energise 2.0 joins Eddie for this edition of the podcast and together they discuss Twitter and Facebook and the way these two sites have changed how Celtic engage with the fans. They talk about the success Tony Hamilton has had with his @polishturnstile account and Jim suggests some further steps the club could take with regard to twitter. 

The audio link is here.

Podcast 137: Celtic and Fan Engagement

Now could this be the reason that the Rangers Tax Case Blog wished to remain anonymous? Not because it was frightened for its safety, but because it was being feed information straight from the top at Celtic park and would, if real identity was known, lead all the way back to the corridors of power at Celtic Park?

You may also know Tony Hamilton as the Celtic PR guy who turned up in the directors box at the Berwick Rangers Vs Rangers match

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That was the match where well known Everton and Celtic fan ESPN Ray Stubbs

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felt compelled to make this half time announcement.

 

Very well as he may its a free society, but why didnt he or ESPN say anything about this disgusting show of SECTARIAN Anti British pro Irish terrorism at Invervess?

They did broadcast it live too

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Tony Hamilton is also The CEO of Celtic FC Foundation charity.

You would have to ask what charity would employ a man who not only follows the sectarian racist anti Rangers bigot Phil Mac Giolla Bhain

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but openly followed a campaign set up for Dissident Irish terrorist Marian Price on facebook.

 

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Marian Price if you dont know is is a prominent Republican and member of the 32 county sovereignty movement  and spokesperson for the Irish Republican Prisoners Welfare Association. she was also one of the IRA terrorists of the London bombing campaign of 1973. She was part of a unit that placed four car bombs in London on 8 March 1973. The old bailey and Whitehall army recruitment centre were damaged with 200 injured and killed one.

Recently this bloodthirsty black hearted bitch On 17 November 2009 she was named as being one of two people arrested in connection with an attack on the Massereene Barracks in Northern Ireland in March 2009 in which two British Soldiers were shot dead.In 2011 she was charged with providing property for the purposes of terrorism.

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She pleaded guilty to providing property for the purposes of terrorism on March 8, 2009, and for this she was handed a 12-month prison sentence. She also admitted aiding and abetting, counselling and procuring the address made to encourage support for the Real IRA at the Easter Rising parade in Londonderry on April 25, 2011, for which she received an eight month sentence. Judge Kerr ordered that the sentences run concurrently, which he then suspended for three years.

She also admitted aiding and abetting, counselling and procuring the address made to encourage support for the Real IRA at the Easter Rising parade in Derry on April 25, 2011, for which she received a nine-month sentence. During the commemoration, a masked man read a statement on behalf of the Real IRA, supporting the aims of the dissident organisation. During this address, Price held the statement for the masked man.

This could be a case for Celtic Football Club to ask Tony Hamilton

“WHEN WILL I SEE YOU AGAIN?”

 

RANGERS TAX CASE UNCOVERED JIM MCGINLEY AKA @BROGANROGANTREV

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Brogan Rogan Trevino and Hogan is Jim McGinley the new editor of the obsessively Rangers hating Celtic quick news.

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Here is making fun of an Amsterdam Police man being knocked unconscious running for his life by a mob of Hooligan Celtic fans.

Jim McGinley aka James Joseph McGinley aka @BroganRoganTrev aka Brogan Rogan Trevino and Hogan aka @Strandsky

Jim McGinley wrote a 11500 word Diatribe called The Silence of the Lambs—- and when the wheels come off the bogey!

This has to rank as the Mein Kampf of internet bampottery . Full of references to Rangers, Cheating , Financial doping  basically comparing Rangers to cheat Lance Armstrong.

One wonders if McGinley Bhoy could muster an 11500 word diatribe about his own team Celtic and say compare them to another American sports scandal like say ….erm Penn state for instance.

James Joseph McGinley is a director in the following companies

Company Name               Company Status

STRANDSKY MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS LTD      Active

ARDENFIELD LIMITED     Dissolved

I would invite any of my readers to forensically go through his companies’ accounts. I’m sure Jim won’t mind in the interest of financial fair play.

Jim McGinley aka @BroganRoganTrev it seems is good pals with sectarian Rangers hater and BBC employee Stuart Cosgrove. Both write for the bastard offspring of the now discredited and deleted Rangers Tax Case, the scottish football monitor.

Auld Jim McGinley even got a name check by Cosgrove on his BBC off the Ball yes the same Stuart Cosgrove who said this,

“One time we were through at Hearts, and we were at Falkirk station on the way, on the same day Rangers were playing Falkirk. It was Huns galore -thousands of them, and there were maybe 40 of us in the CYS from Perth. We got on the train at Falkirk station, we just opened the windows as it started moving, and gave them ‘Orange wankers’ and all the rest of it, and of course as soon as we were moving – the train stopped and started moving back into the station! The driver must have been a Hun or something.”

Stuart Cosgrove is head of diversity at Channel 4.

Stop Press news just in: Could this be the same Jim McGinley?

If what I’m  about to show is the same James Joseph McGinley born in 1961 as the one in the previous Blog aka the Rangers Tax Case obsessive @broganrogantrev ?

Then smack my bum and shout pot kettle black.

If it is then it reeks of hypocrisy as it appears that he has pulled the old Craig Whyte trick of changing birth-date.

It appears he has been at the helm of numerous failed businesses.

Also we could have another ex Solicitor with a dubious legal history on our Rangers Tax Case List.

If it is one and the same person he appears to be married to Sharon McCrudden a procurator fiscal, hmmmmm murkier and murkier

Short name – James McGinley

Director ID : 904533846

Year of Birth: 1961

Company Name               Company Status

JOINTPLAIN LIMITED      Dissolved

PARTDEEP LIMITED         Dissolved

PARTDEEP LIMITED         Dissolved

TRACKSHACK LIMITED   Dissolved

STARSHORE LIMITED      Dissolved

STARSHORE LIMITED      Dissolved

I.P. ALCHEMY LIMITED   Dissolved

STRAAD LIMITED              Dissolved

H & S AMUSEMENTS LIMITED     Dissolved

BORDERFLOW LIMITED  Dissolved

BORDERFLOW LIMITED  Dissolved

BRAIDCOVE LIMITED      In Liquidation

TOWNDALE ARDROSSAN LTD.    In Administration             (Director Resigned 16/07/2008)

DUNMORE PROPERTIES LIMITED              Dissolved

ROWANPORT LIMITED   Dissolved

GREENBROW LIMITED   Dissolved

MOATSFORD LIMITED    Dissolved

JOINTPLAIN LIMITED      Dissolved             (Company Secretary Resigned 27/10/2003)

GROUPE FLO (UK) LIMITED          Dissolved             (Director Resigned 01/11/2004)

WINEPAGE LIMITED        In Receivership (Director Resigned 11/11/2003)

TOP TOURS INTERNATIONAL LTD.            Active   (Company Secretary Resigned 31/03/2004)

STELLA INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL LIMITED             Active   (Company Secretary Resigned 31/03/2004)

BURNFIELD TAVERNS LIMITED   Active   (Company Secretary Resigned 10/08/1992)

RINGTOTAL LIMITED       Dissolved             (Company Secretary Resigned 30/10/2001)

MOSSY MILL HOMES LIMITED     Dissolved             (Director Resigned 19/03/2008)

VALENTINE AND FRENCH LIMITED            Dissolved             (Company Secretary Resigned 16/08/2000)

Lawyers bid to save pub firm

Sunday Mail 2003

Byline: NORMAN SILVESTER

A LEADING lawyer has until tomorrow to save his pub company.

The Dunmore Pub Company, owned by solicitor James McGinley, faced the chop on Friday over an unpaid VAT bill.

But as the firm was about to fold Customs and Excise offcials agreed to an 11th-hour reprieve.

McGinley, 42, whose wife Sharon is a procurator fiscal, has faced a dozen court actions since 1997 over unpaid debts accrued by him and his various companies.

McGinley, an expert in licensing law, is an office bearer of 15 firms and his partners include Glasgow night club boss James Mortimer.

When contacted by the Sunday Mail on Friday, McGinley said he would be clearing the debt of Pounds 1613.

A Customs spokesman told us: “The deadline for payment was Friday but we have now allowed Mr McGinley until Monday to pay the outstanding amount.”

Dunmore own two pubs in Glasgow, the Auld Hoose in Baillieston and the Wharf in Yoker.

His law firm, Reilly McGinley, is based in the city. His sister Anne Marie, 36, is also a partner.

Scottish Solicitors’ Discipline Tribunal

20 June 05

JAMES JOSEPH McGINLEY

A complaint was made by the Council of the Law Society of Scotland against James Joseph McGinley, Solicitor, Reilly McGinley, 57 Ruthven Lane, Glasgow (“the respondent”). The Tribunal found the respondent guilty of professional misconduct in respect of his unconscionable delay and at times failure to reply to letters from another firm of solicitors and correspondence from the Law Society of Scotland, and his unconscionable delay in implementing a mandate. The Tribunal censured the respondent and fined him in the sum of £1,000.

The Tribunal has made it clear on numerous occasions that solicitors have a duty to co-operate with the Society and to provide, as soon as practicable, a full and accurate explanation in respect of any matter which is the subject of a complaint. It is also imperative for solicitors to act with fellow solicitors in a manner consistent to persons having mutual trust and confidence in each other. The Tribunal however took account of the difficulties experienced by the respondent in connection with water damage to his offices and also noted that the respondent had co-operated with the Society and entered into a joint minute in respect of the complaint. The respondent had also taken steps to improve the situation by reducing his workload and closing branch offices. The respondent seemed genuinely contrite with regard to his failures. The Tribunal was accordingly satisfied that it was not likely that the respondent’s actions would be a continuing course of conduct and the Tribunal considered that a censure and a fine of £1,000 would be sufficient penalty.

http://www.ssdt.org.uk/findings/findings/1411_McGinleys.pdf

JAMES JOSEPH McGINLEY, Solicitor, Unit 10, 355 Byres Road, GLASGOW (First Respondent)and ANNE-MARIE McGINLEY, Solicitor, Unit 10, 355 Byres Road, GLASGOW (Second Respondent)

Tribunal Date     26/06/2008

Appeal Status

No Appeal

Edinburgh 26 June 2008. The Tribunal having considered the Complaints dated 21 December 2007 and 9 April 2008 at the instance of the Council of the Law Society of Scotland against James Joseph McGinley, Solicitor, Unit 10, 355 Byres Road, Glasgow (“the First Respondent”) and Anne-Marie McGinley, Solicitor, Unit 10, 355 Byres Road, Glasgow (“the Second Respondent”); Find the First Respondent guilty of professional misconduct in cumulo in respect of his repeated failure to respond to correspondence from his fellow Solicitors; his delay and at times failure to respond to the reasonable enquiries of the Complainers in the course of their investigation and to complaints made against him; his repeated failure to make timeous and in some cases any payment in respect of Counsel’s fees instructed by him or through his firm and his failure to comply with the scheme of accounting and recovery of Counsel’s fees; his failure to comply with statutory notices served by the Complainers and to deliver files as required of him; Find the Second Respondent guilty of professional misconduct in cumulo in respect of her repeated failure to make timeous and in some cases any payment in respect of Counsel’s fees instructed by her or through her firm and her failure to comply with the scheme of accounting and recovery of Counsel’s fees; her delay and at times failure to respond to the reasonable enquiries of the Complainers in relation to the investigation of complaints against her; her failure to comply with statutory notices issued by the Complainers and to deliver files as required of her; Censure the First Respondent; Censure the Second Respondent; Find that both Respondents have failed to comply fully with the Determination and Direction given by the Council of the Law Society of Scotland under Section 42A of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980 within the period specified; Direct that an Order be issued under Section 53C of the said Act; Find the Respondents jointly and severally liable in the expenses of the Complainers and in the expenses of the Tribunal as the same may be taxed by the auditor of the Court of Session on a Solicitor and client indemnity basis in terms of Chapter Three of the last published Law Society’s Table of Fees for general business with a unit rate of £14.00; and Direct that publicity will be given to this decision and that this publicity should include the names of the Respondents.

A. Cockburn

Chairman

LAND DEAL THAT SHOCKED A GOVERNMENT

_52881663_desmond-reid

In light of current events, this is in my humble opinion is a very, very interesting story.

From the Sunday Mail January 26 1997

THE £9 million LAND DEAL THAT SHOCKED A GOVERNMENT

Rangers’ new “Goldfinger” Joe Lewis and Celtic director Dermot Desmond were both named in a report into a huge property scandal in Ireland.

The controversy led to an official inquiry and rocked the Irish Government.

It involved the £9.4 million purchase in 1990 by the state-owned Telecom Eireann of a disused bakery in Dublin as the site for a huge new HQ.

The storm broke after it was revealed that Telecom had paid an inflated price for the site which was previously owned by a company called United Property Holdings.

UPH was led by Desmond and among its shareholders was his friend Mr Lewis, who was listed as having 2.5 per cent. Michael Smurfit, the chairman of Telecom, owned 10 per cent.

Government inspectors at one time froze Mr Lewis’s shareholding in the firm, along with those of the other shareholders. When their report was issued, Desmond – a close friend of the then Irish Prime Minister Charles Haughey – was named as the main beneficiary of the controversial sale.

That’s a charge he has always denied.

The report of the inquiry, conducted by John Glackin, found that UPH had sold the bakery site to two offshore companies called Chestvale and Hoddle.

These firms passed it on to Telecom Eireann, and the total profit on the deals, concluded over 18 months, came to £5.3 million, of which UPH made £2.3 million. The ownership of Chestvale and Hoddle was never firmly established.

The Glackin Report said that it was Desmond, knowing that Telecom were looking for a site for a new HQ, who told Smurfit about the bakery site.

Glackin alleged that Desmond was the real power behind the companies in the bakery deals, and had been involved at almost every stage.

The report was scathing about Desmond’s involvement but cleared Smurfit, who had already resigned as Telecom chairman. It also probed the business affairs of some of Desmond’s closest friends.

They included flamboyant Irish gambler JP McManus – known as The Sundance Kid – stud-farm owner John Magnir, property developer Pat Doherty, and Isle of Man financier Colin Probets.

Both McManus and Magnir owned shares in UPH, along with Desmond and Lewis.

No criminal charges were brought, but the affair, it is said, soured relationships between Desmond and Irish Government ministers.

Desmond, a non-executive director with Celtic PLC and one of Ireland’s leading stockbrokers, strongly denied any wrongdoing and felt he had been treated badly by the Dublin Government and the media.

Desmond, who ploughed £4 million into Celtic’s share issue, is a close friend of Lewis, whose company last week injected £40 million into Rangers.

The controversy over the bakery site was one of several business scandals which eventually led to Haughey’s resignation.

Mr Lewis, who is a renowned recluse, did not give evidence to the inquiry, though it is said Mr Glackin wanted to discuss matters with him.

A Dublin financial insider said:

“The feeling now is that Desmond has been telling Lewis all about the success of his Celtic shares and that Lewis wants some of that action.

“They’ll see Celtic and Rangers as part of a European league set-up and a chance to be big players in European football.”

Charismatic Desmond built up NCB, his Dublin stockbroking, firm until he became, by the late ’80s, the city’s foremost dealmaker.

But in 1991, in the wake of the Telecom HQ affair, he stood down as chairman of NCB and resigned from the state airports authority.

His friendship with Mr Lewis, though, is as strong as ever.

The business giants often play golf together on courses all over the world.

Desmond has always rejected the Glackin Report, which he believes tarnished his good name.

Since the report, he has gone from strength to strength, showing his business skills with interests in Celtic, an aviation firm, and selling a computer software firm for £20 million.

Here is a link to the Glackin report with .pdf of said report

http://thestory.ie/2010/10/13/the-glackin-report-final-part-1/

The Variant Article in its entirety

variant

http://www.variant.org.uk/32texts/CSG.html

 

The New Bohemia
Rebecca Gordon Nesbitt

“The referendum on Scottish devolution on September 11th 1997 was a historic moment for our country. But the ‘Yes Yes’ result was not a mandate for politicians, civil servants, local government officers or any other public sector officials to take on extra powers ‘on behalf of the people’.”
Bridget McConnell, 19971

In summer 2007, Variant reported on the unprecedented move of Glasgow City Council (GCC) devolving its Cultural and Leisure Services department to a private charitable trust.2 The main challenges outlined at the time came from Unison – representing the majority of public sector workers affected – which objected that workers would suffer, that previous fundraising attempts offered a spurious precedent for guaranteeing future funding (which might contribute further pressure to seek private investment), that democratic accountability beyond the ‘lucky six’ councillors appointed to the board would be lost in relation to a number of key services (leading to an ‘arms-length’ private company), that the scheme represented a tax dodge (explicitly prohibited within Labour Party policy)3 and that this move would compromise the credibility and fundraising potential of legitimate charities. Unison mounted a legal challenge, applying for an interim interdict against the Council’s proposals in March 2007 and seeking a judicial review of the process, both of which were unsuccessful.

In January 2007, as a result of similar concerns, Culture Minister, Patricia Ferguson, had sought reassurance about the legality of the move.4 Another objection was made by Scots Tory MEP, Struan Stevenson – responding to the claims of a whistleblower presumed to be a high-level GCC official – on the grounds that the creation of a new company to oversee culture and leisure should have been put out to tender and that the state cannot directly or indirectly subsidise a company.5 Competition commissioner Neelie Kroes passed the matter over to European Commissioner, Charlie McCreevy, who is widely acknowledged to be in favour of free markets.6 McCreevy contacted the Scottish Executive on 10 April 2007 which, just days before Bridget McConnell’s husband lost his job as First Minister, penned a joint response with GCC, refuting any claims of illegality, which was accepted by the Commission.7

Within its first year of trading, Culture and Sport Glasgow (CSG) has given some indication of its future trajectory. Controversial proposals to allow private companies to develop businesses in two of its parks have been strongly resisted and so far resulted in plans for a nightclub in the botanical gardens being scrapped. Initial fears about job security – especially for casual workers – appear to have been founded, with staff at Tramway being offered contracts that discriminate against artists who rely on flexibility in their paid work, thereby undermining the indirect subsidy that reaches the city’s creative practitioners through invigilation work. A year ago, Variant asserted that “one of Glasgow’s proud boasts is that of the free access to museums. How long will that last if the Trust gets into financial difficulties?” Somewhat predictably, it has just been announced that the feted Kelvingrove Museum will be introducing admission charges. It would seem to be an appropriate moment to take a closer look at the formation of Culture and Sport Glasgow, the overlapping networks and interests of its key personnel and the early implications of this transfer for culture within the broader strategies being devised for Glasgow, which are paralleled in other cities around the world.

With reference to city council reports and minutes, it is clear that the genesis of CSG suffered from a lack of transparency from the outset. In November 2005, in the wake of the Cultural Commission making its final report to the Scottish Executive and responsibility for cultural provision having largely been delegated to local authorities Glasgow’s Cultural Strategy was approved by the council. In her introduction to this document, Bridget McConnell (then Executive Director of Cultural and Leisure Services), affirmed the link between cultural participation and economic regeneration, highlighted the continued need for private investment in Glasgow and noted that cultural tourism accounted for 37% of all tourism to the city.8 Indeed, the potential of culture to increase tourism has become widely asserted as a phenomenon, with precedents ranging from Bankside (Tate Modern) to Bilbao (Guggenheim Museum), and McConnell has invoked Bilbao when discussing the new Zaha Hadid-designed Riverside Museum, due to open on the banks of the Clyde in 2010.9

It was McConnell’s proposal to create a new company to manage the city’s cultural provision, which was swiftly taken up by Councillor John Lynch (then Executive Member for Culture and Sport), abetted by Councillors Steven Purcell and Aileen Colleran, who would go on to occupy key roles in Culture and Sport Glasgow. This ultimately led to the formation of two companies – one limited by guarantee with charitable status (with an estimated turnover of £19 million p.a.), and an additional trading arm, or Community Interest Company (CIC), to carry out those functions not deemed charitable by HM Revenue and Customs while gifting all income to the charity. While this proposal has the veneer of passing through the appropriate consultancy phase and council committees before finally being approved at a meeting of the GCC Executive Committee on 2 February 2007, it is interesting to note that Culture and Sport Glasgow and its trading arm had already been incorporated as private limited companies six weeks earlier, on 22 December 2006, with an application for charitable status having been made the day before.10

The intrusion of capital into the cultural arena is a familiar story throughout the modern period. In his landmark examination of how ruling class cohesiveness is achieved through cultural participation, G. William Domhoff describes how the Bohemian Club was founded in San Francisco in 1872 by artists, writers and musicians who subscribed to the myth of Bohemia, whereby creativity springs from poverty. This privileging of creative talent over financial means was soon displaced by more pragmatic concerns about the daily running of the club and, in the late nineteenth century, wealthy, untalented men were voted into the club, thus securing the future of its activities.11 This paves the way for a detailed consideration of the financial motives informing cultural provision in Glasgow.

The diagram [click for PDF] that begins this text details the interactions between the invited board members of Culture and Sport Glasgow and some of their external connections, which are elaborated here:

Bridget McConnell – Executive Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow, and Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
As the manoeuvres outlined above demonstrate, Bridget McConnell was the driving force behind the creation of Culture and Sport Glasgow. Appointed as Director of Cultural and Leisure services in 1998, her tenure was blighted by union wrangles over jobs and by run-ins with the city’s artistic communities about departmental policies or lack thereof. Promoted to Executive Director with negligible discussion in August 2005, reports of top council jobs being axed were appearing on the front page of the Herald by the following November.

As Cultural and Leisure Services complained that an extra £3.5m p.a. was needed to run its museums properly, figures produced by McConnell for the period 1 April 2006 and 26 January 2007 showed her department having a net overspend of £981,000. Yet, while the devolution to CSG was justified to the GCC Executive Committee and the media on financial grounds, McConnell’s perspective has always been broader, extending to discussions around culture at a national level.12 In 2000, she served as a member of the focus group set up to implement the National Cultural Strategy13 and – through CoSLA14 and VOCAL15 – ensured that the work of local authorities in delivering cultural provision was fully recognised.16 On the occasion of Culture Minister, Patricia Ferguson, making her recommendations on the future of the arts in Scotland in January 2006, in response to the findings of the Cultural Commission, it was said that “arts figures across Scotland are unanimous in one thing: the conclusions of Ferguson’s blueprint, which controversially propose to hand more influence over Scotland’s arts scene to local and central government, were wrought in [Bridget McConnell’s] image.”17 In order to make her plans a reality, McConnell has secured the help of some of the most influential pro-business minds in Glasgow City Council and beyond.

Controlling the majority of cultural provision in Glasgow, Bridget McConnell would be expected to have an interest in culture. Some insight into her taste in art comes from the Christmas present she commissioned for husband Jack in 2004 – an oil painting by Hamish MacDonald of the farmhouse on Arran where Jack grew up. Writing in 1997 – the year Glasgow-based artist Christine Borland was nominated for the Turner Prize, with her contemporary, Douglas Gordon, having won the prestigious prize the previous year – McConnell confined her appraisal of visual art successes in Scotland to an earlier generation of painters, mis-spelling John Bellany’s name and merging Peter Howson’s with that of Ken Currie to commend “the internationally successful Belamey, Campbell and Howie.”18 To compensate for the gaps in her arts knowledge, McConnell has seconded Dr. Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York as an advisor, although his role seems largely confined to making links with wealthy Scottish émigrés as part of the CSG development strategy.
One final point of interest before considering the dealings of other CSG representatives is that McConnell’s brother, Robert McLuckie, is the millionaire owner of property company, Camvo 37. In 2007, retired detective sergeant Alistair Watson – the officer behind the ‘cash for honours’ inquiry that dogged Tony Blair – sparked an investigation into McLuckie’s dealings with the Scottish Executive by writing to the Metropolitan Police. Apparently, five houses and a plot of prime building land, sold to Camvo 37 by the Executive for just two pounds in 2004 on the site of the former Ladysbridge Hospital in Aberdeenshire, had been valued at upwards of £1million. A condition of the sale had been that McLuckie should pay for any subsequent renovation, yet he applied for £120,000 from an Executive quango, Communities Scotland, to help build new homes on the land and another £230,000 of NHS and council cash was allegedly spent renovating the existing houses, despite interventions from Inland Revenue. It was reported that, six months before negotiations began, another McLuckie company, Choices Community Care, had donated more than £2,000 to Jack McConnell’s election funds.19

Bailie Liz Cameron – Chair of Culture and Sport Glasgow
Passionate about promoting Glasgow abroad, former Lord Provost, Liz Cameron, travels the world at the city’s expense. This has seen her taking trips to New York, Sri Lanka and Melbourne, the latter of which was undertaken as part of the delegation to secure the 2014 Commonwealth Games for Glasgow. Aside from her work for Glasgow City Council, Cameron works as Vice Chair of Glasgow Cultural Enterprises (the company set up by the council in 1988 to manage various cultural venues, which acts as something of a precedent for CSG) and Glasgow City Marketing Bureau (to be discussed in more detail later). Her connections extend into virtually every aspect of cultural life in Glasgow, while her presence on the planning applications committee ensures that development projects are tailored to fit the city’s priorities.

Councillor Steven Purcell, – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow
Leader of Glasgow City Council, Purcell has been accused by Christopher Mason (leader of the council’s LibDems) of being on a crusade to ‘Blairise’ the council by presiding over changes which saw the traditional committee system replaced with a policy-making cabinet, or executive, of fifteen councillors in summer 2006.20 He is avowedly pro-business, and the devolution of cultural and leisure provision follows the creation of several other limited liability partnerships by the council in recent years. In November 2007, Purcell consolidated his approach by offering rent-free premises to new business start-ups in the city. He is a central figure in the 2014 Commonwealth Games, opening the process up to tendering and making Scottish businesses aware of procurement opportunities. Working alongside Liz Cameron, Purcell acts as Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau; he is also a Non-Executive Director of the Scottish Exhibitions and Conference Centre (SECC) and has a non-financial interest in Scottish Enterprise Glasgow.

In response to fears about the vulnerability of charitable companies like Culture and Sport Glasgow to the 2002 Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act, Purcell reassured citizens that “a commitment to meeting all the Freedom of Information requests currently met by Cultural and Leisure Services is guaranteed as Culture and Sport Glasgow is a publicly owned company and is therefore obliged to comply with the legislation.”21 And, while the CSG Board congratulated itself on the Scottish Information Commissioner’s praise for its publication scheme as “one of best he had ever seen for a publicly-owned company,”22 successive requests for information about various aspects of its operation, have thus far yielded nothing.

Councillor Stephen Curran – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow, and Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
As City Treasurer, Scottish Labour Councillor Stephen Curran has the unenviable task of running a council with a £1.3 billion debt which pays £90 million in interest every year. Combined with the almost £1m overspend shown by Cultural and Leisure Services in the 2006-07 financial year, fiscal prudence invoked in the creation of Culture and Sport Glasgow and its trading arm will continue to be integral to both new companies.

Councillor Aileen Colleran – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow, and Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
In May 2007, the Council Business Manager became Chief Whip and took up a place on the board of both CSG companies. She also undertakes remunerated work as Director/Board Member for two other independent companies set up by the council – Glasgow Cultural Enterprises and City Building LLP.

Councillor James Dornan – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow
Dornan’s appointment to the Board represents the healing of a rift between the SNP and CSG. Having initially opposed the devolution of cultural and leisure provision to the charitable company, SNP leader within Glasgow City Council, John Mason, announced in May 2007 that the SNP would be represented on the board.

Lord Norman Somerville Macfarlane of Bearsden – Independent Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow
A prominent Scottish industrialist, the octogenarian Conservative peer is Honorary Life President of both his own packaging company, Macfarlane Group plc, and of drinks giant, Diageo, one of the biggest alcohol companies in the world. Macfarlane has held Directorships at Glasgow Chamber of Commerce and Clydesdale Bank and his cultural links extend to Scottish Ballet, the Scottish National Orchestra, Third Eye Centre (now the Centre for Contemporary Arts), National Art Collection Fund and National Galleries of Scotland. As Chair of the Kelvingrove Renovation Appeal Trust, he was publicly credited with overseeing a massive fundraising effort to enable Glasgow City Council’s flagship venue to re-open, while the work of professional fundraiser, Alan Horn, is rarely acknowledged.

In March 2008, in recognition of the synergy he brings to business and the arts, Lord Macfarlane was honoured with a Goodman Award (along with the founders of frieze magazine) by Arts and Business, the organisation set up during the Thatcher era to promote partnerships between the two realms. However, all is not rosy in the world of art and business, with Macfarlane Group suffering from a lower demand in packaging, at a time of enhanced ecological awareness, to record losses in the four years up to 2005. When a country’s monetary systems flounder, works of art are known to provide an alternative means of preserving economic capital. Since the American Depression of the 1930s, it has been understood that “exhibiting one’s own art works alongside prestigious international art works, and hence adding to the symbolic value of all the works and to their consequent monetary value, preserved overall capital for the owner by increasing an art work’s present cultural capital for later transformation into economic capital – a good investment of both time and money.”23 Macfarlane is currently Chair of the committee to organise the ‘Glasgow Boys’ exhibition due to take place at Kelvingrove in 2010, with a tour to London’s Royal Academy, a foray into programming which will boost the value of his well-publicised private collection of Glasgow Boys’ paintings.

The Rt Hon George Reid – Independent Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow
As Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament under Jack McConnell, from 2003 until May 2007, George Reid oversaw many corporate interventions into the Scottish Parliament. He was Honorary President of the Scottish Parliament Business Exchange, which was set up to ‘educate’ parliamentarians about business; while participants are asked to sign a no-lobbying guarantee, dues of £7,500 have tended to confine membership to representatives of trans-national corporations and professional lobbyists. One of its members is Holyrood Communications, a political communications company owned by public consultations advisory firm, Holyrood Consultations, which changed its name to 2Collaborate in 2006. On behalf of its clients the Scottish Executive, 2Collaborate launched a campaign – sponsored by Microsoft, CapGemini and the Herald newspaper – to advocate private interventions into public services.

As of May 2008, Reid remains a board member of the Futures Forum24, a think tank set up by the Scottish Parliament to extend its outreach work into fields such as the arts and entrepreneurship. Its foundation was, in turn, informed by the Global Business Network which involves creative futurologists such as Douglas Coupland, Brian Eno, Bruce Sterling and Francis Fukuyama and “works with Fortune 500 companies from virtually every industry and continent, as well as with many national governments, nonprofits, and foundations” to help iron out the uncertainties of global business futures.25

Sir Angus Grossart – Independent Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow
Sir Angus Grossart is Chairman and Chief Executive of Noble Grossart, the merchant bank he founded in 1969. Vice Chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland until 2005, Grossart has been linked with fifty business ventures, via Directorships ranging from British Petroleum to Scottish and Newcastle. His links with culture include, amongst others, trusteeships at the National Galleries of Scotland and the National Heritage Memorial Fund, vice-presidency of Scottish Opera, chairmanship of the Fine Art Society (of which Noble Grossart owns 29%) and directorship of the Edinburgh International Film Festival.
Lord Dennis Stevenson of Coddenham – Independent Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow
Like his fellow Independent Directors, Stevenson has multifarious business and governmental links, engendered through his work for think tanks – including Demos, the Social Market Foundation, SRU, Lexington Communications and Huntsworth PR group – which lead right to the heart of the New Labour government. His cultural involvement extends into work for the British Council, a high-profile Directorship of the Tate Gallery and an appointment as Chancellor of the University of the Arts (the powerful merger of six art and design schools in London).

Dr. Kenneth Chrystie – Chair of Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
A trained lawyer, Chrystie was Partner of Glasgow-based firm, McClure Naismith, from 1972 to 2007 where he became a specialist in intellectual property law,26 which is crucial to the much-vaunted creative industries. Retained as a consultant to McClure’s, he also offers his services to Murgitroyd and Co, Scotland’s only listed firm of patent attorneys. In July 2007, Chrystie was appointed as a Member of Strathclyde University Incubator (chaired by Ian Murgitroyd),27 which nurtures nascent companies until they can thrive on their own and raises questions about conflict of interest.

Flora Martin – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
With a background in the military side of the civil service – working at the Fleet Air Arm base near Perth and the Faslane MoD base at Helensburgh – Martin is widely considered to be one of Scotland’s PR gurus. She started her own company, Flora Martin PR, in 1989, with clients largely centred on the alcohol and hotel trades. In 1996, she sold her company to Citigate Communications for in excess of £1 million, staying on to build the turnover up to £5 million, with clients from Asda to Bank of Scotland. Stepping down to become independent in 2004, three years later she became Chair of Platform PR, which works in government relations (i.e. lobbying) and communications strategies, helping their clients to “weather controversies and cope with crises.”28 Martin will head Platform’s new Glasgow office.

Edward Crozier – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
Managing Director of Whisky Galore Films Limited, Director of Promenade Productions, Britannia Productions and several other media-related companies, Crozier has produced a handful of West End productions. He holds a Directorship at Scottish Opera and, in-keeping with the sporting element of Culture and Sport Glasgow, is a member of the Scottish Rugby Union Council, a Grade ‘A’ rugby referee and past Chairman of the Scottish Rugby Referees Association. He also currently sits on the judging panel for the Scottish Entrepreneur of the year awards.

Seamus MacInnes – Board Member of Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
Seumas MacInnes is the entrepreneurial restaurateur behind the expanding Allied Irish Bank-funded chain of Gandolfi restaurants based in the Merchant City area of Glasgow, the hitherto ignored yet historical eastern edge of Glasgow city centre, which has been earmarked for development by GCC. Gandolfi is a member of the Glasgow Restaurateurs Association29 which represents the main restaurants in the city and forms part of Glasgow’s branding and tourism strategies. MacInnes – who is from Barra in the Western Isles – is a darling of the Herald newspaper, having served as a food columnist there in 2000-1.
The Bigger Picture

In March 2004,30 Glasgow City Marketing Bureau (which, it will be remembered, has CSG’s Steven Purcell and Liz Cameron as its Chair and Vice Chair respectively)31 branded the city with the slogan ‘Glasgow: Scotland with style’. In his introduction to the brand guide, the Bureau’s Chief Executive, Scott Taylor, writes “Since the launch of the brand, in excess of 535,000 additional tourists have visited the city generating £62 million in local economic benefit and delivering a 2% year-on-year increase in hotel occupancy,” thus consolidating the link between the brand and the city’s tourism strategy.

Glasgow City Marketing Bureau is part of a consortium – together with Glasgow City Council, Visit Scotland, Scottish Enterprise Glasgow and Glasgow Chamber of Commerce – set up to develop Glasgow’s tourism strategy.32 As a leading representative of three of the five partner organisations, Steven Purcell embraces tourism as a key industry within Glasgow’s economic development strategy and sets the target of attracting one million visitors by 2016 to take the sector into the £1 billion p.a. bracket. The route for achieving this 80% growth in tourism encompasses a major events strategy centred on the 2014 Commonwealth Games, the afore-mentioned Riverside Museum and the Arena at the SECC. Capitalising on the markets for leisure and ‘discretionary business tourism’, the strategy makes explicit reference to the role of Culture and Sport Glasgow, the renovated Kelvingrove Museum and the regeneration of Merchant City.

As we have seen, Bridget McConnell is fully conversant with the potential of culture and sport to increase the revenue of a city through tourism, and her ambitions for Glasgow, as expressed in CSG’s priorities, closely overlap with those of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau. Emphasis on cultural tourism has led to a ‘festival mentality’, whereby the city’s support is concentrated on attracting temporary tourists rather than supporting Glasgow’s creative practitioners directly.33 March 2008 saw the Magners Glasgow International Comedy Festival, Aye Write! – The Bank of Scotland Book Festival – and the 16th French Film Festival. This was followed, in April 2008, by the Glasgow Art Fair and the two-week visual arts fest, Glasgow International. An annual exhibition that quickly became biennial, Glasgow International effectively brands the exhibitions already taking place in the city’s main institutions and grassroots organisations in a bid to attract visitors en masse. On 13 May, 2008, Katrina Brown was announced as the new Director of Glasgow International. Undertaking this role on behalf of the Common Guild – the ‘public’ arm of Glasgow’s predominant commercial gallery, the Modern Institute – this appointment perfectly consolidates the creeping commercialisation of the art world in Glasgow.

The second exercise in branding extant visual arts activity within the city is Trongate 103, which is due to open in 2009. Led by Glasgow City Council’s Department of Development and Regeneration, this will see the redevelopment of a block at the corner of Trongate and King Street – which has long housed eight arts organisations – to form a unified arts complex.34 Tapping into a familiar, and often disastrous,35 strategy of culture-led regeneration, this dovetails neatly with the Five Year Action Plan devised for the regeneration of the Merchant City area at the east of the city centre. This badly-punctuated document is explicit about the Council’s intentions to capitalise on the potential of this area, ensuring that derelict properties are renovated and inhabited. At the time of writing, the cultural tenants of Trongate 103 have been offered five year leases based on existing rents, after which time their future is uncertain.

Also consistent with the events-based strategy being perpetuated in the city is Culture and Sport Glasgow’s involvement in the bid for the 2014 Commonwealth Games. When McConnell was promoted to Executive Director of Cultural and Leisure Services, her role grew to encompass sport. Together with husband, Jack, and GCC/CSG representatives Liz Cameron and Steven Purcell, McConnell has travelled the world as an ambassador of Glasgow to ensure that the Games come to the city. Recent reports that she may have been sidelined to protect SNP sensitivities would seem to be contradicted by the relocation of the sports development team of CSG to the Commonwealth site.

Critic of neoliberalism, David Harvey, discusses the organisation of urban spectacles, like shopping centres and the Olympic Games, to “create a positive and high quality image of place…” Serial repetition of successful models, he says, “is understandable, given the grim history of deindustrialization and restructuring that left most major cities in the advanced capitalist world with few options except to compete with each other, mainly as financial, consumption, and entertainment centres. Imaging a city through the organisation of spectacular urban spaces became a means to attract capital and people (of the right sort) in a period (since 1973) of intensified inter-urban competition and urban entrepreneurialism.”36 Indeed, the Commonwealth Games is viewed by the CSG team as a major opportunity for Scottish business. While accounts of Culture and Sport Glasgow have largely ignored its trading arm, the entrepreneurial muscle of Ed Crozier combined with the business-nurturing approach of Kenneth Chrystie will no doubt ensure that the maximum amount of capital is extracted from this event. In parallel with this, the hospitality-based PR work of Flora Martin and the role of influential Merchant City-based restaurateur, Seamus MacInnes, will no doubt contribute to the profitable tourist-led regeneration.

More than the sum of its parts, the creation of Culture and Sport Glasgow represents the wholesale takeover of culture by business interests. It posits a strategy for economic regeneration that depends on the whims of elite tourism and its pace of consumption in a period of economic crisis. It demonstrates an ethos that is smothering this city and others like it, regarding culture solely in terms of its use value, stripped of any emancipatory potential. Far from being considered in terms of the universal creativity to which every citizen has a right, culture in Glasgow is framed in terms of passive participation and money-making potential, with the city’s burghers fast accumulating cultural capital in the process. It remains to be seen how this approach will affect the creativity of future generations as Glasgow’s cultural communities are rendered impoverished and complicit in the new Bohemia.

This research was undertaken as part of an MRes in Social Research in the Department of Geography and Sociology at the University of Strathclyde.

Notes
1. Bridget McConnell, ‘Culture and the New Politics: Reflections from a Small Country.’ In M. Jacobs (ed.) Creative Futures. Fabian Society, London, pp. 16-22.
2. Anon. ‘O Rose, thou art sick! Outsourcing Glasgow’s Cultural and Leisure Services.’ Variant, 29, pp. 30-1.
3. This point refers to Labour’s policy document Scotland’s Future: Report of the Scottish Policy Forum which opposes the creation of charities for outsourcing services, a policy inserted at the insistence of Unison states: ‘We will look at ways to ensure the legitimate incentives that apply to charities are not used as vehicles for outsourcing by local authorities.’ See Gerry Braiden, ‘Council’s proposal to hand over museums ‘against party policy’.’ The Herald. 2 March, 2007, p.2.
4. Paul Hutcheon, ‘Executive queries legality of new culture trust: Glasgow council’s bid to hand over libraries and museums hits legal snag.’ The Sunday Herald. 4 February, 2007, p. 28.
5. John McCann, ‘Glasgow museums trust faces Euro probe: Investigation over claims charity is operating illegally.’ Evening Times. 3 May, 2007, p. 2.
6. Honor Mahony, ‘Free marketers in top commission posts.’ EU Observer, 13 August 2004.
7. Gerry Braiden, ‘Commissioner clears city over culture and sport trust claims.’ The Herald. 30 August, 2007, p. 6. http://www.theherald.co.uk/politics/news/display.var.1651843.0.0.php
8. Bridget McConnell in C. Landry (ed) Glasgow: The People, The Place, The Potential. Glasgow’s Cultural Strategy., 2006. http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/en/YourCouncil/PolicyPlanning_Strategy/ServiceDepartments/CultureandSportGlasgow/
9. M. McLaughlin, ‘Museum faces delays as costs spiral to £74m.’ The Scotsman. 13 June, 2007, p. 21.
10. Culture and Sport Glasgow Articles of Association and Certificate of Incorporation of a Private Limited Company (Company No. 313851) 22 December 2006 and letter from Burness to OSCR 21 December 2006.
11. G.William Domhoff, The Bohemian Gove and Other Retreats: A Study in Ruling-Class Cohesiveness. Harper & Row, New York, 1974. pp. 52-54.
12. It will be remembered that her husband, Jack McConnell, First Minister of Scotland November 2001-May 2007, had made the development of devolved powers for culture a priority. This was reflected in his 2003 St Andrew’s Day speech in which he said, ‘I believe we can now make the development of our creative drive, our imagination, the next major enterprise for our society. Arts for all can be a reality, a democratic right, and an achievement of the early 21st Century.’ See http://www.scotland.gov.uk/News/News-Extras/176
13. On 18 December 2002, in her capacity as Chair of VOCAL, Bridget McConnell wrote to the group charged with implementation of the Scottish Executive’s National Cultural Strategy to propose a national review of local government cultural and leisure services. See minutes of Joint Implementation Group meeting 14 January 2003, item 4.6. http://www.scotland.gov.uk/About/FOI/19260/jointgroup. This intervention led to her being copied into documents collected by the subsequent Cultural Commission (a visit to the Cultural Commission archive held in Stirling revealed that the marginalia of documents included the note ‘Copies to Frank [McAveety], James [Boyle], Bridget).
14. Convention of Scottish Local Authorities. McConnell served as Link Arts Adviser (1997-2001) and Joint Chair of the CoSLA/VOCAL Culture Strategy Task Group (2005).
15. The Voice of Chief Officers of Culture, Leisure and Community Services in Scotland.
16. See Scottish Executive/COSLA Implementation of the National Cultural Strategy: Guidance for Local Authorities, March 2003.
17. See Eddie Barnes and William Lyons, ‘Are our artists being strung along?’ Scotland on Sunday. 22 January, 2006. p. 13. In the same article, it was claimed that McConnell had always viewed the Scottish Arts Council as an impediment to her plans of offering ‘access to excellence’, which may have led to its demise as a result of the Cultural Commission process. Elsewhere, it was reported that a memo was sent from civil servants to the Executive in advance of the Cultural Commission, seriously undermining the efficacy of the Scottish Arts Council, and reported a feud between Bridget McConnell and James Boyle. See Paul Hutcheon, ‘Revealed: civil servants’ attack on arts council: Memo sparks fears of secret agenda.’ The Sunday Herald. 10 April, 2005. p. 10.
18. Bridget McConnell, ‘Culture and the New Politics: Reflections from a Small Country.’ op. cit. p. 17.
19. Paul Gilbride, ‘McConnell’s relative faces probe into £2 property deal’ The Express, 26 March 2007, p.15.
20. Stephen Stewart, ‘Chaos as council stopped by sit-in protest: Anger over cabinet system.’ The Herald. 30 June, 2006. p. 9.
21. Brian Currie, ‘No hiding place for secrets in our new city leisure trusts: Freedom of Information pledge by Purcell.’ Evening Times. 8 March, 2007, p. 7.
22. Culture and Sport Glasgow. Minutes of Meeting of Board of Directors, 27 June, 2007. Note 7(4). See http://www.csglasgow.org/aboutus/meetings_minutes/
23. Michael Grenfell and Cheryl Hardy, Art Rules: Pierre Bourdieu and the Visual Arts. Berg, Oxford, 2007. p. 97.
24. http://www.scotlandfutureforum.org/sff/people.asp
25. http://www.gbn.com/
26. Kenneth Chrystie is a founder member of The Intellectual Property Lawyers Organisation (TIPLO) based in London.
27. http://www.ukbi.co.uk/index.asp?PID=542
28. Platform PR website http://www.platformpr.co.uk/TrackRecord.aspx
29. http://www.bestglasgowrestaurants.com/index.php?page=restaurants&id=86&start=0
30. There seems to be some confusion about dates in the literature. The brand guide claims that GCMB launched the brand in March 2004 while its Chief Executive, Scott Taylor, dates the inception of the bureau to April 2005. See Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, Glasgow: Scotland with style: The City Brand. September, 2007. http://www.seeglasgow.com/glasgow-the-brand
31. According to Steven Purcell’s introduction to the brand guide, ‘The Bureau has a team of 43 people engaged in branding and public relations; conference, meetings and incentive sales; event creation, management and marketing; conference and event accommodation bookings; ICT and finance and administration.’
32. Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, Glasgow’s Tourism Strategy to 2016, 2007. This strategy is predicated on the understanding that ‘tourism is the fastest-growing global economic sector in terms of foreign exchange earnings and job creation’ (p. 7). In considering the policy context for the strategy, it is noted that it ‘takes advantage of the favourable national policy environment’ (p. 4).
33. One of the few roles of the former CLS relinquished by CSG was that of direct grant-giving powers.
34. See http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/en/Residents/ArtsDevelopment/Newsletter/visualart.htm
35. In Dublin, regeneration of the Temple Bar area led to hiked rents which precluded its former cultural tenants; the same pattern has been seen in the Shoreditch area of London, notably through the spectacular demise of the Lux Centre. Benedict Seymour, ‘The Last Picture Show’, Mute, 22, December 2001 documents the rent support originally offered to the Lux by the British Film Institute (themselves renting the building from Glasshouse developers) which was reneged upon when the BFI underwent a funding squeeze, and concludes: ‘With the forced exodus from New Labour’s bathetic grands projets already begun, the challenge now is to discover a ‘third way’ between the unaccountable bureaucracy that consumed the Lux and the culture pimping that sustains the ICA. If anything good comes out of the eclipse of the Lux it will involve creating a better, viable and contemporary form of the autonomy sought by the original cooperatives a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away.’ See http://www.metamute.org/en/The-Last-Picture-Show
36. David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change. Blackwell, Oxford, 1980, p. 92.

OPERATION E.U TREE

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With the alleged corruption of Celtic and Labour land deals /state aid and the the soft loans campaign growing momentum, I would like to say one thing.

Nobody has been found guilty of anything, yet!

Lets be Calm.

Yes, let us ask questions to anybody that matters about all and sundry, but lets not get all Rangers Tax case Blood-lusty about it, like that bigoted little sectarian racist cabal thought they could under what ex solicitor who left a trail of debt Jim McGinlay, the sectarian anti British Gerry Coogan, the miner shafting bigot solicitor Paul McConville, the former main stream media editor John MacLean and Tony “The Hat” Mckelvie to name a few, thought was anonymity.

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Because unlike the Rangers Tax case Blog the Celtic State Aid blog if there is one,Wont have a sympathetic ear from the Scottish Mhedia.

I doubt Radio Clyde and the Rangers and unionist hating BBC Scotland will be doing any in-depth investigations into alleged Celtic State Aid.

And you can bet those ever increasing flappable Employees at Celtic park wont sit on their hands in defence of their sordid Child rape covering up, anti British terror promoting club like the poor excuses for Rangers boards that we have seen recently.

As I say lets be calm and let the E.U carry out their investigation because it is by no means a fore gone conclusion.

As we can see , dear reader from this wonderful article entitled The New Bohemia from the LEFT LEANING arts mag the Variant.
Here is extracts from it. I will post the article fully on a different post complete with handy diagram.

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The New Bohemia
Rebecca Gordon Nesbitt

“The referendum on Scottish devolution on September 11th 1997 was a historic moment for our country. But the ‘Yes Yes’ result was not a mandate for politicians, civil servants, local government officers or any other public sector officials to take on extra powers ‘on behalf of the people’.”
Bridget McConnell, 19971

In summer 2007, Variant reported on the unprecedented move of Glasgow City Council (GCC) devolving its Cultural and Leisure Services department to a private charitable trust.2 The main challenges outlined at the time came from Unison – representing the majority of public sector workers affected – which objected that workers would suffer, that previous fundraising attempts offered a spurious precedent for guaranteeing future funding (which might contribute further pressure to seek private investment), that democratic accountability beyond the ‘lucky six’ councillors appointed to the board would be lost in relation to a number of key services (leading to an ‘arms-length’ private company), that the scheme represented a tax dodge (explicitly prohibited within Labour Party policy)3 and that this move would compromise the credibility and fundraising potential of legitimate charities. Unison mounted a legal challenge, applying for an interim interdict against the Council’s proposals in March 2007 and seeking a judicial review of the process, both of which were unsuccessful.

In January 2007, as a result of similar concerns, Culture Minister, Patricia Ferguson, had sought reassurance about the legality of the move.4 Another objection was made by Scots Tory MEP, Struan Stevenson – responding to the claims of a whistleblower presumed to be a high-level GCC official – on the grounds that the creation of a new company to oversee culture and leisure should have been put out to tender and that the state cannot directly or indirectly subsidise a company.5 Competition commissioner Neelie Kroes passed the matter over to European Commissioner, Charlie McCreevy, who is widely acknowledged to be in favour of free markets.6 McCreevy contacted the Scottish Executive on 10 April 2007 which, just days before Bridget McConnell’s husband lost his job as First Minister, penned a joint response with GCC, refuting any claims of illegality, which was accepted by the Commission.7

What do we have here?

Allegations of State Aid being investigated by the European Commission, hmmmmmm. By a company Culture and Sport Glasgow, and Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC whos Executive Director is Bridget McConnell non other than the wife of former Labour first minister for Scotland, hmmmmmmm.

Lets have a look at this gentleman, the European Commissioner, Charlie McCreevy that Competition commissioner Neelie Kroes so kindly passed the matter over too.

The man who contacted the Scottish Executive on 10 April 2007 which, just days before Bridget McConnell’s husband lost his job as First Minister, penned a joint response with GCC, refuting any claims of illegality, which was accepted by the Commission.

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Charlie McCreevy Born 30 September 1949 in Sallins, Ireland was the

European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services from 22 November 2004 – 9 February 2010
Irelands Minister for Finance In office 26 June 1997 – 29 September 2004
Teachta Dála In office June 1997 – October 2004
Fianna Fáil Politician for Constituency Kildare North In office June 1977 – June 1997

In 1997, Fianna Fáil returned to power and McCreevy became Minister for Finance. His period coincided with the Celtic Tiger era which saw the rapid growth of the Irish economy.

How did that Celtic Tiger pan out by the way?

Charlie McCreevy was also involved in the two measures of cutting Capital Gains Tax and providing tax incentives for property development in thinly populated rural areas have been partly responsible for the explosion in housing and commercial property speculation, which led ultimately to the collapse of the Irish banking system

McCreevy also prompted warnings from the European Commission, who claimed that his £2 billion tax giveaway in 2000 would be inflationary, and harmful to the Irish economy.

In 2008 as Ireland entered recession McCreevy’s stewardship has been cited as one of the reasons why the global financial crisis is hitting Ireland especially hard, due to his “light touch” regulation of the financial system.

Former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald has attributed Ireland’s dire economic state in 2009, on a series of “calamitous” government policy errors by the then Finance Minister Charlie McCreevy, who between the years of 2000 and 2003, boosted public spending by 48% while cutting income tax.

Following his departure from the Commission, McCreevy was forced to resign from the board of a new banking firm, NBNK Investments, after an EU ethics committee found a conflict of interest with his work as commissioner in charge of financial regulation. This is first time that a former member of the EU executive has had to resign a directorship the 2003 system for overseeing the work of retired commissioners.

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Charlie McCreevy is very CLOSE business and social friends with Celtic Football Club owner Dermot Desmomd. Infact in one rare newspaper interview From 23 OCTOBER 2004 titled “Inside the mind of Dermot Desmond

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2012/0410/1224314568400.html

he speaks of his admiration for former Finance Minister Charlie McCreevy, his pride in his brainchild, the Irish Financial Services Centre (IFSC), why he wants George Bush to win the US election, and the reason he left Ireland in 1994: “I’m leaving the press and I’m avoiding small-minded people.”

Ironically that was the same year as Phil Mac Giolla bhain went to Ireland under a cloud. one can only speculate if Phil was the small minded bigot he left Ireland for.

sml-desmond-gethering-2013

Former EU commissioner Charlie McCreevy was appointed to the Barchester board. As well as serving on the board of Ryanair, Mr McCreevy is a director of WorldSpreads, the spreadbetting company which collapsed in the UK. Other Irish board members of Barchester include John Bateson, finance director at Dermot Desmond’s IIU.

A real estate investment group including one of Barchester Healthcare’s key equity backers, Dermot Desmond, has bought all of the care home group’s property debts in a sale and leaseback deal.
Barchester is the UK’s largest premium care home group and employs almost 17,000 staff at over 200 locations. Desmond and fellow Irish entrepreneurs John Magnier and JP McManus hold large stakes in the business.

Denis Brosnan was once chairman of healthcare company Barchester. You may remember his son Paul Brosnan chairman of Castlebeck, the company behind Winterbourne View, the care home at the centre of the recent BBC Panorama abuse exposé, has resigned as the group braces itself for what it expects to be a highly critical report into care standards conducted by the Care Quality Commission and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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Castlebeck is owned by Denis Brosnan’s Jersey-based Lydian Capital, which is backed by fellow Irish tycoons JP McManus, John Magnier and Dermot Desmond.

A note for Rangers fans is that Charlie McCreevy joined the board of Sports Direct International plc on 31 March 2011 as a non-executive director. Owned by Mike Ashley who has an involvent with the Club as a major share holder.

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Also of note Mr McCreevy came under fire from socialist lawmakers in Brussels who accused him of stalling on the regulation of hedge funds and private equity firms. Critics claimed that “commissioner McCreevy is trying to avoid implementing the demands of the European Parliament for regulation covering all financial players”.

Another extract from The New Bohemia by Rebecca Gordon Nesbitt

Bridget McConnell – Executive Director of Culture and Sport Glasgow, and Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC
As the manoeuvres outlined above demonstrate, Bridget McConnell was the driving force behind the creation of Culture and Sport Glasgow. Appointed as Director of Cultural and Leisure services in 1998, her tenure was blighted by union wrangles over jobs and by run-ins with the city’s artistic communities about departmental policies or lack thereof. Promoted to Executive Director with negligible discussion in August 2005, reports of top council jobs being axed were appearing on the front page of the Herald by the following November.

You may remember from this blog dear reader that Culture and Sport Glasgow is now called Glasgow Life.
You remember the GCC Tax funded company that held the Rangers Tax case Propaganda before Rangers were finally found innocent?

https://themanthebheastscanttame.wordpress.com/2013/06/13/rangers-tax-case-uncovered-9/

The GCC Tax funded company that employed Rangers hating. British Unionist hating Bigot friends a PIRA terrorist mouthpiece to come and talk about Rangers Tax issues

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As Cultural and Leisure Services complained that an extra £3.5m p.a. was needed to run its museums properly, figures produced by McConnell for the period 1 April 2006 and 26 January 2007 showed her department having a net overspend of £981,000. Yet, while the devolution to CSG was justified to the GCC Executive Committee and the media on financial grounds, McConnell’s perspective has always been broader, extending to discussions around culture at a national level.12 In 2000, she served as a member of the focus group set up to implement the National Cultural Strategy13 and – through CoSLA14 and VOCAL15 – ensured that the work of local authorities in delivering cultural provision was fully recognised.16 On the occasion of Culture Minister, Patricia Ferguson, making her recommendations on the future of the arts in Scotland in January 2006, in response to the findings of the Cultural Commission, it was said that “arts figures across Scotland are unanimous in one thing: the conclusions of Ferguson’s blueprint, which controversially propose to hand more influence over Scotland’s arts scene to local and central government, were wrought in [Bridget McConnell’s] image.”17 In order to make her plans a reality, McConnell has secured the help of some of the most influential pro-business minds in Glasgow City Council and beyond.

Glasgow Life Logo

One final point of interest before considering the dealings of other CSG representatives is that McConnell’s brother, Robert McLuckie, is the millionaire owner of property company, Camvo 37. In 2007, retired detective sergeant Alistair Watson – the officer behind the ‘cash for honours’ inquiry that dogged Tony Blair – sparked an investigation into McLuckie’s dealings with the Scottish Executive by writing to the Metropolitan Police. Apparently, five houses and a plot of prime building land, sold to Camvo 37 by the Executive for just two pounds in 2004 on the site of the former Ladysbridge Hospital in Aberdeenshire, had been valued at upwards of £1million. A condition of the sale had been that McLuckie should pay for any subsequent renovation, yet he applied for £120,000 from an Executive quango, Communities Scotland, to help build new homes on the land and another £230,000 of NHS and council cash was allegedly spent renovating the existing houses, despite interventions from Inland Revenue. It was reported that, six months before negotiations began, another McLuckie company, Choices Community Care, had donated more than £2,000 to Jack McConnell’s election funds.19

This Story above involving Little Randy Jack McConnell the Labour first minister for Scotland and his Brother in Law bears striking similarities from what I can see to many of the land deals struck with Glasgow City Council and Celtic Football Club. Especially the Lennoxtown one.

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You may remember dear reader from this blog about Bridget McConnell’s brother, Robert McLuckie a man who is very friendly with Celtic board and ex players. He was reported in the News of the world as sexually harassing SNP Fiona Hyslop and calling two girl singers dedicating a song to the British Armed Forces as “PRODDY BASTARDS” the two girls turned out to be Roman Catholic.

https://themanthebheastscanttame.wordpress.com/2013/06/13/rangers-tax-case-uncovered-9/

one Scotland many Cultures indeed wee wife cuckolding Jack!

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I WILL REITERATE NO RANGERS TAX SECTARIAN BLOOD-LUST PLEASE!

This is far from a foregone conclusion I mean asking the European Union to investigate corruption is akin to asking Jimmy Savile to investigate allegations of Child rape in the Roman Catholic Church!

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THIS IS WHY WE MUST BE RATIONAL, COOL HEADED AND VIGILANT!

ASK QUESTIONS! MAKE SURE YOU GET ANSWERS! THERE’S NO LAWS AGAINST THAT. NOT EVEN IN ALEX SALMONDS SCOTLAND THAT TOES THE THE LINE TO EVERY BIGOTED LITTLE IRA TERRORIST REVISIONIST SECTARIAN CABAL. …….

YET!

THERE SHALL BE NO WHITE WASH AT THE GLASGOW CITY COUNCIL BIG HOOSE!

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