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ANGRY BRIGADE CHRONOLOGY 1969 February 3 Unexploded dynamite charges discovered on the premises of the Bank of Bilbao and the Bank of Spain in London. February 9 Bank of Spain in Liverpool bombed. March 15 Two anarchists, Alan Barlow and Phil Carver, arrested immediately following a powerful explosion at the Bank of Bilbao in London. In their possession was a letter claiming the action on behalf of the 1st of May Group. August 16 Home of Duncan Sandys, Tory MP, fire-bombed. August 17 Ulster Office in London firebombed. August 19 Bomb explodes after being thrown into army recruiting office, Brighton. October 9 Petrol bombs found in left luggage locker in London. October 15 Imperial War Museum gutted by incendiary device. 1970 January 28 Bomb attack on offices of the Spanish Cultural attache in Paris. February 10 Ian Purdie is imprisoned for 9 months for throwing a petrol bomb at the Ulster Office in Saville Row during an Irish Civil Rights Campaign march. February 20 3 students captured as they are about to firebomb Barclays Bank. February 28 Bomb attack on the Bank of Bilbao and the Spanish State Railways in Paris. March 28 Time bomb found at Waterloo Station. May 4 American Embassy, London, firebombed. May 10 Incendiary device discovered aboard Iberian Airliner at Heathrow. Similar devices are found in other European capitals on planes belonging to Iberia. May 19 Wembley Conservative Association firebombed. May 22 High explosive device discovered at a new police station in Paddington. This was later claimed by the prosecution in the trial of the Stoke Newington Eight to be the first action undertaken by `The Angry Brigade'. June 10 Brixton Conservative Association firebombed. June 11 Stuart Christie's home raided with explosives warrant. June 18 Lambeth Court firebombed. June 30 Army depot, Kimber Road, London, firebombed. June 30 Ian Purdie is released from Albany prison (Isle of Wight). July 3 Simultaneous bomb attacks in Paris and London against Spanish State Tourist offices, and the Spanish and Greek Embassies. July 7 Army recruiting office, South London, firebombed. Army Officer Training Centre, Holborn, London, firebombed. July 10 Home of a retired policeman in Stoke Newington firebombed. August 18 The London offices of Iberia Airlines, Spanish State airline, bombed. August 30 The London home of the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir John Waldron, is damaged by a bomb blast. The bombing is not reported in the national press. September 8 The London home of Attorney General, Sir Peter Rawlinson, in Chelsea, is bombed. Again this goes unreported . September 17 Jake Prescott paroled from Albany Prison, Isle of Wight. September 21 Wimbledon Conservative Association firebombed. September 26 Hampstead Conservative Association firebombed. September 26 Bomb exploded outside Barclays Bank, Heathrow. September 26 Simultaneous bomb attacks against Iberia in Geneva, Frankfurt, Paris and London airports. October 7 BOAC Air terminal at Victoria, booby trap hand grenade found. October 8 Second explosion at Rawlinson's home. October 9 Italian Trade Centre, Exhibition Building, Cork Street, London, bombed. Attacks simultaneously in Manchester, Birmingham and Paris against Italian State buildings. The attacks were claimed on behalf of Giuseppe Pinelli the Italian anarchist murdered by the police in 1969. October 24 During the Council workers' strike a bomb explodes in the cleansing dept head office, Greenford. October 26 Administration building on Keele University campus firebombed. October 26 Barclays Bank at Stoke Newington firebombed. Newspaper report says: `Police are investigating several similar incidents at other branches'. November 20 A BBC van outside the Albert Hall in London covering the Miss World contest is bombed at 2,30 am. The prosecution claimed that Jake Prescott was responsible for this explosion, but also brought a witness who vouched that Jake was in fact in Edinburgh at the time. They were forced to drop this charge. December 3 Spanish Embassy in London machine gunned following international protests against the trial of the Basque nationalists, the Burgos Six. This was not reported. December 8 Big demonstrations against the Tory Government's Industrial Relations Bill. In the early hours of December 9 the Department of Employment and Productivity in St James Square, London, is bombed. The police had searched the building and no sooner left it than it went off. Action claimed by the Angry Brigade. 1971 January 12 Thousands of people strike and march against the Industrial Relations Bill. The home of Robert Carr, Minister of Employment, in Hadley Green Road, Barnet, is bombed. First explosion is at 10:05 pm, the second at 10:20 pm. The action is claimed by the Angry Brigade. "One man the police particularly want... is a Scot in his twenties who is suspected of being involved in the bomb attack at the Iberia Airlines office in London last August. This man was believed to be in Paris yesterday." (The Times) The hunt for Stuart Christie as a likely `candidate for outrage' was on. His history as an anarchist and his involvement with the movement in Spain made him a superb candidate for a fit-up. Police searches extend over the whole of the London area. A number of people were dragged up to Barnet Police Station for questioning. "Special Branch were watching members of a group believed to be connected with the ex-plosions". All those questioned at Barnet in the early part of the week were released, apart from a man and a woman who were handed over to the police in other parts of London in connection with other offences. In the week after the Carr bomb a police guard was provided for Justice Melford Stevenson after he had received a phone call saying that a bomb was to be placed at his house. This was Melford the hanging judge who was to sentence Jake Prescott to 15 years. Secret orders have been issued to police and security guards that members of the organisation must be flushed out as a matter of top priority. An undercover squad of Special Branch officers has been formed to pursue full-time investigation into the group. Full-time guards have been placed on Cabinet Ministers. These are angry times... Peter Walker (environment Minister), Melford Stevenson, Tory MP Hugh Fraser, Tory Prime Minister Heath and many others have received threatening calls. A communique sent to the Express newspaper says: "THE ANGRY BRIGADE IS AFTER HEATH NOW. WE'RE GETTING CLOSER". January 18 Glasgow South African Airways office firebombed. January 19 Jake Prescott was arrested on a cheque charge in Notting Hill. On January 20 he appeared in Marylebone Court, where he was questioned by Habershon. In the time he was inside on remand, he was put in cells with Messrs A, B and C. Habershon had an interview with Mr A at Camberwell Court, which he took up again on February 9. Mr A made a statement that Jake "had admitted the bombings at the DEP, Carr's home and the Miss World Contest"... Very convenient! But unfortunately for Habershon, the jury at Jake's trial were not prepared to believe the police witness (perhaps they had in mind the ?10,000 reward that had been offered by the Daily Mirror for police informants)... This part of the police evidence was rejected as a frame-up. At this time the police were being given full rein to do what they liked. In the midst of the hysteria that was generated by the idea that the opposition might be armed, in the midst of the fear that came after a cabinet minister had his front door blown off, a manhunt was taking place `leaving no stone unturned'. Stuart Christie was particularly a victim of this. The London evening newspapers were trumpeting from day to day about the `young Scottish anarchist recently returned from Spain' whom they had branded as the most likely... people were disappearing off the streets for questioning. The police visit offices of leading newspapers and take photographers off to Barnet to identify people from the photos that were taken outside Carr's house on the night of the January 12 bombing. On February 3 Jake Prescott was released on bail. Ian Purdie was in court at the time, as he had been for Jake's previous remands. Then, on February 11, Jake and a Dutch friend were seized from a pub in North London and dragged off to Barnet. They were refused any access to lawyers for two days. Jake was interrogated by Habershon and Allard for hours. On February 12 Jake's defence counsel began preparations for a writ of habeas corpus on the police, which would require them to either charge Jake or release him. On February 13 Jan Oudenaarden, the Dutchman, was released after "the most frightening experience of my life". Jake however was not released. He was charged with causing an explosion at Carr's home and those at the DEP and the Miss World contest. Jake and Jan had been `detained for questioning' for 3 days. In the court at Barnet, Habershon is challenged to produce `grounds for arrest' and is threatened with legal action. It is claimed that he had tried to persuade Jake to change his lawyer -- presumably to one who would not cause trouble for the police... January 25 Home of the Lord Provost of Glasgow bombed. January 27 Communique 5 received by the Press Association. The police were forced to admit that earlier bombings (which they had covered up) had taken place. The police, however, imposed a press blackout on the course of the investigations. At the same time the Daily Mirror offers a ?10,000 reward to anybody giving information leading to a conviction. January 29 The Times reports: "Scotland Yard and security officials are becoming increasingly embarrassed and annoyed by the activities of the Angry Brigade, who cannot now be dismissed as a group of cranks. Some senior officers credit the group with a degree of professional skill that has seldom been experienced". In the weeks after the Carr bombing, the Barnet Brigade, headed by Roy Habershon (explosives expert), Commander Bond and Commander Dace, thundered all over London with squad cars, dogs, photographers, raiding houses of 'known left wing extremists'. Their concern (as was clear from the number of address books, magazines, letters, etc that they took) was to draw up a picture of the extra- parliamentary left, whose activities they were now forced to take seriously, and whose structures they were more or less ignorant of. These were raids of the political police in action. The raids included: January 13: Chris Reed, Huddleston Road, London, N7 January 14: Stuart Roche, Schools Union activist. January 15: Ian Purdie's brother, Robert is taken up to Barnet and questioned. The police are looking for Ian. January 17: The house of Ann Lamche (Cinema Action) is raided. Two people are taken off for questioning. The Agitprop house in Muswell Hill (which the police were eager to look round) address book copied. January 19: 4 known raids in which nothing is found. Joe Keith and Tony Swash questioned by Habershon. January 20: Ian Purdie questioned by Palmer-Hall at Bedford Gardens. January 21: Paul Lewis of International Times is questioned by Habershon. Office and home searched. January 22: Chris Allen is questioned by Edinburgh CID. Habershon goes to Edinburgh for three days. January 23: Another raid in Edinburgh. January 24: Police raid a house in London and two men, Ross Flett and Phil Carver were dragged off to Barnet for questioning. Barnet refuses them access to a lawyer who was present outside the station. The papers start to talk of a Scottish anarchist. Two men are seized by police in London and taken to Barnet for questioning concerning `about 30 unpublicised attacks on Establishment property' including banks, the home of Tory racist Duncan Sandys and various Conservative Party offices. January 29 The Evening News reports that: "... in the latest report of HM Inspector of Explosives, `there was again a substantial increase in the number of cases involving homemade devices. There is evidence of the increasing use of such devices in the furtherance of political activities' ". January 30 Slough Conservative Office firebombed. February 3 Jake Prescott is released on bail and yet is arrested on the 11th. He is interrogated, denied access to a lawyer for three days, and is accused of the attacks on Carr's home and the BBC van. February 9 The Jersey home of a local managing director firebombed. February 11 The house in Grosvenor Avenue, Islington, where Jake Prescott had been staying, is raided by the police. The house is searched for explosives. Diaries, address books, newspapers and other articles are taken away, despite protests that this does not come into the terms of the police warrants. Press reports now make Grosvenor Avenue the centre of the conspiracy. The nearest thing they can find... February 11 Earlier in the day Habershon and his gang had disrupted the trial of the people who were involved in the demonstration at the Miss World contest in November 1970. They removed by force four of the defence witnesses who were due to give evidence in the trial. They were taken off to Barnet, where they were questioned and denied all access to legal representation. Habershon comes forth in true democratic light when he says "I am not concerned with legal niceties". Charges are brought against Scotland Yard for assault (of those dragged away from Bow Street) and for wrongful arrest and imprisonment. The Special Branch were present at the Miss World trial. February 13 Searches at the homes of Hilary Creek, John Barker, Kate McLean, Chris Allen and others in a hunt for explosives. Jake Prescott is charged with conspiracy to cause explosions between July 30 1970 and December 1971, and with the specific bombings of Carr's home, the Dept of Employment and the Miss World contest. February 15 Cannock Street is raided again. February 19 Habershon goes to Edinburgh. Two houses are raided and Jane and Chris Allen are questioned. The same day The Times prints Communique 6 from the Angry Brigade. There was also a telephone call from an Angry Brigade spokesman to the Havering Recorder in Essex, saying that from Saturday next a campaign of violence would be conducted against Conservative Party policies in South Africa. THE RAIDS CONTINUE February 20 Mike Kane's house is raided. March 5 House in Talbot Road, Notting Hill raided. March 6 12 midnight, house in Tyneham Road, SW11, raided. Ian Purdie was there and was arrested. Habershon said at Barnet that "the raid was to find explosives and Ian Purdie. They are synonymous as far as I am concerned." He admitted in court that he had ordered Ian to be arrested for questioning, which is illegal. March 7 Ian Purdie is charged, along with Jake Prescott, accused of the two Angry Brigade bombings. They are both in the top security wing at Brixton Prison -- as class A prisoners -- and are kept in their cells for 23 hours a day. March 10 The Guardian reports on police excesses in their investigations. March 18 During a major strike of Ford workers in England the main offices of the Ford Motor Company at Gants Hill, Ilford, on the outskirts of London, is wrecked by a powerful explosion. A thousand word communique (Communique no 7) is delivered shortly after. ... A man walks into a London bank and demands ?5,000 with the threat of a bomb that he had with him (a biscuit tin full of coal). The bomb at Fords on March 18 sparks off another wave of raids: March 20 House in Notting Hill raided. Defence documents seized. March 23 Grosvenor Avenue raided for the second time. Dogs and ten pigs. March 24 Two houses in East London raided. First, Ron Bailey's with explosives warrant -- impression of typewriter taken. Second, Digger Walsh's with explosives warrant, by Cremer and Bentley. April 1 Two houses in Notting Hill raided. More defence files for the Powis Square trial are seized. Throughout the period since their arrest, Ian and Jake have been kept in solitary in Brixton Prison, allowed out for only one hour each day. Their defence lawyers can only gain access to them after bargaining with Habershon. When the defence counsel asks for evidence of arrests to be produced, he is told this can't be done without the permission of the Attorney General. In addition ?10,000 bail for each of the defendants is refused by the magistrate at Barnet. April 1 The home of the headmaster of Roydale School is firebombed. April 5 Arson attempt at Gosport Tory Club. (Evening Standard says "this is the latest in a series of incidents involving this club in the last six months.") April 5 Bomb left in Leicester Square. April 22 Committal proceedings for Jake and Ian start at Barnet Court. The committal is to decide whether or not the magistrate feels there is enough evidence against the two of them for a trial to be set at the Old Bailey. There is no doubt that he will find so, but nevertheless proceedings proceed... interminably... until May 27. Jake had been presented (April 15) with three more charges: having conspired with Ian to cause explosions `with others' between July 1970 and March 1971 and having actually caused the Miss World and DEP bombings. April 22 Arson at Whitechapel Barclays Bank. April 23 Booby trap incendiary envelope posted to MP at House of Commons. April 24 Second police raid in Wivenhoe, Essex. Charges: possession of drugs -- shown photos of Jim Greenfield and Anna Mendelson and 2 others. April 26 3rd raid on Cannock Street. Chris arrested on cheques charges. April 28 The Times receives a liquid bomb through the post. It had a message: "From the Vengeance Squad, the Angry Brigade, The People's Army. We will use these. Many of them in June and July. Revolution now." April 29 Sabotage at Nuclear Power Station, Berkeley, Gloucester (3rd such incident within three months). April/May The IS printers had an intimidating visit, asking about women's newspaper. Raids on IS members in London. May 1 Mayday, a bomb explodes in the Biba boutique in trendy Kensington. It was accompanied by Communique 8. May 4 Bomb found strapped to the underside of Lady Beaverbrook's car. Inquiries range through Kent, Essex and Oxfordshire. May 4 Four home-made bombs found near the Sidcup and Chislehurst Grammar School, where Prime Minister Heath received the Freedom of Bexley on Friday. May 22 Bomb attack on Scotland Yard Computer Room at Tintagel House, London. This is accompanied by simultaneous attacks by the Angry Brigade, the International Solidarity Movement, and the Marius Jacob group against British Rail, Rolls Royce and Rover offices in Paris. May Harris Gleckman, Alan Barlow, and Smith raided for the second time at Agitprop, Muswell Hill. June 1 A letter is sent to The Times: "If Heath and Rippon contrive to enter the Common Market without seeking the opinion of the British people they will be on the receiving end of a bullet. This is no idle threat. Signed: The Angry Brigade." July 22 During a dispute between Ford management and the militant shop steward John Dillon, in the Ford Liverpool plant, the Angry Brigade blow up the home of Ford's managing director, William Batty, in Essex. The same night a bomb damages a transformer at the Dagenham plant of the Ford Motor Company. By this time Scotland Yard is hopping mad. Sir John Waldron holds a conference there, where senior police officers are told of the order that has come from the Prime Minister, via Home Secretary Maudling, that "The Angry Brigade must be found and smashed"... "We have been ordered to treat the Angry Brigade as Public Enemy Number 1. This is a top priority job." In the words of the Sunday Telegraph: "YARD WILL GET THE ANGRY BRIGADE.... A special team of 20 hand-picked detectives from the Flying Squad and Special Branch, working with army bomb disposal experts and Home Office scientists. Their leader, a commander, whose name is being kept secret for his own safety... is known as rough and ready... The squad is taking a tough line. It will raid hippy communes, question avowed members of the `underground' and build up a complete file on the sub-culture that threatens the present social order." July 19 Factory at Dordan damaged by several fires started by incendiary devices. July 25 Intimidation of a claimant in North London when police with explosives warrant smash door in. July 26 Ian Purdie refused bail of ?17,500 by Melford Stevenson. July 31 Despite close police protection in the home of the Secretary for Trade and Industry, John Davies, is badly damaged by a powerful explosion in London. This action followed close on Davies' announcement of his intention to close Upper Clyde Shipbuilders, throwing thousands of men out of work. This is accompanied by the 11th Communique from the Angry Brigade. August 2 Two houses in Essex searched with explosives warrant. Judge Argyll of the OZ trial is threatened in his Midlands home. The trial date for Jake Prescott and Ian Purdie is set for September 7, and now the police's concern is to do everything possible to wreck and intimidate any support action that might be planned for them. Various houses are raided and material and addresses related to the Ian and Jake defence is seized. One of the places raided was the Agitprop collective in Bethnal Green, London, where material was seized . August 15 More raids: Hungerford Road, Dave Garfinkel taken for questioning. Beresford Terrace, N5 -- documents seized. Crystal Palace -- Sally Keith's house, floorboards ripped up. August 15 Following the announcement by the British Government that internment was to be introduced in Ireland, there was a powerful explosion at the Army recruiting centre in Holloway Road, North London. This was accompanied by a Communique signed `Angry Brigade Moonlighters Cell'. August 16 Agitprop, Bethnal Green again raided with explosives warrant. August 17 Wilson and Habershon raid house in Talbot Road, Notting Hill, with warrant for stolen goods. August 21 House in Amhurst Road, London, raided by Special Branch and CID. Jim Greenfield, Anna Mendelson, John Barker and Hilary Creek are arrested. The four are taken to the `Bomb Squad' HQ in Albany Street, London, where the two men are subjected to a brutal beating-up to extract a confession from them. August 21 Stuart Christie arrested at Amhurst Road, London, while visiting the house. One hour later Chris Bott is also arrested at the same place. Both are taken to join the others at Albany Street Police Station. Incriminating evidence in the form of two detonators is planted by police officers in Christie's car. Both men are also verballed. August 23 All are charged at Albany Street Police Station with: 1. Conspiring to cause explosions between January 1 1968 and August 21 1971. 2. Possessing explosive substances for an unlawful purpose. 3. Possessing a pistol without a firearms certificate. 4. Possessing eight rounds of ammunition without a firearms certificate. 5. Possessing two machine guns without the authority of the Secretary of State. 6. Possessing 36 rounds of ammunition without a firearms certificate. 7. Jim: attempting to cause an explosion in May 1970. 8. Anna and Jim: attempting to cause an explosion in Manchester, October 1970. 9. Stuart: possessing one round of ammunition without a firearm certificate. (This was dated back 2 years when a bullet was taken from his flat. No charges were preferred against him at the time.) 10. John, Jim and Stuart: possessing explosive substances. 11. Jim, John and Hilary: receiving stolen vehicle. 12. Stuart: possessing explosive substances. (The two detonators planted by the police). All are refused bail and remanded in custody to await trial. August 29 Military wing of Edinburgh Castle bombed. September 10 Ipswich Courthouse bombed. September 16 Bomb discovered in officers' mess inside Dartmoor prison. (News not released for two weeks). September 20 Support of Chelsea Bridge opposite army barracks bombed. (Blast heard three miles away.) September 24 Despite the fact that the police claim to have arrested all the Angry Brigade, the Albany Street Army Barracks (near the Bomb Squad HQ) is bombed by the Angry Brigade in protest against the actions of the British Army in Northern Ireland. October 15 Maryhill Barracks Army HQ, Glasgow, firebombed. October 20 Home of Bryant, Birmingham building boss, bombed while his workers are on strike. Communique issued by the Angry Brigade. October 30 Post Office Tower in London is bombed by the Angry Brigade. October 30 'The Cunning Man' Pub, Reading, which refused to serve workers from the M4 site, bombed. November 1 Army Tank HQ in Everton Street, London, bombed by the Angry Brigade. November 6 Amsterdam: attack against Lloyds Bank; Basle: Italian Consulate attacked; Rome: British Embassy attacked; Barcelona: British Embassy attacked. All in support of the `Stoke Newington Eight' and the Italian anarchists imprisoned on trumped-up charges of 'conspiracy' and subversion. November 11 Haverstock Street, Islington, raided. Angie Weir arrested, taken to Albany Street and charged with conspiracy to cause explosions. November 17 89 Talbot Road raided: Chris Allen ends up similarly charged. November 26 Pauline Conroy arrested in her flat in Powis Square and charged. November 29 Broadstairs Courthouse firebombed. December 1 Trial of Ian Purdie and Jake Prescott ends. Ian Purdie found not guilty on all charges. Jake Prescott found not guilty of specific bombings, but guilty of conspiracy to cause bombings on the basis of having written three envelopes, and was sentenced to fifteen years. December 15 Jordanian Ambassador, London, machine-gunned in his car. December 18 Kate McLean arrested and charged along with Angela Weir, Chris Allen and Pauline Conroy, who had been arrested during the course of November. of having conspired with the six people already arrested on conspiracy charges. Shortly before the opening of Committal proceedings against the ten militants, Attorney General, Sir Peter Rawlinson, the victim of one of the Angry Brigade attacks, decided there was insufficient evidence for a case to be made against Pauline Conroy and Chris Allen, and they were released from custody. 1972 January 22 Explosive letter sent to MP at House of Commons. February 1 Rhodesia House in London firebombed. February 3 Kirkgate, Huddersfield, Army Recruiting Office destroyed by firebombs. February 17 Bonhill Street Social Security Office, London, firebombed. Liverpool Army HQ, Edge Lane, bombed. Severe damage. February 22 Aldershot Paras HQ bombed -- 7 killed. March 10 South African Airways, London, firebombed. March 15 (Approx) Prison officer shot outside Wandsworth Prison. March 20 Two shots fired through the front of the Army Recruiting Office, Slough, Bucks. March Four members of the Workers' Party of Scotland sentenced to a total of 81 years as a result of an expropriation carried out against the Bank of Scotland in June, 1971. The comrades, who defended their actions politically in court, were dealt the highest sentences ever by a Scottish court for robbery: William McPherson, 26 years, Matt Lygate, 25 years, and Ian Doran were virtually ignored by the revolutionary left. March 30 Bomb containing 13 sticks of gelignite planted on railway line near Stranraer, Glasgow, used by the Army to transport men and equipment to ferry for N. Ireland. April 6 2nd bomb (13 sticks) planted on rail link near Glasgow. April 24 Homemade bomb planted at police headquarters at Sleaford, Lancs. 15 year old boy held. April 26 Bomb blast and fire at Tory HQ, Billericay, Essex. May 1 Explosion at CS gas factory. May 30 Trial of `Stoke Newington Eight' accused of conspiracy to cause Angry Brigade bombings, begins in No 1 Court at the Old Bailey in London. This was to be the longest trial in the history of the British legal system. Excerpt from a Stoke Newington Eight Defence Bulletin: THE TRIAL SO FAR... Has been four months of prosecution, four months of police witness after witness contradicting each other, changing their story, LYING, broken only for four weeks when the judge had his holiday... A CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE The Press have reported nothing of all this -- just as they never reported the bombings until it suited them. What are they scared of? WHAT CONSPIRACY? The only concrete evidence is the guns and gelignite `found' by the police in the flat where 4 of the defendants lived. At first the police said that 2 of the 4 were there throughout the raid; then they admitted that at one point they were taken out of the flat then brought back. WHY? The fingerprint expert admitted that there were no prints on the guns and explosives. WHY NOT? The prosecution's story changed from day to day. It emerged that the police would have fallen flat over the guns and gelly as they came into the flat if it had been where they said it was, instead of 'finding' it ten minutes later; so they suddenly `remembered' for the first time -- a year later -- that it had been covered with clothes. POLICE CONSPIRACY One detective was forced to admit that he had altered his notebook during the trial. Another gave the game away altogether when he said that he and a colleague sat down in the kitchen and `decided' what happened in the raid. NO CONSPIRACY The rest of the evidence against the eight is research, letter and articles written by the defendants for different underground papers ( Frendz, Strike) and broadsheets. The prosecution call them proof of conspiracy because they mention such political targets as the Industrial Relations Act, Fair Rents Act, Miss World contest, etc. Their scientific experts' tried to pin 25 of the bombings that took place in England between 1968 and 1971 on to these people, claiming that these bombings were `associated' -- disregarding other similar bombings and covering up the differences between the 25. But the explosions were claimed by groups as different as the 1st of May group, the Angry Brigade, The Wild Bunch and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. And the `set' didn't include 3 claimed by the Angry Brigade AFTER Amhurst Road was raided. Now the defence is beginning, the truth can come out: the only conspiracy there's been is a STATE CONSPIRACY. Police explosives expert testifies that between March 1968 and August 1971 there had been 123 known attacks on property. November 24 During his summing up Mr Justice James directed the jury to ignore the defence's protestations that it was a political trial. He said: "It is not (a political trial) and I direct you to have none of it. Political trials are trials of people for their political views. We do not have them in this country." December 6 The trial ends. Jim Greenfield, Anna Mendleson, Hilary Creek and John Barker are sentenced to 10 years for `conspiracy to cause explosions'. The other four charged are acquitted, and the sentence of Jake Prescott is reduced to 10 years. December 7 After the Angry Brigade sentences the previous day, Scotland Yard names two more people they want in connection with the bombings: Gerry Osner and Sarah Poulikakou, both living abroad at the time. 300 people marched in protest to Holloway Prison. In all, 12 people were arrested and charged -- 2 had the charges against them withdrawn, 5 were acquitted, five were convicted and imprisoned for conspiracy. Following the trial Commander Bond was promoted to Deputy Assistant Commissioner at Scotland Yard. Det. Chief Superintendent Habershon was made Commander and seconded to the Home Office's Research and Planning Office in 1973. In June 1974 he headed the police investi- gation into the killing of Kevin Gateley, the Warwick Uni- versity student, in Red Lion Square on June 5th 1974 -- as a result of which the police were absolved of all respon- sibility. In April 1975 Commander Habershon was appoint- ed head of the Bomb Squad, replacing Robert Huntley.