The spy cops scandal: part 2

In 2018, Frank Bennett’s sister Honor received a hand-delivered letter from a public inquiry about their 18-year old brother Michael Hartley, who had been reported missing at sea believed dead 50 years before. For a moment they thought Michael had been found, but in fact, the letter revealed that their dead brother’s identity had been stolen by a police officer who had penetrated two leftwing organisations. Using this false identity, the police spy had deceived a woman into a sexual relationship and had been prosecuted during his deployment. Frank talks to Anushka Asthana about his childhood and the impact his brother’s death had on him and his family. Knowing that years on, his brother’s name had been used by police has had a huge impact on his mental health he says. Their behaviour has been “disgusting”.

Anushka also talks to Guardian investigative editor Paul Lewis and Guardian investigative reporter Rob Evans about their decade-long investigation with activists to uncover the activities of the Special Demonstration Squad (SDS). Over four decades, at least 139 police officers were given fake identities to closely monitor the inner workings of more than 1,000 political groups. Some of those identities had been stolen from dead children to lend credibility to their aliases – with some, in a macabre ritual, even visiting the graves of the deceased children whose identities they were using.

The work of activists and the Guardian has resulted in a judge-led public inquiry on a statutory level with other significant inquiries, such as Lord Saville’s investigation into Bloody Sunday and the Chilcot examination of the Iraq invasion.

If you have been affected by this podcast, the Samaritans are available for counselling on 116 123.

Honor Robson and Frank Bennett brother and sister to the late Michael Hartley. Michael died aged 18 when he was swiped overboard when working as a cook hand on a fishing boat. The family have just found that his identity was subsequently stolen by undercover police officers and used to infiltrate political groups, including deceiving a woman in to a sexual relationship



Photograph: Mark Waugh/The Guardian

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source: theguardian.com