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Buckingham Palace: previous security breaches

Threats to Judges, Prosecutors Soaring

Royal chauffeur suspended over alleged security breach at Buckingham Palace

Royal chauffeur Brian Sirjusingh was suspended today after allegedly allowing undercover reporters to gain access to sensitive areas of Buckingham Palace without passing through security checks.
He was secretly filmed letting the two journalists, who were posing as wealthy Middle Eastern businessmen, into palace grounds and showing them around a garage containing royal cars including a Bentley used by the Queen and other vehicles including a Rolls-Royce, a Daimler and a Jaguar used by the royal family.

The reporters were able to take pictures of number plates of the vehicles and claimed they were left alone for long enough to plant a bomb at one point. Buckingham Palace said it was looking into the claims made in the News of the World newspaper.

A palace spokesman said: "Obviously, the allegation will be investigated and the individual concerned has been suspended pending an investigation.
"Any security matter is taken very seriously."

The Metropolitan Police said officers had been in touch with royal staff about the incident. A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "We are naturally concerned about the issues raised by this story and are liaising with palace officials about their staff security arrangements."

In the film, Mr Sirjusingh is seen letting the reporters in through a gate and ushering them past a security checkpoint, where a uniformed police officer was sitting. Signs reading "STOP security measures in progress" and "Have your personal card/ID ready please" were ignored.

The chauffeur then showed them several vehicles used by members of the royal family and even allowed one to sit in a Bentley used to transport the Queen on state occasions. "That's where the Queen sits," Mr Sirjusingh, 38, told them.

Strict security measures are meant to be in force at the palace and even members of the royal family, including the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Charles, are required to show photographic ID each time they enter a royal residence.

Mr Sirjusingh, who is originally from Trinidad and served in the Royal Logistics Corps, is alleged to have allowed the reporters to video and photograph the royal cars and also to have revealed codenames for the vehicles used by royal protection officers. He is further accused of revealing the Queen's private travel plans and security weaknesses within the cars.

The last car he showed on the unofficial tour of the garage was a green Daimler with an ordinary number plate which is driven by the Queen. "It's a supercharged V8, but it was built to suit the Queen. She drives. Sometimes she says 'leave me alone' and she goes away," he said. "She's got slightly short legs so the floor has been raised to suit her. It's tailor made for her. She only uses it because it's British and she got it at a discounted rate."

Mr Sirjusingh complained about his wages and offered to work for the 'businessmen' on the side. "I have to say the pay is not so great. If you ever looking for a part-time chauffeur let me know," he told them. "Quite a few evenings I'm free. But you just can't go and tell Dick, Tom and Fred I work for so and so. It's security."

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Buckingham Palace: previous security breaches

Buckingham Palace is investigating allegations that a royal chauffeur allowed undercover reporters into Buckingham Palace in exchange for money.

This is not the first time security has been breached at the palace.

:: The most serious breach came in March 1982 when Michael Fagan broke into the Queen's bedroom at the palace. She woke to find him sitting on her bed.

 A year earlier, Marcus Sarjeant, 17, fired six blank shots at the Queen at the Trooping the Colour ceremony.

:: Stephen Goulding was jailed for three months after breaking into palace grounds in 1990. He claimed he was Prince Andrew Windsor and declared the Queen was his "mum".

:: In July 1992, Kevin McMahon, 25, was arrested inside the grounds for the second time in a week. During his first sortie, he forced a helicopter carrying the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh to divert as he roamed the grounds.

:: The same year, an intruder walked into St James's Palace and downed a whisky in Princess Alexandra's private apartment.

:: A naked paraglider landed on the roof of Buckingham Palace in 1994. American James Miller was fined £200 and deported.

:: In 1995, student John Gillard rammed the palace gates in his car at 50mph, tearing one off its hinges.

:: In 2003, an undercover reporter from the Daily Mirror got a job as a footman at the palace.

:: The same year, a major investigation was launched after "comedy terrorist" Aaron Barschak gatecrashed Prince William's 21st birthday party at Windsor Castle. Wearing a dress, beard and sunglasses he climbed on stage as the prince addressed the crowd, and kissed him on both cheeks.

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Threats to Judges, Prosecutors Soaring

By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 25, 2009

Worried Court Personnel Resort To Guards, Identity Shields, Weapons
 
Threats against the nation's judges and prosecutors have sharply increased, prompting hundreds to get 24-hour protection from armed U.S. marshals. Many federal judges are altering their routes to work, installing security systems at home, shielding their addresses by paying bills at the courthouse or refraining from registering to vote. Some even pack weapons on the bench.The problem has become so pronounced that a high-tech "threat management" center recently opened in Crystal City, where a staff of about 25 marshals and analysts monitor a 24-hour number for reporting threats, use sophisticated mapping software to track those being threatened and tap into a classified database linked to the FBI and CIA.

"I live with a constant heightened sense of awareness," said John R. Adams, a federal judge in Ohio who began taking firearms classes after a federal judge's family was slain in Chicago and takes a pistol to the courthouse on weekends. "If I'm going to carry a firearm, I'd better know how to use it." The threats and other harassing communications against federal court personnel have more than doubled in the past six years, from 592 to 1,278, according to the U.S. Marshals Service. Worried federal officials blame disgruntled defendants whose anger is fueled by the Internet; terrorism and gang cases that bring more violent offenders into federal court; frustration at the economic crisis; and the rise of the "sovereign citizen" movement -- a loose collection of tax protesters, white supremacists and others who don't respect federal authority.

Much of the concern was fueled by the slaying of U.S. District Judge Joan H. Lefkow's husband and mother in their Chicago home in 2005 and a rampage 11 days later by an Atlanta rape suspect, who killed a judge, the court stenographer and a deputy. Last year, several pipe bombs exploded outside the federal courthouse in San Diego, and a drug defendant wielding a razor blade briefly choked a federal prosecutor during sentencing in Brooklyn, N.Y. In March, a homicide suspect attacked a judge in a California courtroom and was shot to death by police.

"Judges today have dangerous jobs, and that danger has many dimensions," said David Sellers, a spokesman for the administrative office of the U.S. Courts. "They are worried about security and safety 24 hours a day." Although attacks on federal court personnel have not increased, the explosion of vitriolic threats has prompted a growing law enforcement crackdown aimed at preventing them. The U.S. Marshals Service, which protects judges and prosecutors, says several hundred require 24-hour guard for days, weeks or months at a time each year, depending on the case.

"We have to make sure that every judge and prosecutor can go to work every day and carry out the rule of law,'' said Michael Prout, assistant director of judicial security for the marshals, who have trained hundreds of police and deputies to better protect local court officials, an effort that began last year with Northern Virginia and Maryland officers. "It's the core of our civil liberties,'' Prout said. State court officials are seeing the same trend, although no numbers are available. "There's a higher level of anger, whether it's defendants or their families," said Timothy Fautsko, who coordinates security education for the National Center for State Courts in Williamsburg and said threats are coming from violent offenders along with divorce, probate and other civil litigants.

The threats are emerging in cases large and small, on the Internet, by telephone, in letters and in person. In the District, two men have pleaded not guilty to charges of vowing to kill a federal prosecutor and kidnap her adult son if she didn't drop a homicide investigation. The judge in the CIA leak case got threatening letters when he ordered Vice President Richard B. Cheney's former chief of staff to prison. A man near Richmond was charged with mailing threats to a prosecutor over three traffic offenses. The face of a federal judge in the District was put in a rifle's cross hairs on the Internet after he issued a controversial environmental ruling, judicial sources said.

Hundreds of threats cascaded into the chambers of John M. Roll, the chief U.S. district judge in Arizona, in February after he allowed a lawsuit filed by illegal immigrants against a rancher to go forward. "They cursed him out, threatened to kill his family, said they'd come and take care of him. They really wanted him dead," said a law enforcement official who heard the calls -- which came from as far as Richmond and Baltimore -- but spoke on condition of anonymity because no one has been charged.

David Gonzales, the U.S. marshal in Arizona, said deputies went online and found Roll's home address posted on a Web site containing threatening comments. They put the judge under 24-hour protection for about a month, guarding his home in a secluded area just outside Tucson, screening his mail and escorting him to court, to the gym and to Mass. "Some deputies went to church more in a week than they had in their lives," Gonzales said.

Roll said that "any judge who goes through this knows it's a stressful situation" and that he and his family were grateful for the protection. The stress nearly overcame Michael Cicconetti, a municipal court judge in Painesville, Ohio, after police played a tape for him of a defendant in a minor tax case plotting to blow up the judge's house. "I hear a man's voice talk about putting a bomb in the house, and another voice says, 'What if there are kids involved?' and the first man says, 'They're just collateral damage,' " the father of five recalled.

Cicconetti evacuated his family for a terrifying week in which they were under guard and stayed at friends' houses. "I couldn't go to work for two weeks. I was too shaken up. I couldn't think," he said. For months, the judge was nervous every time a car drove by his home. His children were afraid to go to bed; their grades dropped. The judge now has a security system in his home -- and a stun gun within reach in court. Sibley Reynolds, a state court judge in Alabama who prosecutors said was threatened last year by the son of a defendant convicted of stealing about $3,000 from a humane shelter, packs the real thing -- a Colt automatic pistol. He keeps it under his robe, in his waistband.

"I don't go anywhere without my security with me," Reynolds said. Court officials could not say how often judges arm themselves. But the marshals have installed home security systems for most federal judges since the Lefkow incident, and many are removing their photos from court Web sites and shielding their home addresses. Senior U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan in the District said judges who have handled terrorism matters are hesitant to travel to the Middle East, or to South America if they've had drug-trafficking cases.


U.S. District Judge Wayne Andersen in Chicago said he has "stopped even mentioning publicly that I have children. Normally, parents want to be visibly associated with their kids. Judges now think everything is on the Internet.'' The Judicial Conference of the United States, the policymaking arm headed by the Supreme Court chief justice, will soon distribute a DVD with security tips. It will be called Project 365, for security 365 days a year. "Judges today are far more security-conscious than they ever have been," said Henry E. Hudson, a federal judge in Richmond who is working on the DVD. "I don't think it's at the point where it's interfering with their judgment and dedication to their jobs.''

 

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