tickingbird, I don't see the scandal of child sexual exploitation was covered up by 'the establishment' in the way that the crimes committed by Peter Ball were. I don't mean to split hairs but Peter Ball offended against boys aged 8 and upwards, who were active in his Church.
Peter Ball accepted a caution for some offences, which should never have been offered. He should have been prosecuted. The GMP force area had a policy at that time, that no one accused of a sexual offence should be cautioned. Being cautioned means the offender walks out of the police station with no professional assessment of the level of risk he poses, with no ongoing involvement of probabtion/nspcc for example. Cautions are usually used for minor offences.
As Framilode says above, Peter Ball denied the offences for which he was cautioned. The documentary claims he continued to abuse after the caution, which is unsurprising. The 'establishment' cover up involved the AB of Canterbury and other senior clergy. Prince C arranged accommodation for him. I don't know whether Prince C believed PB to be innocent. It's the same kind of cover up that took place with Cyril Smith (as one example)
The way in which the grooming gangs were not investigated, or prosecuted and their victims abandoned by police, social workers,all agencies is a scandal of a different kind. GMP now acknowledge it knew from 2003 but in truth it knew years before that. Nazir Afzal states that in 1998 the force said it's government set targets were car crime and burglary. GMP senior officers acknowledged the problem but said it didn't have the resources to deal with the problem. Why senior officers and directors of children's services didn't go directly to central government to say they needed resources to tackle organised crime against children remains unknown.
LAST TWO LETTERS GAME 13 (Following game 12)


