Police attend Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd offices as arrest warrant is served on Cullum McAlpine for blacklisting crimes
Metropolitan Police officers attended the London offices of Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd (Fri 21st Feb 2014) as an arrest 
warrant was served for Cullum McAlpine for his role in the Consulting 
Association scandal. This weekend if the 5th anniversary of the raid by 
the Information Commissioner's Office that discovered the illegal 
building industry blacklist.
The arrest warrant cited breaches of the 
European Convention on Human Rights, the Health & Safety at Work Act
 and the Data Protection Act. 
When giving 
evidence to a Select Committee investigation into blacklisting Cullum 
McAlpine was forced to admit that the was the first chairman of the 
Consulting Association conspiracy (a post he held for 3 years) and that 
the first meetings of the shady organisation were actually held in his 
office at the the Sir Robert McAlpine Limited offices in Grosvenor 
Crescent, Victoria.  
The illegal database held secret files on 3213 
individuals which included information such as name, address, national 
insurance number, phone numbers, car registration and particularly 
recorded trade union membership and incidents where workers had 
complained about health & safety on building sites. Those workers 
that appeared on the blacklist suffered years of unemployment, repeated 
dismissals and financial hardship. 
During the building of the Olympics Stadium in 
2008-9, Sir Robert McAlpine was invoiced in excess of £28,000 for 
blacklisting name checks - which equates to 65 name checks a day, 7 days
 a week for the period. 
The Independent Police Complaints Commission is 
investigating police involvement in blacklisting and has already 
confirmed that Special Branch "routinely provided information about 
prospective employees"
Six police vehicles from the Met Police Emergency Response Unit visited site at 10:45am,
 as the Citizens Arrest Warrant was being served by members of the 
Blacklist Support Group who had occupied the top floor of the 
construction company's office block.
Dave Smith, secretary of the Blacklist Support Group said:
"Blacklisted
 workers have lost their houses and our kids were on free school meals 
while Cullum McApline is the lord of the Manor in his £4.5million Grade 1
 Listed Mansion in Cold Ashton. 
In any civilized society, McAlpine and his co-conspirators would be behind bars .
We visited the birthplace of the Consulting Association to carry out a citizens arrest.
We were pleased when the Met Police arrived and assisted in our search for Cullum McAlpine. 
It shows how seriously the authorities are taking corporate crime." 
Blacklisted activist Helen Steele said,
"It has been 5 years since this conspiracy between big business and the police was discovered.
Trade unionists and environmental activists have had their human rights violated. 
But 5 yeas later, no one has been brought to justice for the crimes they have committed.
Its about time Cullum McAlpine was in the dock"
Sir Robert McAlpine and seven other major 
construction firms involved in blacklisting are joint defendants in the 
High Court conspiracy case - next court date April. 
The other companies in the High Court action are: Skanska, Costains, Laing O'Rourke, Kier, Vinci, Carillion and Balfour Beatty.
 
 
 
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