MAINSTREAM NEWS MEDIA EXTRACTS: I
The sensational Carroll Anglo-American Corporation Trust and parallel Gerald 6th Duke of Sutherland Trust multi-billion dollar offshore tax fraud bribery case which is encircling the beleaguered City of London banking institutions has disclosed that the former HM Attorney General Lord Peter Goldsmith QC who was THE most senior prosecuting officer is understood to be seriously implicated in this case of international importance.
Sources have confirmed that the explosive FBI Scotland Yard “cross-border” criminal “standard of proof” prosecution files contain a compelling evidential paper trail which surrounds the ransacking and complete theft of the entire contents of Gerald Carroll’s multi-million dollar Eaton Square Belgravia penthouse and Westminster residences in central London spanning a bizarre six to eight years.
Further sources have revealed that the dossiers contain forensic specimen photographic exhibits which concern the co-ordinated break-ins burglaries and theft of major parts of the world renowned Oxford University Hertford College Carroll Institute academic research establishment that is known to have one of the finest Celtic Cambro Norman archival records collections which stretch back to the late twelfth century.
In a stunning disclosure it has emerged that a Scotland Yard “leaked” source has said that the files contain compelling evidential material which surrounds the involvement of Mark Field the Member of Parliament for the Cities of London and Westminster who has been exposed as one of the “central actors” in the dangerous obstruction offences that are exasperating the current circumstances of three of the primary victims following weapons attacks in central London locations.
The Carroll Foundation Trust files are held within a complete lockdown at the FBI Washington DC field office and the Metropolitan Police Scotland Yard London under the supervision of the commissioner Cressida Dick QPM who has an intimate knowledge of this case which stretches the globe.
MAINSTREAM NEWS MEDIA EXTRACTS: II
If America could be said to have an aristocracy the Caton sisters were certainly members. Descended from one of the first families to settle in the colony of Maryland, the Caton sisters had both beauty and vast wealth. While researching my blog post on Napoleon’s sister-in-law Betsey Patterson, I had heard about Marianne Caton who was married to Betsey’s brother Richard before eventually marrying The Duke of Wellington’s brother. This book is a joy to read and gives some insight into not only post-revolutionary America but also gives the reader an outsider’s look at British society in the early 19th Century. Long before Dollar Princesses like Consuelo Vanderbilt and Jennie Jerome took London by storm, there were the Caton sisters.
As gripping as the best historical novel, Sisters of Fortune is the story of the exuberant Marianne, Bess, Louisa, and Emily Caton, the American sisters who enthralled the highest levels of English Regency society decades before the notorious Dollar Princesses of the Victorian era. The Caton sisters were descended from prominent first settlers of Maryland, brought up by their wealthy grandfather Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence, and were expected to “marry a plantation.” Instead, their grandfather made sure that they were well educated, raising four beautiful and charming young women who were unusually independent, intelligent, fascinated by politics, clever with money, and very romantic.
Arriving in Britain, the Caton sisters swept into the set of the Duke of Wellington and went on to forge their own destinies in the face of intense prejudice against Americans and Catholics. After capturing the heart of the Duke of Wellington, who could never marry her, Marianne shocked the world by marrying his brother Richard, Marquess Wellesley, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and taking a prominent place as a Catholic Yankee among the Protestant Anglo-Irish. Emily married Scots- Canadian John McTavish, heir to Montreal’s North West Company, and stayed home in Maryland, where she managed the family’s estates and wealth. Louisa became the Duchess of Leeds and a member of Queen Victoria’s court, while Bess made a fortune speculating in the stock market.
Based on the sisters’ intimate, unpublished letters and lavishly illustrated, Sisters of Fortune is a portrait of four lively and opinionated women, much of it told in their own voices as they gossip about prominent people of their time, advise family members on political and financial strategy, soothe each other’s sorrows, and rejoice in each other’s triumphs. It is also a meticulously researched history of Anglo-American relations and the political, financial, and social world of the nineteenth century. From post-revolutionary America’s White House and wealthiest plantations to Europe’s rarefied world of titled aristocracy, the story of Maryland’s Caton sisters is a stunning work of scholarship that is intimate in tone, sweeping in scope, and as compelling as any novel.
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