'Paedophile' Labour peer who'll NEVER face justice: Victims' despair  and police fury as law chief says Greville Janner will not be charged  with 22 sex attacks on children because he 'has Alzheimer's' 
- Lord Janner will not face prosecution despite facing credible evidence
- Director of Public Prosecutions says decision comes with 'deep regret'
- Alison Saunders tells of botched investigations in 1991, 2002 and 2007
- Former Labour MP allegedly  preyed on boys in 1960s, 1970s and 1980s
By  
Chris Greenwood   and  
Andy Dolan for the Daily Mail   
    Published:   01:23 GMT, 17 April 2015   |    Updated:   06:00 GMT, 17 April 2015 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-Greville-Janner-not-charged-Alzheimer-s.html
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    Allegations: Veteran peer Lord Janner  (pictured in 2002) has repeatedly denied claims he abused young boys at  care homes and is now not fit to stand trial despite 'credible evidence'
Alleged  child abuse victims of Labour peer Greville Janner last night accused  police and prosecutors of a 45-year cover-up over a tidal wave of  evidence he is a predatory paedophile.
The  86-year-old party grandee was accused of being ‘Labour’s Cyril Smith’  and an ‘animal’ as prosecutors revealed he escaped prosecution three  times over 16 years thanks to botched investigations.
Janner  is accused of preying on vulnerable boys at three Leicester care homes  between 1969 and 1988. Prosecutors said there remained an ‘overwhelming  case’ to charge the former MP with 22 sex attacks on nine victims in  children’s care homes – the youngest of whom was just ten.
But  furious victims reacted with outrage after the Crown Prosecution  Service said it would not try the former Leicester MP because he was  suffering so much from Alzheimer’s that he could not even understand any  charges against him, let alone answer them.
They  accused bungling authorities of helping to cover up the crimes of a  once powerful man and destroying any hope they had of justice. Child  protection campaigners, MPs, police and victims said they would  challenge the decision in the courts.
Lord  Janner voted in the Lords 210 times between his Alzheimer’s diagnosis  and the end of 2013, suggesting he might have been fit to stand trial if  the authorities had acted sooner.
Last  night it emerged that senior Labour MP Keith Vaz was one of 16 MPs who  publicly defended Greville Janner against child sex abuse allegations at  a time when prosecutors now admit the peer should have faced trial.
Mr  Vaz said in 1991 that Lord Janner had been the victim of a ‘wicked  attack’ and campaigned for a change in the law to prevent any repeat. Mr  Vaz, the Labour candidate for Leicester East, praised Lord Janner as a  ‘great survivor’.
One MP  said last night Lord Janner should be stripped of his peerage, while a  police watchdog said the decision was ‘wholly perverse’. One victim, now  believed to be aged in his 50s, branded him an ‘animal’ who left a  trail of destroyed lives.
‘He is still being protected because of his status and isn’t able to stand trial,’ he said.
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    Pointing: Channel 4 News filmed Lord  Jenner outside his house in London on July 8 2014, in what was is the  most recent moving image of the Labour peer 
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    Director of Public Prosecutions: Last  year, Alison Saunders (pictured) said prosecutors will pursue justice  for victims of child sex crimes whether their cases were '30 days or 30  years old' - but not in the Janner case
‘They  say that it’s not in the public interest, but isn’t it in the public  interest to know what his victims have gone through at the hands of this  man? As it stands we victims are just being pushed to the ground again  and walked over.’
                
CPS REJECTED THREE EARLIER CHANCES TO PROSECUTE JANNER                
                1991:  A complaint of sexual assaults by one individual who featured in the  trial of paedophile care worker Frank Beck. The allegation, in essence,  was one of grooming and sexual abuse of the alleged male victim between  the ages of 13 and 15. The CPS decided there was insufficient evidence  to prosecute.
2002:  In an investigation named Operation Magnolia. Lord Janner was the  subject of allegations as part of a probe into abuse  children's home.  The CPS says specific allegations relating to him were not referred to  them and claim police chose not to pursue him.
2006:  As part of a new sex abuse investigation, Operation Dauntless, an  alleged victim made allegations of serious sexual offending around 1981  by three individuals including Lord Janner. The CPS decision in 2007 was  again that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute.
                
            
Leicestershire  Police, which was lambasted for past failings, said there was ‘credible  evidence’ that Lord Janner committed ‘some of the most serious sexual  crimes imaginable’.
One  senior figure said justice had been ‘fundamentally undermined’,  labelling the decision ‘wholly perverse and contrary to any notion of  natural justice’.
Labour MP Simon Danczuk said the ‘vast majority of people will view this as a cover-up’.
Labelling  the claims against Janner as ‘absolutely stomach-churning’, he said:  ‘It is clear to me he shouldn’t be in the House of Lords and should be  stripped of his peerage.’
Janner served as a Labour MP for 27 years from 1970 to 1997, first in Leicester North West and then Leicester West.
The  son of an MP, he was a pillar of the Establishment, qualifying as a QC,  taking public office and chairing the Board of Deputies of British  Jews. Allegations against him were first made public in 1991 during the  trial of Frank Beck, a manager of Leicester children’s homes accused of  abusing more than 200 boys.
But  after Beck was jailed, powerful figures rallied around Lord Janner and  he stood in the House of Commons to denounce the claims as not having a  ‘shred of truth’.
Despite  the controversy, Tony Blair elevated the backbench politician to the  Lords as a life peer within months of Labour sweeping to power in 1997.
  
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
 
 
  
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
 
Probes:  Greville Janner, left in 1974, served as an MP for decades and was  investigated in 1991, 2002 and 2007. Janner was mentioned during the  trial of paediophile Frank Beck, right,  who died in jail
He  was investigated again in 2002 and 2006 when fresh allegations surfaced  but each time the CPS decided no further action should be taken.
In  January 2013, Leicestershire Police launched a fresh investigation into  Lord Janner after victims came forward in the wake of the Jimmy Savile  scandal. They uncovered evidence that Lord Janner preyed on vulnerable  young boys at up to three Leicester care homes between 1969 and 1988.
Alleged  victims said the politician used his hobby as a keen amateur magician  to befriend and abuse them. One man claimed he was tied up and raped and  others said they were violently groped and fondled against their will.
                
ALLEGED JANNER VICTIM FUMES OVER 'DISGRACEFUL' DECISION
                A  man who claims he was abused by Lord Janner branded the decision not to  pursue the case ‘a disgrace’ and accused prosecutors of protecting the  politician because of his status.
In  an angry statement released via Leicestershire Police, the alleged  victim told of the ‘pain and suffering’ he claims to have suffered.
And he says the peer should stand trial so alleged victims have an opportunity to have their day in court.
The man, who is not named, said Lord Janner is ‘being protected’ and today’s announcement is ‘not in the public interest’.
He said: ‘If he was an everyday person with a normal life and job, justice would [have] been served.’
He said the peer’s alleged victims are ‘just being pushed to the ground again and walked over.
‘Let  someone feel the pain and suffering that I’ve endured and still going  to endure for the rest of my life. It’s not a case of being found guilty  or going to prison - it’s about being believed after so long being told  that we were lying. Justice needs to be served.’
The man is one of 25 people who claim to have been assaulted in Leicestershire between the 1960s and 1980s by Lord Janner. 
                
            
Police  also reviewed three previous investigations into serious allegations  about Lord Janner in 1991, 2002 and 2006. Yesterday, Director of Public  Prosecutions Alison Saunders said the politician should have been  charged on each occasion.
In a damning serious of admissions, she revealed her ‘deep regret’ that mistakes by police and prosecutors let him off the hook.
Lord  Janner was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2009 and requires  constant care. His friend, entertainer Uri Geller, 68, said he no longer  recognised him, adding: ‘The man’s mind is out, finished, totally  erased.’
Yesterday  Labour suspended Lord Janner as Ed Balls insisted the party has ‘acted  swiftly and decisively’ over the ‘serious allegations’.
Leicestershire Police said it was ‘exploring what possible legal avenues there may be to challenge’ the CPS decision.
Sir Clive Loader, the Tory Police and Crime Commissioner for Leicestershire, said the force built an ‘overwhelming case’.
‘This  decision is not just wrong – it is wholly perverse and is contrary to  any notion of natural justice. I cannot believe that any right-minded  person will understand or support it.’
In  their first public statement since claims against Lord Janner first  surfaced, his family said: ‘Lord Janner is a man of great integrity and  high repute with a long and unblemished record of public service. He is  entirely innocent of any wrongdoing.
‘As  the Crown Prosecution Service indicated today, this decision does not  mean or imply that any of the allegations that have been made are  established or that Lord Janner is guilty of any offence.’
n  Nick Clegg has ordered all his Liberal Democrat MPs and peers to  co-operate with police investigations into Cyril Smith’s child abuse.
                         Sir Clive Loader appalled at decision to not prosecute Janner
                              
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
               
           
 
   
 
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    Influential: Lord Janner was chair of the Holocaust Educational Trust and vice-president of the World Jewish Congress
The  Deputy Prime Minister has been criticised for refusing to launch an  independent inquiry into what members of his party knew about the  paedophile MP’s attacks on young boys over four decades.
But  Mr Clegg said there was no ‘treasure trove’ of documents in the Lib-Dem  archives and insisted it was a matter for detectives.
He  also repeated attempts to distance his party from Smith by pointing out  that the MP belonged to Labour and the Liberals before taking the Lib  Dem whip in 1988. ‘No organisation can replace the police and the police  must now do the job which clearly wasn’t done by the police in the  past,’ he said.
                
TEST THAT DECIDES SUSPECT'S WELL-BEING DATES BACK 100 YEARS                 
                The test for deciding whether a suspect is well enough to stand trial dates back nearly 200 years.
A  defendant ruled to be unfit to plead cannot be found guilty or not  guilty, and may not be jailed, although they can be detained in a  psychiatric hospital.
Judges  launch ‘fitness to plead’ process if defence lawyers claim their client  will be unable to follow court proceedings, and must rely on the  evidence of two or more doctors. They must apply a test first formulated  in 1836 in the case of a deaf and mute man accused of bestiality. 
The  court then holds a ‘trial of the facts’, where a jury must decide if  the defendant did the act they are accused of – but not whether they are  guilty of any crime. Such a ‘trial of the facts’ could have been held  for Janner.
But the CPS ruled out this possibility by insisting he should not be charged, meaning the case would not come to court at all.
Four  medical experts examined Janner, two for his own legal team and two for  the police and prosecutors. They all agreed he would not be able to  engage meaningfully in the trial process. The CPS ruled he would  ‘inevitably’ be found unfit to plead, effectively pre-empting the  decision of a judge.
                
            
 
 
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    Labour peer: Lord Janner in 1974 outside Parliament with a child not connected to any abuse claims
Vile abuse, 3 bungled probes and a 45-year 'cover up', by PAUL BRACCHI
His  name and face may not be immediately familiar to everyone today but, in  his pomp, Lord Janner was one of the most prominent Labour politicians  and campaigners of his time.
His  entry in Who’s Who occupies nearly 50 lines: MP for Leicester West  (1970-97)… distinguished barrister… author… broadcaster… former  president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews. After training at  the University of Cambridge and Harvard Law School, he qualified as a  barrister in 1954 and was appointed a QC in 1971. He has fought  tirelessly for the return of Jewish assets held in Swiss banks by the  Nazis, and was made a life peer on his retirement from the Commons in  recognition of his achievements in public life.
Those are the bare facts of Greville Janner’s gilded career.
For  nearly 25 years, however, a shadow has hung over Lord Janner of  Braunstone in the same way it did Cyril Smith and a string of other  establishment figures. We now know, from victims who have come forward  following his death – too many for the allegations not to be true – that  late Rochdale MP Smith was a serial paedophile. But was Janner?
Detectives  have interviewed more than 20 men who claim they were abused by Janner  in their youth. It is suspected he used his hobby as a magician – Janner  is a member of the Magic Circle – to get close to them and gain their  trust when he visited children’s homes in Leicestershire between 1969  and 1988.
But  the evidence will never be tested in court after Alison Saunders,  Director of Public Prosecutions, ruled that it was not in the public  interest to put the Labour peer on trial because of his age and ill  health.
Janner,  86, is a father of three. His youngest daughter, Laura Janner-Klausner,  51, is an ordained rabbi and serves as senior rabbi at the Movement for  Reform Judaism. His son Daniel Janner is a prominent QC.
Janner’s  wife Myra died in 1996 and he has not been seen outside his flat in  Hampstead, north-west London, since police investigating the claims of  historic sexual abuse raided it in 2013. Shortly afterwards, reports  emerged that he was suffering from advanced dementia.
In  the month before the raid, Janner attended the Lords 15 times, claiming  £2,100 in daily allowances, which has inevitably cast a critical  spotlight on the decision to not prosecute him.
Janner,  it should be stressed, strongly denied the allegations against him –  including claims of rape – when they surfaced nearly 25 years ago at the  trial of Frank Beck, a care-home warden suspected of abusing scores of  children in his care. Beck, a former Liberal councillor, was given five  life sentences.
Yet, the 1991 case made sensational headlines for very different reasons.
One  of those headlines can be found in a faded newspaper cutting. It reads:  ‘My Commons date and night with MP Janner.’ The witness in question was  Paul Winston, then aged 30, who lived at one of Beck’s care homes in  Janner’s constituency. Mr Winston claimed under oath that Janner had  abused him repeatedly between the ages of 13 and 15.
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    The Queen was pictured alongside father-of-three Lord Janner in 2003. He is now 86-years-old
He  said that he had sex with Janner in a Holiday Inn hotel, at the MP’s  home when his wife and children were away, and visited him in the  Commons.
The  jury were shown letters the MP is said to have sent to him on House of  Commons notepaper. Some were reportedly signed ‘love Greville’. They are  now in the hands of the police.
One  was alleged to have been penned by Janner after they had stayed  together at his home. ‘It feels strange not to have you flipping around  me like a friendly flea!,’ the letter said. ‘In fact – I miss you.’  Referring to an encounter in the swimming pool of the Holiday Inn, Mr  Winston said: ‘I was fondled in my private area. It seemed at first like  a bit of fun, being thrown around the water, but he would hold me  close.’
Beck  used the testimony as part of his defence: that he was being prosecuted  to divert attention from Janner and other high-profile (unnamed)  paedophiles and that he was trying to shield the boys under his charge  from them.
Paul Winston was not the only witness to implicate Janner.
Two  others were called for the prosecution, saying Beck had raped them, but  in cross-examination, they appeared to confirm some details of Mr  Winston’s story.
One,  a woman, said she heard an argument between Beck and Mr Winston in  which he [Beck] was shouting that he wasn’t [allowed] to see Greville  Janner any more.’ The other, a man, said Mr Winston had boasted about  ‘having friends in high places’. Were the allegations made simply to  muddy the waters? The jury thought so, finding Beck, who died in prison  in 1994, guilty of the majority of charges against him.
Days  later, Janner, then in his 60s, broke his silence on the affair by  making a personal statement to Parliament. Under parliamentary rules,  personal statements are not debatable, so there were no follow-up  questions from MPs.
Janner  told them: ‘There was, of course, not a shred of truth in any of the  allegations of criminal conduct against me during the trial.
‘Meanwhile,  as my wife, my family and I have had a taste of the suffering which  Beck can impose on innocent people, will you join me in sending the real  sufferers, the individuals who endured his homes and whose lives have  been wrecked at his hands, the profound sympathy of us all?’
His  statement was greeted with cheers. Fellow Labour MP Keith Vaz described  Janner as a ‘brave man’ and others passed on leader Neil Kinnock’s  ‘tremendous support’.
      
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
    
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    While Janner’s health has made the  prospect of prosecution impossible, the stench of an establishment  cover-up will continue to surround this deeply troubling case
Police interviewed Janner and Mr Winston, but no charges were ever brought against the MP.
One  of the detectives who worked on the Frank Beck case was Mick Creedon,  who is now Chief Constable of Derbyshire. Last year he made a  sensational claim in The Times. He said there was ‘credible evidence’  against Janner and that he and his colleagues wanted to make an arrest  but were prevented by ‘more senior people’ from doing so.
To put it bluntly, the investigation was blocked.
Mr  Creedon said: ‘The decision was a clear one: he [Janner] will be  interviewed by appointment and there won’t be a search of his home  address or his constituency office, of his office in the House of  Commons. It was a decision made by people more senior than me.’ The  allegations against Janner remained buried in newspaper archives until  the authorities began re-opening historic child abuse cases in the wake  of the Jimmy Savile affair. Many revolve around the Elm Guest House, a  gay sauna in Barnes, west London, where boys are believed to have been  abused by a string of powerful men in the 1970s and 1980s, including  Cyril Smith.
One of the people who contacted the police was Paul Winston.
At  the same time, two booklets from the archives of former MP Andrew  Faulds – who died in 2000 – emerged. One, a four-page leaflet entitled  Janner Fails to Answer ‘Sex With Boy’ Evidence and published by a group  calling itself Concerned Leicester Parents, landed on the prominent  Labour backbencher’s desk in 1992.
The second, a 24-page booklet entitled Is Grenville Janner QC, MP, Above the Law?, arrived in 1995.
Both  booklets appear to have been printed professionally and sent  anonymously to Mr Faulds (and presumably to several other influential  figures) by individuals anxious to ensure further attention was paid to  the 1991 trial.
The  1995 booklet provides a detailed account of an alleged victim’s  testimony. It tells how the boy spoke of meeting Janner in the Commons  when he was 13.
He said was invited to Janner’s home when his wife was away.
‘We ended up in his bed together and he cuddled me. We cuddled and fondled together. I didn’t like it and told him to stop.’
So began a two-year sexual relationship, the boy claimed.
The  booklet also says that the boy ‘had been able to provide the police  with information about Janner’s home, hotel rooms, life, habits and  person in... infinite and verifiable detail’. The 1992 leaflet also  refers to an alleged victim’s ‘detailed’ evidence: ‘Such evidence,  submitted under oath... requires a specific and detailed refutation.’
Crown prosecution lawyers have spent nine months studying volumes of evidence gathered by Leicestershire police against Janner.
This  week officers visited Mr Winston, now in his mid-50s and living on the  outskirts of Leicester, and other alleged victims in person to inform  them of the decision not to proceed with the case. It has raised further  questions about the CPS in the face of growing criticism of the conduct  of Operation Elveden against tabloid journalists.
This  is the fourth time that Janner has escaped prosecution. He was  interviewed by police after the Beck trial, and was the subject of  further allegations of abuse in 2002, but these were not referred to the  CPS.
A  third investigation was launched in 2006 after police received a  complaint from yet another alleged victim. A dossier was passed to the  CPS which decided there was ‘insufficient evidence’ to bring charges.
Inevitably,  while Janner’s health has made the prospect of prosecution impossible,  the stench of an establishment cover-up will continue to surround this  deeply troubling case.