Intelligence UK Investigations (“IUK“) operates on the front lines, holding the executive to account, exposing and prosecuting the perpetrators.

Restoring the broken English Constitution. The Bill of Rights 1688. Rule of Law. English rule of law. English Constitutional principles.

 

Left: King William III and Mary II. Right: The English Bill of Rights of 1688, formally titled;
An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and Settling the Succession of the Crown“, established key constitutional principles limiting the power of the monarchy and affirmed the rights and liberties of the people.  It was a direct response to the reign of James II and his perceived abuses of power. 

 

Crucial private engineering essential in the public interest to ‘throw a spanner in the works’ of the systemic corruption machine eating away democracy, the Constitution and civilian rights

IUK advocates the rule of law, and we privately enforce the criminal and civil laws.

Our mission is to restore just governance, and that means taking action where others don’t, and going the extra mile to ensure that justice is done. Our work fills the void where the system fails to ensure that regulators regulate, police do police, for the people and not just for establishment players, and that judges and courts do judge and do justice.

Judicial and public sector corruption erodes the rule of law, diminishing civilians rights which are enshrined in the long-established English constitution with acts designed to ensure some face justice, whilst others don’t, or that some enjoy the statutory or constitutional rights and protections, whilst others don’t.

The judiciary and legal sector in the UK is largely unregulated, and is deliberately regulated by non-regulators. The system has been engineered by the establishment so that those in power avoid accountability, and a culture of secrecy and cover ups prevail, over transparency and accountability.

There is a free for all for unscrupulous lawyers engaging in fraudulent acts, and the Solicitor’s Regulation Authority and Bar Standards Board persistently fail victims of wrongdoing.

IUK fills the gap where the police and regulators fail to enforce, we are regulating the unregulated, to maintain the rule of law, fairness and just governance. In private law enforcement and prosecution, we can do everything that the public sector can do, only much faster, and we are truly independent.

The supremacy of the English rule of law is our birthright

English constitutional principles, and the fundamental rights and protections granted by the Constitution and the statutory laws are the birthright of every man, woman and child of the land.

The rule of law

The principle is that ‘no one is above the law‘. There must be equality before the law, and that means for everyone, and without bias. There must be transparency of law, ‘justice must be seen to be done‘ and everyone has the right to self-determination under the law. There must be an independent judiciary and access to legal remedy. Where there is wrongdoing, there must be remedy, and ‘justice delayed is, justice denied‘.

Upholding and enforcing the rule of law ensures restriction of arbitrary exercise of power by subordinating it to well-defined and established laws, preventing abuse of government and judicial powers, and ensuring that legal rights are fulfilled in practice.

An attack on civilian rights and democracy

Over 7-years, IUK has gathered intelligence by screening complaints of judicial corruption and wrongdoing by those who have come to us directly and through our affiliates.

IUK concludes that there is little judicial independence in England and Wales under the current regime, the rule of law is greatly compromised in the criminal and civil courts, and we fight to change that.

Restoring the rule of law & holding the unaccountable to account. King Charles III and King Charles 1, who was declared a traitor and enemy of the people, and executed.

King Charles I was executed on January 30, 1649, after being found guilty of treason by the Parliament of England, being the first and only English monarch to be tried and executed by his own people. The execution marked a turning point in the separation of powers between the monarchy and Parliament.

The importance of the constitutional oaths of office & non-regulation

The judicial oath and oath of Lord Chancellor are crucial elements of the rule of law, ensuring accountability and integrity within the government and judiciary. The issue is the administration and a complete lack of enforcement.

Judges of England and Wales are required to adhere to the following core principles, inside and outside the courtroom. These principles comprise of the Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct, endorsed at the 59th United Nations Human Rights Commission, in Geneva, April 2003.

The core judicial principles state:

    1. Judicial independence is a prerequisite to the rule of law and a fundamental guarantee of a fair trial. A judge shall therefore uphold and exemplify judicial independence in both its individual and institutional aspects.
    2. Impartiality is essential to the proper discharge of the judicial office. It applies not only to the decision itself but also to the process by which the decision is made.
    3. Integrity is essential to the proper discharge of the judicial office.
    4. Propriety, and the appearance of propriety, are essential to the performance of all of the activities of the judge.
    5. Ensuring equality of treatment to all before the courts is essential to the due performance of the judicial office.
    6. Competence and diligence are prerequisites to the due performance of judicial office.

IJudges of England and Wales are in fact unregulated and are self-regulating and unaccountable.

The judicial oath of office:

 

A short illustrated video: Body language is everything. The former Lord Chief Justice of England & Wales and
the current President of the King’s Bench Division taking the oath of office

The constitutional importance of the judicial oath of office

The judicial oath of office dates back to the Roman times.

In England and Wales, judges, magistrates and tribunal officers must take two oaths when they are sworn in. The first is the oath of allegiance to the reigning monarch, and the second the judicial oath.

The statutory oath of office (Section 4 of the Promissory Oaths Act 1868) is a solemn commitment by the judicial officer to uphold the law and administer justice impartially. In medieval times, any breach was enforced most severely, today, there is no regulation or enforcement.

“I, [Insert full name], do swear that I will well and truly serve our Sovereign King Charles in the office of [Insert judicial office of], and I will do right to all manner of people after the laws and usages of this realm, without fear or favour, affection or ill will. So help me God.”

Curbing judicial abuse of power and punishing misconduct 

Unregulated, unaccountable judges are causing havoc. Judicial accountability is essential in any democracy.

IUK is taking direct action against the perpetrators, bringing international and domestic litigation to evoke change.

We are lobbying Parliamentarians to evoke new legislation to make corrupt and or improper exercise of judicial powers and privileges an indictable only offence punishable with up to life imprisonment and or an unlimited fine.

Read more about our investigatory services and the cases we are taking forward in our collective fight for justice and reform.