A gong for the secret detective

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31 December 1998
Manchester Evening News
Steve Panter


A TOP-SECRET detective who risked his life time after time in the line of duty has been honoured for his courage. The master of deep infiltration of major crime rings becomes an OBE today. Henri Exton headed Greater Manchester Police undercover unit before he retired five years ago. The former detective chief inspector has continued in his specialist field and is now with the Ministry of Defence. His work while he was in Manchester varied from penetrating notorious soccer gangs to uncovering evidence which proved a convicted killer innocent.

Mr Exton was later "loaned out" by GMP to other forces and on one such mission was held hostage by a gang he inflitrated in the south of England - but retained his cover. His early successes in Greater Manchester in the 1970s and 80s involved uncovering organised crime rings and recruiting supergrasses.

He was heavily involved in the huge armed robbery inquiry Operation Belgium, so-called because of his Belgian family background. He became a trusted "member" of notorious 1970s soccer gang the Young Guvnors who followed Manchester City and caused serious violence across the country. In fact he became a leader of the Guvnors and had to take part in some organised incidents to preserve his cover. He even had to endure a beating in a cell in Wales inflicted by police officers who were convinced he was a soccer thug.

In Italy, during the 1990 World Cup, he wore an Italian policeman's uniform then switched sides to pose as a football hooligan. One triumph was pretending to be a drugs buyer. His role was so sensitive that, when he was awarded the Queen's Police Medal for outstanding skills and bravery, it was kept secret.

Two other officers have been awarded the Queen's Police Medal for their services in Greater Manchester. Chief Supt Andrew Glaister, who retired last March after 35 years as an officer in Manchester, was head of GMP's C division. The other officer honoured today cannot be named.
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The use of part time spies by MI6

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4 April 1991
The Guardian
Richard Norton-Taylor

OUTLINE

SECRET INTELLIGENCE SERVICE - MI6
  • has used businessmen and tried to use journalists as freelance contacts, or what it calls "approved unofficial agents" 
  • "successive governments have maintained the fiction that it does not exist in peacetime; thus it cannot be held to account, and can deny everything" 
  • MI6 has an officer attached to most large embassies abroad 
  • Embassys go to lengths to disguise their agents 
  • Most host countries know exactly who they are 
  • Known to have placed agents in banks abroad, and in companies which have branches in locations where there is no official government presence 
  • "Persuaded the Observer newspaper to take on Kim Philby as its Beirut correspondent after his fellow Soviet agents, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, fled to Moscow in 1951." 
  • Its use of outsiders is well known.
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Exposing a secret service, the MI5

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27 April 1990 
The Times
Sheridan Morley

The sight of former high-ranking MI5 officers fleeing from television reporters, much after the fashion of suspect double-glazing salesmen on the run from Esther Rantzen or Roger Cook, is not an attractive one. Last night's This Week investigation (ITV) is going to need some sort of official reaction beyond that of the slammed door.
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