Mr Moody told the judge that, even if the school was proved negligent, Mr Henderson had suffered no loss as he had “failed to accept the help that was offered to him”.He also accused Mr Henderson of being involved in drugs at school, an allegation that John Greenbourne, Mr Henderson’s counsel, described as scandalous.The case is due to be heard at the High Court on 14 October and is expected to last about five days.. Last month an angry crowd jeered Mr Huntley’s partner, Maxine Carr, 25, a former teaching assistant in Holly and Jessica’s class at St Andrew’s primary school, when she appeared at the same court on a charge of attempting to pervert justice. The media was urged yesterday to show restraint in its reporting of the first court appearance by Ian Huntley, the school caretaker charged with the murder of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman. Detectives described Mr Murdoch as a “person of interest to us”.But the Australian Supreme Court ruled that tests could not go ahead until an appeal from Mr Murdoch’s lawyers was heard No date for the hearing has been set.
Magistrates are not expected to consider Mr Huntley’s mental state or seek a plea to the charges.Lord Goldsmith said: “It’s important that as this will be the first time Mr Huntley turns up at court, that everyone exercises a great deal of care about how that is reported. Classmates of the 10-year-old girls at St Andrew’s School released two white doves as a symbol of peace and remembrance. She was a Kuwaiti and had seen some of the terrible things that Iraqi soldiers had done. I had been up a mountain in Colorado with Margaret Thatcher in August, 1990, when she was meeting George Bush and Kuwait was invaded by Iraq It was increasingly likely that we were going to war. She had been in Washington at the time, had witnessed none of this, and the story had been made up through a public relations agency.
Sometime in the late spring of 1991, when the war was over, we all discovered that this Kuwaiti girl was actually the daughter of the Ambassador of Kuwait. She launched Popstars: The Rivals, a series she has every reason to believe will follow Popstars and Pop Idol into the nation’s affections She saw the climax of I’m a Celebrity… Everything went wrong – including the fact that I couldn’t hear anything from London. But I will acknowledge that I’m behind a lot of mainstream hits. She first worked in newspapers after training as a secretary, but thought television seemed more exciting. Man O Man, where the losing men were pushed into a pool, was not a winner. “There’s a broadsheet perception, and a British middle-class perception, that we shouldn’t be watching entertainment, we should watch documentaries and serious drama But people don’t; they watch a huge amount of entertainment.


October 17th, 2010
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