Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On January 28, 2017, Aleksej Gubarev, chief of technology company XBT and a figure mentioned in the dossier, initiated a defamation lawsuit against BuzzFeed, Inc. and Steele (and his company, Orbis Business Intelligence) in the High Court of Justice in London, Britain, Case No: CR 2017 - 664, [1] after BuzzFeed published the "Steele Dossier," alleging the dossier made "seriously defamatory ...
The Steele dossier, also known as the Trump–Russia dossier, [1] is a controversial political opposition research report on the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump compiled by counterintelligence specialist Christopher Steele.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 08:26, 7 November 2010: 1,239 × 1,754, 6 pages (110 KB): Stephani of Rowella {{Information |Description={{en|1=A dossier containing an outline of the facts and impacts relating to the proposed Pulp Mill in the Tamar Valley, Tasmania, Australia}} |Source=Friends of the Tamar Valley |Author=members of Friends of the Tamar Valley |Da
The term Dodgy Dossier was first coined by online polemical magazine Spiked in relation to the September Dossier. [3] The term was later employed by Channel 4 News when its reporter, Julian Rush, [4] [5] was made aware of Glen Rangwala's discovery [6] that much of the work in the Iraq Dossier had been plagiarised from various unattributed sources including a thesis produced by a student at ...
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
The inquiry opened on 1 August. Hearings began on 11 August. The first phase of the inquiry closed on 4 September. A second session of witness-calling began on Monday 15 September, where some witnesses from the first session, such as Andrew Gilligan, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, BBC chairman Gavyn Davies and Alastair Campbell were recalled for further questions arising from the first phase ...
Dossier: The Secret Files They Keep on You is a 1974 book about record-keeping by Aryeh Neier when he was the executive director of the ACLU.Neier writes that many institutions, from schools to credit and law enforcement agencies, keep secret files on American citizens and share them widely with future employers without their consent.
The 45 minute claim lies at the centre of a row between Downing Street and the BBC.On 29 May 2003, BBC defence correspondent Andrew Gilligan filed a report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme in which he stated that an unnamed source – a senior British official – had told him that the September Dossier had been "sexed up", and that the intelligence agencies were concerned about some "dubious ...