" Telecommunications company Cellnet admitted that it had automatically conducted its own internal investigation after publication of the "Squidgygate" transcript, because Gilbey had been speaking on a Cellnet phone | Gilbey, who initially denied The Sun's charges, was a 33-year-old car-dealer who had been a friend of Diana's since childhood |
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" So he "rang the Sun instead | " Cellnet's inquiry, claimed Ostrom, had "replicated" the findings of Colloms and Nelson: Cellnet announced that it was "completely satisfied that we can dismiss this as an example of our network being eavesdropped |
" Norgrove claimed: "I wanted to speak out now to clear up all this nonsense about a conspiracy [.
14" Diana expressed worries about whether a recent meeting with Gilbey would be discovered | One of these was the annual report of the Interceptions Commissioner, , who oversaw the intelligence-gathering practices of the security services |
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The first major "Establishment" figure to question the official line on "Squidgygate" was , the arch-conservative chairman of the | That these "pips" were present at all was therefore anomalous, but they were also too fast, too loud, and exhibited a "low-frequency [audio] 'shadow'," implying "some kind of doctoring of the tape," said Audiotel's managing director, Andrew Martin, in his firm's report |
Dorril, Stephen, and : Smear! Jephson, Patrick: Shadows of a Princess; , 2000;.
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