About this blog

Ramblings, thoughts, facts and opinions about political things - starting point council tenant participation with my land-lord Camden council and council tenant reps plus other housing issues, and whatever.


NOTE: I believe this account has been illegally hacked. Little clues have been left for me. They like playing games.

Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Threats to set fire to house with us in it

 the day they came for me 


This was last night around 9pm, my neighbour in flat C above me 

I phoned police and they came down here but didnt arrest her and today i am very wary. do i take her threats seriously? im unsure if go out if i will come back to a house on fire, she is i believe being protected. 





This happened sun 7 Nov 2021
a previous recording of the same neighbour and me arguing

the video is 2:42 long PH lovely, it is fantastic that ME this is PH from upstairs PH everybody works but you Me look PH you are the only one [I got upset at this point as she keeps making remarks about me not being in employment] Me shut the f&&k up PH come out Me yeah PH Come on Me yeah you bitch 0:21 PH come out because I'm recording Me yeah ??? PH you are getting thrown out 0:26 Me listen to the bitch PH get you thrown out ?? Me listen to her shes ?? [she backed away from me down the stairs as I went towards her] Me you are running away PH?? Me oh yeah 0:35 PH every time I come in here I record it as I'm coming in and ???? Me oh right PH they can hear it you fool Me right right so they can hear you slamming the door did they 0:47 PH ugly bitch, you are an unemployed bum Me an unemployed bum 0:54 PH and you should have been a stlll born, you should have been Me I should have been a still born 0:58 PH f££king horrible, ugly, vile, nasty piece of sh3t all you do is complain about people, all you do is harass them, all you do is hurt other people 1:11PH all you do is sit indoors and get your computer out and you can't work but you can ride a bike, you can use your computer but you can complain and you can [she moves back again when i moved towards her whilst she is shouting "come on come on"] Me yeah you bitch PH Come on [she is performing now with the "come on come on" whilst moving/running away from me] PH come on out of here 1:33 PH come on lets ?? Me ??? Note: I think we where both in the downstairs communal hallway at this point with her having opened the front door and standing outside on the door step shouting at me] 1:36 PH you nasty piece of shit Me ??? PH ?? horrible, you are vile [Note: The bang you can hear at 1:42 is me slamming the door on her [she is outside on the door step with me still in the communal hallway] Me vile, nasty f££k off PH horrid ??? 1:48 PH all you do is moan, all you think off ??? thats all you do you??? ????? 2:00 ??? 2:20 PH vile ????? Me ????? PH ??? all you do is ?? people ??????? end



Mon Oct 18 2021


11.31 long

auto transcript is there on youtube  but ive not gone over it and checked it yet, will do that later on sometime





Thursday 23 Sept 2021


Council tenant in flat C above me, Kentish Town, NW5 2XB again calling me names out her window so every one could hear - thursday 23 Sept 2021 I didn't catch all of what she was shouting but what I did manage to record was PH " the whole street everytime" me "oh pathetic" ph "pathetic" me "oh bless" PH " get a job me "oh get a job PH "unemployed bum, get a job, never work in [his? ]life, never worked in your life" Me 'laughs' PH "unemployed lowlife" Me "I'm a lowlife, againnn" PH "you always have been" Me "right" a pause Me " is that it then" a pause Me " rights i thought that was about the, yeah, she works so hard " ends 0:43



Wed 29 April 2020

Following on from the very aggressive and dramatic outburst of venom towards me [video dated 8 May 2020 but recorded 27 March 2020,] I was subjected to another dramatic and aggressive outburst by the tenant who lives in flat above me, who started stomping about in her bedroom. It sounded like my bedroom ceiling was going to cave it. She then sneaked down her stairs and before i knew it she kicked my flat door and by the time I had found a recording device she had gone back upstairs to her flat and wouldn't come out

Prt1
 
Transcript: Inside my flat PH " ... you out of here" Me " you kicked the door again you b*tch" PH " you getting thrown out" I opened my flat door and said "yeah the b*tch upstairs PH You getting thrown out "Just came down and kicked my door" PH "you fucking lowlife Me I wonder why that is, why don't you come down and tell me PH you blew the lights again you fcuking twisted, Me come on tell me PH you fcuking psycho Me tell me PH twisted, you need locking up Me come on tell me, come down and tell me PH I just fcuking did Me oh you kicked the door PH fcuking lights in Me you kicked my door PH you blew the lights in, again - you fcuking nutcase, you need locking up and we're gonna make sure you get locked up Me right PH and sectioned

prt 2 . PH Wed 29 April 2020 Watch and see she says











27 March 2020, a week after I came out of hospital after suffering a Heart Attack, I recorded flat C above me shouting things at me whilst she was in the downstairs hallway. I was in my flat on the first floor, and opened my door when she was downstairs.

Warning some swearing

C: " i'm going to get you thrown out of here, im recording everythink, about you blew in the fcuking lights in, you pathetic, small minded hope, hurry up and fcuking die. Fcuking hell unbelievable. I'm going to get you out like I got the other one out, don't worry and im logging everything and they are going to throw your ar*e out, they have assured us they are gonnu' Fcuking c**t, you pathetic lowlife,


Friday 28 Oct 2022
Flat C front door [which is directly opposite my door and main living/sleeping rooms] and no sound proofing in the building ] has been doing this thing the last weeks where it sounds like someone has come in/out her flat and closed the door so that the lock makes a racket - this was happening every night before 11pm, then earlier this week it was just after 11pm, the next night was just after 12midnight, then early this morning it was 1am - I suspect that its deliberate to upset/unnerve me.


Saturday, 11 June 2022

Culture and Governance failings in Local Government

The below is from the central government website www.gov.uk - and more specific HERE 
Its about governance failings at a local council level. I haven't copied all of it - only some and have added in area's my own emphasis and notes. 

I wondered at what point did central gov think it was right to intervene in the running of local government - when some parts of the corporation weren't functioning as they are expected to,  by either statutory legislation or common law as opposed to inappropriate local customs and traditions. 

I think its fair to add that local councils do a lot of good stuff as well. 


Guidance
Addressing cultural and governance failings in local authorities: lessons from recent interventions

Updated 16 June 2020


1. Introduction

In May 2020 we published Statutory Intervention and Inspection: a guide for local authorities[footnote 3]. Additional guides, including the lessons that can be learned from the different inspections and interventions under the Local Government Act are being developed and will be published in due course.

The Local Government Act 1999 (as amended) gives the Secretary of State powers to inspect and, subject to there being sufficient evidence, intervene in a local authority where that authority is failing in its best value duty, namely:

to secure continuous improvement in the way in which its functions are exercised, having regard to a combination of economy, efficiency and effectiveness.[footnote 4]  [my emphasis] 


Since 2010, the Secretary of State has intervened formally in 4 local authorities:

  • Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council
  • London Borough of Tower Hamlets
  • Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
  • Northamptonshire County Council

There have also been non-statutory interventions in Birmingham City Council and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Although each intervention was unique and the sample size is small, it is important that we identify common characteristics to ensure that lessons can be learned for the future.

Our analysis shows that one common characteristic of recent statutory and non-statutory interventions is weaknesses in the local authority’s culture and governance.

The culture of a local authority is determined by its shared values and beliefs, how decisions are made, as well as how elected members and officers behave, interact and carry out their roles.

This is designed to be a living document which will be updated as we learn lessons from any future interventions. In this spirit, we would welcome suggestions from local authorities as to omissions or additions. Any comments should be made to LocalGovernmentStewardship@communities.gov.uk.


4. Addressing poor behaviour across an authority

5. Strengthening scrutiny, transparency and whistle-blowing support


https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/addressing-cultural-and-governance-failings-in-local-authorities-lessons-from-recent-interventions/addressing-cultural-and-governance-failings-in-local-authorities-lessons-from-recent-interventions

                                                                        

                             __________________________________________

Post: Municipal Corporations HERE



Sunday, 5 June 2022

Municipal Corporations - Local Governance

WORK IN PROGRESS


[notes: I can't find this great reform act of 1832 or the below mentioned 1835 Act - on the website legislation.gov.uk, not even under the year 1832 HEREI've also checked the years 1831 - 1839, just in case and I still can't find such acts even ones that have been noted as repealed.

I can though find 2 Municipal Corporations Acts of 1882 and 1883 which I will link to below]


http://www.historyhome.co.uk/peel/politics/municip.htm

" The 1835 Municipal Corporations Act 

After the passing of the 1832 Reform Act the next logical step in the reform of the constitution was that of the Municipal Corporations

There were about 250 of these towns, each of which had received a Royal Charter at some time in the past to have its own council or corporation. There were great variations in how the corporations were chosen and how they functioned but in over 180 of them, only the members of the Corporation were allowed to vote. Normally they re-elected themselves or brought friends and relatives onto the council. The Commission found generally that power was held by a small number of people because so few townsfolk could vote. 

They also found evidence of corruption with the council members becoming rich at the expense of the town's inhabitants.

Corporation funds are frequently expended in feasting and in paying the salaries of unimportant officers. In some cases, in which the funds are expended on public works, an expense has been incurred beyond what would be necessary if due care had been taken. These abuses often originate in negligence ... in the opportunity afforded of obliging members of their own body, or the friends and relations of such members.

Parliamentary Papers (1835) XXIII. Royal Commission on Municipal Corporations

The corporations fixed the local bye-laws and taxes and it was impossible for the majority of rate-payers to remove unpopular councils because they could not be voted out. Most of the corporations used their privileges for personal and party advantage: the majority were Tory. Councils ignored matters like water supplies, drainage and street cleansing which they were supposed to oversee.

Even worse than this, most of the new industrial towns had not been recognised as boroughs and had no corporation at all. In these towns, living conditions deteriorated and the overcrowded slums were a threat to public health. In October 1831 the first cholera epidemic broke out in Sunderland and spread rapidly throughout the country. By January 1832 cholera had broken out both in Edinburgh and London.

Following the same procedures that had been adopted for the investigation of the Poor Laws, in July 1833 the Whig government set up a Royal Commission was to investigate the working of local councils. The Commission's secretary was Joseph Parkes, a radical lawyer. 285 towns were investigated, most of which were found to be unsatisfactory. As a result of the Commission's findings, a Bill was drawn up and brought to the House of Commons by Lord John Russell in June 1835.

The Bill went through the House of Commons without too much difficulty but the House of Lords proved more difficult. 

Most of the closed corporations were controlled by Tories and the Tory peers claimed that the Bill was an attack on privileges and property. They had used the same reasons to oppose the abolition of rotten boroughs during the 1832 Reform Act campaign. The Lords made some amendments to the Bill but, thanks to the efforts of the Duke of Wellington and Sir Robert Peel, the Tory Lords were restrained from throwing out the Bill altogether. The legislation went onto the Statute Book in September 1835.

Terms of the Act

  • All closed corporations were abolished
  • Borough councils were to be elected by all male ratepayers who had lived in the town for three years
  • Councillors were elected for three years at a time and one-third of the council was to be elected annually
  • Councillors would choose the mayor, who would hold office for one year
  • Councillors would choose a group of Aldermen who would hold office for six years
  • Each borough was to have a paid town clerk and treasurer. Accounts were to be properly audited
  • Councils were required to form a police force
  • Councils, if they so wished, could take over social improvements such as proper drainage and street cleaning
  • Towns and cities that had no council could apply for incorporation if they so wished

Comment

The Act provided a vast improvement over the previous system, which was haphazard and disorganised. It also established the principal of elected town councils. Progress was very slow but the Act at least established the machinery that would enable future reforms to be carried out in the towns. However, the legislation did have several failings:

  • The Act did not compel the new councils to make social improvements. Consequently, by 1848 only twenty-nine boroughs had taken any action in terms of public health
  • Many towns failed to apply for incorporation because the procedure was complicated and expensive. In 1848 there were still sixty-two large towns without councils.
  • The Act mainly benefited the middle classes. Very few working men were wealthy enough to be ratepayers."  Source  http://www.historyhome.co.uk/peel/politics/municip.htm


Municipal Corporations Act 1882 HERE   

Municipal Corporations Act 1883  HERE

Thursday, 7 April 2022

Camden Council Elections 5 May 2022

                                 London Wide Local Government Council Elections 5 May 2022


taken from https://www.camden.gov.uk/local-council-elections-may-2022

Because of recent Boundary Changes there are now 20 wards 
with 15 wards having 3 elected councillors 
and 5 wards with 2 elected councillors
instead of 18 wards with 3 elected councillors, in the London Borough of Camden. 
I have put a 2 with the ward name - of those wards with 2 councillors. 

There has also been some ward name changes.

Map of whole Borough as it was and as it is now HERE  and below



Wards   Click on name for list of candidates                           

Belsize                           

Bloomsbury                                          

Camden Square                                                    

Camden Town                                                           

Fortune Green                                      

Frognal                                                                           

Gospel Oak                                           

Hampstead Town    [updated 3 June 2022: there will be a by-election in Hampstead Town [unknown date] ward due to local labour association putting up a candidate who won seat in this ward, but who appears to have been a dud and has stepped down]   

Thursday 7 July 2022  https://www.camden.gov.uk/hampstead-town-by-election Linda Chung, LD                             

Haverstock                                                      

Highgate                                                            

Holborn and Covent Garden                        

Kentish Town North                                                         

 Kentish Town South                                                         

Kilburn                                  

Kings Cross                           

Primrose Hill                                                                      

Regents Park                  

South Hampstead                                                                   

St Pancras and Somers Town               

West Hampstead                     

 

     \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\


Tues 12/12/2023 

from Nov 2021 

The Strange case of Lazzaro Pietragnoli - former elected member of Camden Council who was first elected onto the Council as a labour party member -  at Camden Town with Primrose Hill ward by-election May 2012 - he replaced Thomas Neumark who moved to the United States twitter name was @phillmum 


https://www.hamhigh.co.uk/news/21327675.unacceptable-camden-councillor-resigns-secret-twitter-account/

23 Nov 2021 






18 Nov 2021 - CNJ  Former mayor Lazzaro Pietragnoli resigns as Labour's chief whip over ‘abusive' Twitter account

22 Nov 2021 - CNJ  Lazzaro Pietragnoli resigns from council over ‘abusive' social media account

25 Nov 2021 - CNJ I’m sorry for fake account's online abuse’: Lazzaro Pietragnoli quits Town Hall

                   Letters Behaviour is no surprise 

PS apparently the Twitter account @PHillmum which Lazzaro Pietragnoil [LP] had been running/twitting from had been around for 5 years - so that makes it sometime in 2017 it was created. 

Thursday, 2 December 2021

LGO Finding of Maladministration

www.lgo.org.uk Local Government Ombudsman

London Borough of Camden (10 022 017)

Licensing Maladministration causing injustice

1 February 2012

London Borough of Camden repeatedly ignored a man’s requests for a street trading pitch and his subsequent complaints about it. The Ombudsman said the Council had no proper procedures or policies in place for allocating street trading pitches. The process lacked transparency and fairness and made the allocation of pitches open to the possibility or the appearance of corruption.

She also said the Council’s complaints procedure had failed.

The Council’s own central complaints unit appears to have been ignored by the department concerned, and my own investigation has been hampered by incorrect information provided by the Council (my emphasis). This has caused unacceptable delay and frustration to the complainant, who has been trying for three years to make use of an unused street trading pitch. Added to this, the Council has itself been losing revenue due to its own disorganisation.” (my emphasis)

The man complained about the Council’s failure to respond to his repeated requests for a particular street trading pitch that had not been used since 2008. He received no response to his first application, and his continued attempts over the next three years to secure the pitch, or another permanent pitch, were unsuccessful.


Tuesday, 16 November 2021

Safeguarding - Hannah

Local news report about the Safeguarding review of the sad death on 9 Feb 2018, of a lady named Hannah Leonard [aged 55] who had lived in Camden in Bray Tower on the Chalcots Estate, Adelaide Road,NW3. I didn't know Hannah but I hope she is at peace now. 

 

Hannah Leonard: Murdered mother was failed by care system, report finds | Islington Tribune






http://camdennewjournal.com/article/murdered-mothers-care-failed-her-report-finds


Hannah Leonard: Murdered mother was failed by care system, report finds Hannah Leonard had been a victim of cuckooing

04 November, 2021— By Tom Foot

______________________








Hannah Leonard died after 55 knife and scissor stab wounds


A VULNERABLE woman who was brutally murdered in her flat was let down by a flawed system that failed to take responsibility for her, a report has found.

The body of Hannah Leonard, who had been a victim of “cuckooing” – when a person’s home is taken over, often by drug dealers – was discovered in February 2018 by builders who were stripping dangerous cladding off her home in Bray tower on the Chalcots estate.

She had 55 knife and scissor stab wounds and the shoe-print of her killer, a woman she had met in a pub, was found on her face.

A 40-page, in-depth adult safeguarding review has revealed how various departments “failed to share responsibility” for Ms Leonard.

The 55-year-old was suffering from an incurable disease and had become known as a “repeat caller” to the emergency services.

There had been too much focus by the NHS and local authority on her alcoholism at the “expense” of her mental health needs, the report suggested.

The system failed to piece together the jigsaw,” the report said, adding that the set-up was vulnerable to miscommunication, administrative errors and could allow a case to fall through the gaps.










Ms Leonard was traumatised by the Chalcots fire safety evacuation

The review, which was mentioned in an annual report discussed by councillors this week, has recommended social services and emergency services combine better in the future when faced with complex cases.

Ms Leonard had in 2016 fallen into a fortnightly pattern of binge drinking, depression and suicidal thoughts.

She made dozens of 999 calls, including on one night when she threatened to jump from a window of her home, leading to “a night-long deployment of emergency services and an out-of-hours GP”, the report said.

In another example, she had reported a sexual assault outside her flats and that a man was in her flat aggressively asking for sex. She also complained of chest and leg pain to paramedics.

Hannah was known to health and social care services in Camden and was a frequent caller to emergency services,” the report added.

She had a diagnosis of Huntington’s disease, recurrent depressive disorder, and was known to use alcohol.”

She had reported a series of falls at home before her death in 2018.

Despite her calls to the emergency services, the NHS and the council, she did not meet the criteria “for a social care response”, the report said.

The review specifically focuses on a flaw that can leave vulnerable people denied help, which they are legally entitled to under the Care Act, because they are also regularly intoxicated with alcohol.

The report said: “The organisational view seemed to have settled: Hannah was making decisions to drink alcohol, was making decisions about risk, and that she could therefore protect herself from the adverse effects of both.

Hannah may well have had mental capacity in relation to patterns of alcohol use and social risk-taking, however, it would appear there was sufficient concern about this to have been more fully assessed.”

Ms Leonard had grown up in the Irish care system and had been a victim of sexual abuse and childhood trauma. But the care “system” in Camden had “demonstrated a limited understanding of her adverse childhood experiences”, the report said.


In June 2017 the Chalcots tower blocks were evacuated over fire safety fears, affecting hundreds of residents.

This caused a “tremendous disruption” to Ms Leonard and may have affected her drinking and access to anti-psychotic medication, the report said.

Due to the unprecedented scale of the evacuation, Hannah’s GP surgery was unable to support her while she resided temporarily in another area,” it added.

This was a traumatic time for Hannah and may have contributed to her use of alcohol as a coping mechanism.”

A review of Ms Leonard’s death was launched in 2019. A series of recommendations were made including better training of social workers and a need “for the system to consider the whole person”.












Lucy Casey was convicted of murder


Health, social care, and emergency services needed to work together, sharing their own experiences to offer Hannah a holistic service that was as unique as she was.”

The report said her daughter had “demonstrated compassion and understanding” throughout the process and had a “genuine wish for organisations to heed the lessons of Hannah’s cases and make changes to practice to ensure that lessons are learned”, the report said.

In a statement, the independent chair of Camden Safeguarding Adults Partnership Board, James Reilly, said: “On behalf of Camden’s Safeguarding Adults Partnership Board, I express our sincere condolences to Hannah’s daughter and family. My thanks to her for her contributions to this Safeguarding Adult Review and to the partner agencies who also participated.

Our Board appreciates the clarity of the comprehensive report and we are committed to fully considering his findings and to improving our future responses to become demonstrably more holistic, informed, proactive and integrated in keeping with the recommendations of this Safeguarding Adult Review.”


Hannah met killer in pub

LUCY Casey, from Kilburn, was convicted of murdering Hannah Leonard in 2018. The 43-year-old had met Ms Leonard in the Sir Colin Campbell pub in Kilburn High Road before going back to her home in Bray tower with a man.

After she was sentenced, Ms Leonard’s daughter Caroline Snowling said there had been a lack of professional support for her and her family following the tragedy. Ms Leonard, who was born in Cork, Ireland, moved to London in the 1980s.

Ms Snowling described her as a “true Irish lady” who was “a very strong and independent woman who loved her community”.

At the time of her mother’s death, she asked for floral tributes to be left outside her door at number 73, adding: “I know for sure that she was known in the community and loved. “She was really sentimental about things and I know she’d like them at her door.

                  --------------------------


Safeguarding Adults Partnership Board HERE

Scroll down the page to read the report Safeguarding Adults Review (SARs): 2020 - "Hannah" 


Thursday, 19 August 2021

Fires in Camden Dwellings

WORK IN PROGRESS


noting some of the fires in the London borough of Camden - before and after the tragic 
fire of [14 June 2017] at Grenfell Tower, West London that killed 72, displaced many and harmed many many others in and around the area. 



Pre [before] Grenfell Tower            

       Sept 2008 Kim Blake HERE  Grafton rd, kentish town  - various arson attempts at KB home  -  Dec 2009  Kim Blake  HERE  - KB charged and brought to court for said arson attempts, found not guilty   and 2011 HERE  has gastric band in stomach and dies. 

1946 Janet Bailey baby-burned-death-kentish-town-fire Grafton rd, kentish town. 

  • Thursday 18 April 2013 Valerie Willis HERE - Countess Road, Kentish Town, London NW5 2XH 
  • 26 Dec 2016 John McKelvey HERE  Hawley Road, Camden Town, NW1 8AA


It was around this year [2013] that the Government made regulations HERE  called The Coroners (Investigations) Regulations 2013 which came into force 25 July 2013 
Part 7 Action to Prevent other deaths 

More commonly known as Prevention of future deaths reports which can be found at the judiciary website linked below 


Post Grenfell Tower [Tuesday 14 June 2017 tragic fire which killed 71/2 [depending who is reporting it] people and many many others harmed/traumatized


2017

21 November 2017 

          Tuesday 21-11-2017 at 31 Daleham Gardens, Frognal and Fitzjohns ward London borough of Camden,  NW3 3BY  3BU Fire at street property house conversion 

Madeline/Magdelana Fink 35 died. 

In-depth reports on 31 Daleham Gardens Fire HERE 

Note: ward now called Frognal  Belsize


8 Dec 2017 

Jacob Sulaiman 65 died 

Robert Morton House, Alexandra Place, St Johns Wood, London NW8 0DX  Reports HERE 


2018

3 Sept 2018 Harmood street, Haverstock ward,  HERE 

9 Nov 2018 Brassey Rd 


2019

3 Feb 2019 

Carl Thorpe 46, Highgate Mental Health Centre   HERE Dartmouth Park Hill, London N19 5NX - 

Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust (candi.nhs.uk)

Strangled and set alight Highgate Mental Health Centre fire victim's aunt speaks out as Old Bailey judge slams medics | Hampstead Highgate Express (hamhigh.co.uk)


2020

4 Nov 2020  

Wednesday 4-11-2020  Bridgeway Street,  St Pancras and Somers Town, LB of Camden. NW1  Fire at flat in block of flats  Henry Boddy 61 died 

In-depth reports on Bridgeway Street fire HERE


3 Nov 2020 NOTES: As reported by Richard Osley on Twitter [ see below] there was also a fire the day before [3 Nov 2020] in Kings Cross. As far as I am aware no deaths or serious injuries. 

"Birkenhead Street estate in King's Cross being evacuated after a fire. Police and firefighters have helped an elderly man out of the building and he is being treated by paramedics" 

 


14 February 2020 

Friday 14-2-2020 at flat 16 Aspen House Maitland Park Villas,  Haverstock ward, LB of Camden, NW3. Landlord Camden Council.

Fire/explosion in empty block of flats due to be demolished  

Daniel Coleman 42 died 

In-depth reports on Aspen House fire HERE

On 14 Feb 2022 there was another fire nearby 

https://www.hamhigh.co.uk/news/housing/chalk-farm-fire-sees-30-people-evacuated-8690060


2023
Thursday 6 July 2023  the London Fire Brigade and others reported: 



Footnote

Please let me know [in comments section] if any mistakes are noted and I will correct them - as and when they come to my attention. I sometimes get dates [numbers] muddled up.