THE RECENT CONVICTION IS ESPECIALLY TROUBLING FOR THOSE WHO HAD CHILDREN AT
NEWBURY BYPASS PROTEST CAMP
~ Helen Beynon ~
The man I now know as Nicholas Gratwick was exposed as a police informant around
a decade ago. I had not given him the time of day until a couple of weeks ago,
when an activist friend asked me if I’d be willing to share my memories of
Gratwick with a Guardian journalist. ‘Radio Nick’, as he was known, turned out
to be on trial for a range of offences connected to child abuse and possessing
indecent images of children—offences that the UK National Crime Agency called
some of the worse ever encountered by specialist child abuse investigators.
Shock waves ran through my old activist circles, with one question surfacing
again and again – did the police who deployed him as an informant know of his
behaviour? As Gratwick does not have a record for such offences dating from the
time, this is hard to prove, and it is unlikely we will ever know. Yet, some
activists recall police officers telling them there was a paedophile on the
camps, and of course, a lack of a criminal record proves little here.
The recent conviction is especially troubling for those who had children at
Newbury (both locals who welcomed Gratwick into their homes and those on the
camps), or who remember how many young and vulnerable people, including
teenagers recently out of care were involved. For me, the revelations brought
back some odd memories of Gratwick talking about pornography to me at a social
gathering – something which, at the time, I thought was just an attempt to shock
me.
I first met Gratwick the day he turned up at the Newbury bypass protests in
early 1996. I was working in a little upstairs office that the campaign rented
and, as usual, it was chaos. Work had just begun on the motorway that would
destroy ancient woods and heaths, damage two clear-flowing chalk streams and
wreck nine miles of open countryside. Camps were springing up along the route,
with tree top walkways and tree houses spanning the land.
In those days when mobile phones were rare and expensive and the internet
unheard of, the office was where people came for information. There would be
people from the camps seeking news, new people turning up and wondering where to
go and what to do, journalists seeking new stories, and a small group of us who
somehow juggled all of this and kept the busy hub going.
Gratwick arrived and said he was an engineer who could help us set up a
short-wave radio network—something that was invaluable for passing messages
along the route of the road. He quickly got stuck into this and helping with
other useful things like driving our vans. For several months, he acted as a
semi-official ‘quartermaster’ helping distribute all the ropes, climbing
equipment, tools and so on that needed to go the camps. In hindsight, this is a
pattern of behaviour that undercover police officers also deployed to win trust
and get quickly to the core of a campaign—although plenty of us who did these
jobs were not undercovers of course!
At the time, Gratwick aroused my suspicions. Every morning, I would head out to
the route early to see where security guards and workers were gathering for the
day’s round of tree-felling. Over a couple of weeks, Gratwick kept pressuring me
to get a radio fitted in my car—at the time I thought it strange how much he
really wanted me to do this and had a distinct sense that he was keeping tabs on
me. In the end, a kind benefactor bought me a mobile phone, but Gratwick’s
insistence played on my mind.
In the years after Newbury, Radio Nick turned up on climate camps,
anti-capitalist demos, in the Greenpeace office, various other campaigns and
social events, including at least two weddings I know of. Like undercover
officers I have known, his politics and reasons for being on protests seemed
flimsy. Also, like many undercover officers, Gratwick formed a relationship with
at least one young woman. When Mark Kennedy and other undercover police officers
were exposed more than a decade ago, Gratwick was revealed to be not a cop, but
a paid informant, acting either on his own or as part of a spy-company working
under contract.
Gratwick currently awaits sentencing, but prison for a grass and a child abuser
will not be a lot of fun, I suspect. As I write, the next stage of the UK’s
Undercover Policing Inquiry is getting going and it feels as if most of us who
have been close to both informants and ‘spy-cops’ are beyond being shocked about
the depths that the state will sink to for information on environmental and
social justice campaigners.
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