Grooming Gangs in Multicult-Fascist UK: Casey’s Report and Ongoing Investigations, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)
Baroness Louise Casey's June 16, 2025, report on group-based child sexual exploitation (CSE) has exposed systemic failures in addressing grooming gangs in the UK, sparking renewed investigations in Newcastle and trials in Sheffield. This review, drawing on JJ Starky's article and web sources, discusses the report's key findings, live operations, and trials, highlighting institutional shortcomings and the urgent need for accountability.
Casey's 200-page audit reveals a "culture of blindness, ignorance, and prejudice" that allowed grooming gangs to thrive for decades. Key findings include:
Data Failures: Ethnicity data is missing for two-thirds of perpetrators, preventing national-level conclusions. Local data from Greater Manchester, South Yorkshire, and West Yorkshire shows a disproportionate number of Asian, particularly Pakistani, men involved, e.g., 66% of suspects in Rotherham's Operation Stovewood were Pakistani, despite being 4% of the population. The Home Office's claim that most offenders are White was criticised as baseless.
Legal Loopholes: Cases were often downgraded from rape to lesser charges, with victims aged 13–15 wrongly deemed to have "consented." Casey recommends mandatory rape charges for adults abusing children under 16.
Institutional Neglect: Child protection plans for sexual abuse have plummeted to a 30-year low (2,160 cases), while neglect cases rose to 30,950. Authorities avoided investigating ethnicity to prevent "racism" accusations, leaving victims unprotected.
Migrant Involvement: A "significant proportion" of suspects in live cases are non-UK nationals or asylum seekers, with some exploiting perceived "moral laxity" in British girls.
Scale of Abuse: Around 500,000 children face sexual abuse annually, with 700 group-based CSE offenses recorded in 2023, likely underreported due to inconsistent definitions.
The report criticises a cycle of "momentary action" followed by inaction, with survivors like Fiona Goddard asserting that abuse was enabled by authorities' fear of addressing perpetrators' ethnicity and victims' marginalised status. Casey's 12 recommendations, all accepted by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, include a national inquiry, mandatory ethnicity data collection, and a National Crime Agency (NCA)-led operation targeting over 1,000 reopened cases.
Northumbria Police are probing new intelligence about active grooming gangs in Newcastle's West End, following a 2017 case where 18 individuals from diverse backgrounds were convicted for abusing hundreds of girls as young as 14. A Chief Inspector confirmed concerns about ongoing exploitation, but a survivor told GB News her trial collapsed due to police mishandling evidence, raising doubts about current efforts.
In Sheffield, a trial involving Sageer Hussain, Kessur Ajaib, and Mohammed Makhmood for allegedly abusing a 14-year-old girl in Rotherham (1999–2002) underscores the scandal's persistence. The court heard chilling testimony, with Hussain allegedly saying, "That is what white girls are for," revealing racist attitudes. Operation Stovewood, investigating Rotherham's historic abuse, has identified 323 suspects, with 42 convictions, nearly two-thirds of Pakistani heritage. Delays in justice, some cases take 19 months for charging decisions, continue to harm victims.
Casey's report exposes a systemic failure to give justice to victims, with authorities historically ignoring girls, often from care homes, due to their perceived "waywardness." The reluctance to address ethnicity, fearing racism accusations, has emboldened perpetrators and far-right groups alike, as Casey notes. Starky critiques her media comments for still pandering to political correctness, risking a diluted national inquiry.
The NCA's operation and the inquiry, with powers to compel witnesses, aim to address past cover-ups, but scepticism persists. Former prosecutor Nazir Afzal argues criminal investigations, not inquiries, deliver real accountability. Resource constraints, as noted by lawyer Richard Scorer, could hinder the review of over 1,000 cases. Posts on X highlight public frustration, with calls for deporting convicted abusers unmet due to countries like Pakistan refusing repatriation.
In conclusion, Casey's report lays bare decades of institutional denial, with grooming gangs exploiting vulnerable girls amid data gaps and misplaced priorities. Newcastle's ongoing investigations and Sheffield's trials reflect progress but also persistent failures in police competence and victim support. The national inquiry must avoid political posturing and deliver justice, ensuring survivors' voices, not fears of "racism," guide action. Without sustained reform, the cycle of abuse and inaction will persist. And the rapes are still going on, to the eternal sham of Britain.
https://news.starknakedbrief.co.uk/p/latest-grooming-gang-updatescaseys
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