Jinkies! Former Reagan White House staffer and truthteller Barbara Honegger vs. The Casey Family
Jimmy Savile, star of children's television favourite Jim'll Fix-It, sued the Sun in 2008 over a series of articles linking him to Haut de la Garenne, the Jersey children's home where human remains were found and children were allegedly tortured and sexually abused.
He initially denied ever visiting the home, despite photographic evidence to the contrary.
Savile's reaction was to slap an injunction on The Sun who had to withdraw the picture.
This was followed with a series of articles.
One asserted that Savile was unwilling to assist with the police investigation and another that he admitted having visited the home.
But then it brings in Edward Heath:
One of those who stood most to lose was Sir Edward Heath, the former prime minister from 1970-74, who was known to visit the Jersey care home the Haute Garenne among others to take young boys on boating weekends on his yacht called 'Morning Cloud', or as his bodyguards referred to it, 'Morning Sickness'.
The person bringing children for him to abuse is Sir Jimmy Saville.
He was seen by the witness, victim, taking young boys onboard Heath's yacht The Morning Cloud when they were at party conference.
Allegedly Saville is known for supplying a number of high profile MP's with children for them to sexually abuse.
As a writer on Fortean Times notes:
"The sites which carried the Jersey picture usually segue into a very lurid mythos which has Savile pimping boys to Edward Heath for orgies on his yacht.
We are just a few yards from the Twilight Zone of pedophile lizards . . ."
[Yeah - funny, that...]
The Disclosure Project site, which also has the same allegations about Heath, also notes:
"Heath was warned on 4 occasions by the head of the Metropolitan police not to loiter in London's lavatories and not to try to pick up young boys.
Nonetheless, he quickly fell prone blackmailers who insisted he dress up in a ridiculous Gestapo uniform in which he was photographed.
Under threat of exposure Heath was forced to enter Britain into the Common Market, now the European Union, under very unfavourable conditions.
It is still a bone of contention among scholars how he became PM in front of the immensely popular and scholarly Enoch Powell who to all intents and purposes should have been Prime Minister.
We are drifting very far from credible truth here, and I think the notion that Edward Heath had a hidden private life, dressed up in a Gestapo Uniform (and no photos have come to light) and was blackmailed into joining the Common Market is a complete fantasy.
David Ike's site goes one step further, and has Heath not only involved in Satanic rituals, but also - according to an eyewitness - shape-shifting into a reptilian, during a ritual.
But the Heath story is interesting, because Heath is also linked to sexual abuse scandals regarding the Kincora boys' home in Ireland.
The earliest version of this in my lifetime was the Kincora boys' home affair in Northern Ireland in the 1970s.
Then, three gay men working there had abused the boys in their care for almost 20 years.
They had survived complaints from the boys, parents and other care workers, because one of them, the late William McGrath, was not only a senior figure in the Orange Order and a friend of the Reverend Ian Paisley, but also an informant for MI5.
Rumours spread of boys being taken to big country houses to be used by public figures, including Lord Mountbatten, the former head of MI6, Maurice Oldfield, and Edward Heath. These rumours are still circulating on the Internet.'
Where did these rumours come from?
Colin Wallace, a former MI5 officer, revealed that they were part of a plan by MI5 to discredit Heath, so that he would have to give way to a Prime Minister more in keeping with a stronger security service.
Colin Wallace, was an army intelligence officer attached to MI5 who resigned in 1976 protesting about MI5's anti-Wilson activities, but he says they also extended to Heath:
Wallace claims part of these covert psychological operations (known as 'psyops') were designed to prevent the election and re-election of a Labour regime.
'We also had a campaign going against Edward Heath and other prominent Tory MPs thought to be too liberal', says Wallace.
'The aim was to discredit them politically by planting smear stories against them in the press. '
For example, Heath and other bachelor politicians were wrongly 'linked' to homosexual scandals, such as the Kincora boys' home affair in Ulster.
The ultimate aim, Wallace says, was to remove Heath as leader of the Conservative Party and replace him with someone of a more resolute approach to political and industrial unrest.