Details
Details
Alias:
Graham Coates
Deployment:
-
Deceased Child’s Identity:
No
Targets:
(1977 - 1979)
Overview

HN304 ‘Graham Coates’ was the cover name of a former Special Demonstration Squad undercover officer who infiltrated the International Socialists in 1976 and several anarchist groups, including the Zero and Anarchy publishing collectives, between 1977 and 1979. 

He later briefly infiltrated Hammersmith Socialist Workers Party after having his anarchist deployment brought to a sudden halt. He is not recalled by any former members of the groups that he infiltrated.

Coates is the the only officer in tranche one who acknowledged that the sexual relationships between undercover officers and members of the target groups were known within the SDS, including by the managers. He was also the only police witness who spoke in detail about a broader misogynist culture within the unit.

His reporting contained many examples of derogatory and biased language. Coates also spoke about the detrimental effects his deployment had on his well-being; he left the Metropolitan Police not long after his deployment ended.

Coates submitted a written statement to the Inquiry on 11 October 2019 and gave live evidence on 7 May 2021. Unless stated otherwise, Coates’ written statement is the source of the following information.  

 

Pre-SDS Career

HN304 ‘Graham Coates’ joined the MPS in the early 1970s as a uniformed officer and joined Special Branch in the mid-1970s. 

Prior to joining the SDS he also had unspecified roles in B, C and E squads.  Coates started with the SDS in April 1976 and finished in September 1979.

In the Special Demonstration Squad

In 1976, detective inspector HN3093 Roy Creamer , then of C Squad, asked Coates to report back on a political meeting being held at North London Polytechnic. Unknown to Coates, this was a trial run for the SDS. 

Shortly afterwards, he was instructed by Creamer to go to a room in New Scotland Yard where he was asked if he wanted to join the SDS.

For Coates, the clandestine nature of the unit was alluring: ‘The SDS was a secret unit within a secretive police department’. He added that, career-wise, it ‘had seemed to be a step up’.

Tradecraft

Coates admitted that his cover name was a deceased child’s identity, which he obtained from the births registry at Somerset House, London. He added that he made a trip to where the child had been born to familiarise himself with the area. 

The only official identity document he had in his cover name was a driving licence. Coates had two fake cover jobs, as a photographer and a window cleaner. He said he never carried out any work in either role, but did distribute leaflets promoting his photography service.

Target Groups

Coates was initially deployed into the Hackney branch of the International Socialists in 1976. He transitioned into anarchist groups, including the Anarchy and Zero magazine-publishing collectives, in early 1977.  

He was returned to the International Socialists, now renamed the Socialist Workers Party, in late 1979.

Hackney International Socialists

International Socialists (IS) was the group most infiltrated by the SDS.  As Coates began his deployment in 1976, HN296 ‘Geoff Wallace’  and HN301 ‘Bob Stubbs’  were also spying on it in west London.

HN354 Vincent Harvey ‘Vince Miller’ , also a contemporary of Coates, infiltrated IS within the east end of London. Coates’ spying on the Hackney IS branch began in the summer of 1976. 

Coates described his infiltration of Hackney IS as beginning slowly, spending time at a local community centre in Dalston and talking to activists selling newspapers on the street. Coates waited for an invite to a meeting, rather than pushing for one. 

He described the Hackney branch of IS as ‘fanatical’ about meetings, but also said that there were just seven or eight people attending them. These were often held at the Centerprise Bookshop, on Kingsland Road. 

Image
Centerprise Bookshop, Hackney.
Centerprise Bookshop, Hackney

Once a member, he attended meetings and sometimes took on the role of coordinating Socialist Worker newspaper sales in the area. The officer had little else to say about this part of his deployment, although he clearly took active roles in the group. For instance, a report dated 24 August 1976 recorded Coates giving a talk on the history of the Labour Party at an IS meeting.

His first known report, as disclosed by the UCPI, was on the IS Hackney branch meeting at Centerprise held on 8 July 1976. This report is notable for its racist language, out of place even for the time:

However, a negress in the audience stated that an organisation called the West Indian Defence Ctte based in Brixton was presently engaged in arming with knives and coshes as many black people in Brixton as possible and that this organisation was fully prepared to meet physical racialism in the area with physical attacks.

 

A later report on the branch recorded details of four IS members purchasing a house together. Coates claimed this was relevant information as it demonstrated that the activists were on low incomes.  He remarked that Special Branch officers were trained to record all information that came their way – no matter how tangential it had seemed to be. 

For instance, one report recorded the details of an IS member, but also noted the name of his wife, who was not involved in the group.  Coates’ interpretation of recording this single piece of information gives insight into the Special Branch mindset and bureaucratic process when writing the reports:

We were encouraged to report in this way because no man is an island. In this instance, it was likely that his wife was sympathetic to his views and suggests she might, eventually, become an activist too. If she had previously come to the notice of SB, her reference would either be mentioned in S[pecial] B[ranch] records or she would have had her own file and that reference would have been quoted. The person typing up this report would have added that file reference. 

From the mid-1970s, the National Front was especially active and posed a physical threat in the form of racist and homophobic attacks.  Left-wing groups and their meetings were also under threat, which Coates’ reporting reflects. 

For instance, a meeting of Hackney Community Relations, a local government organisation, was a target of NF members, who disrupted it on 22 July 1976. IS members, presumably including Coates, formed a defensive picket, while the attendees left in groups for their own safety.  Another report, thought to be from the officer, covers a similar situation at a meeting of Islington Community Relations.

In August 1976, a talk titled ‘Women – the fight for equality’ was delivered at an IS meeting. Inappropriately, Coates commented in the report that the female speaker was ‘attractive’. 

During January and February 1977, Coates was moving to the anarchist scene.  One of his last reports on IS included an Islington branch meeting on the ‘Islington 18’ Defence Committee.  Later, Coates, when entering the anarchist milieu, was also to spy on the same legal defence campaign (see below). 

There was a transition period of a couple of months in 1977, when Coates attended both socialist and anarchist meetings with his last Hackney branch report dated 3 May 1977.

Anarchist Groups

Coates had said that his move from IS to infiltrate anarchist groups was at least partly motivated by ‘a fascination within me about the subject of anarchism’.  In the oral hearings, the CTI made the suggestion that Coates was a ‘policeman with anarchist leanings’ – which Coates gladly accepted.

He also claimed that when he wrote articles for Anarchy magazine he was expressing views he genuinely held. Consequently, Coates was asked about whether there was any sympathy among SDS officers for the groups they were infiltrating:

I think that if every undercover officer told the truth, they would have to admit that at some point during their deployment they had some sympathy for the ideas and tenets of the group or groups that they were involved with. Sort of like an (sic) Stockholm syndrome. 

However, Coates qualified this as a ‘mental exercise, a mental construct within an individual’s mind’. The anti-authoritarian and anti-state theories at the centre of anarchist political philosophy would also seem hard to reconcile with the duties of any police officer, not least one tasked to spy on political groups.

Zero Collective

Image
Zero Magazine, Aug/Sept 1978
Zero Magazine

Coates became involved with anarchist publication the Zero Collective.  

The Zero Collective was the first anarchist organisation that Coates was deployed to spy on. 

The group was based in the rundown Docklands area of east London.

Coates described the premises to be in need of renovation, something that he then volunteered to help with. 

Although, Coates said, the group was not a threat to anyone:

the Special Branch hierarchy were always interested to hear about these little groupings even though they must have known they were harmless from HN300. I suppose they could not ignore them given the bombings carried out by the Angry Brigade, and they did not want to be caught out again.

Details for many of the meetings that Coates attended would have been openly listed in Freedom Newspaper, or other anarchist publications.

Coates reports on the very first meeting of the group, held on 24 February 1977.  It indicates that he was already active in anarchist circles at this point. His reports on this collective cover internal discussions and, in particular, tensions between Zero Collective and the Anarchy Collective. 

The Anarchy magazine collective

The Anarchy Collective was another, longer-established publishing collective.  Again, much of Coates’ reporting did not cover planned demonstrations or subversive activities, as Coates admitted: 

They had weekly meetings of only around 3 to 5 people […] The meetings were all a bit theoretical: they seemed to just love talking about things, critiquing and discussing them. […] Their main focus had been to publish their magazine.

Coates had said in his oral testimony that he was not aware of the collective being involved in any public disorder. He added that although he was aware that some activists had ‘tenuous’ connections to the activities of the Angry Brigade  he saw nothing along those lines in his deployment.

Much of the disclosure mentioning the Anarchy Collective is administrative in nature, describing the kind of run-of-the-mill organising that it took to publish a magazine.  Coates says in a report that it was a ‘gathering of friends’ and ‘very little of political interest emerged.’   

Instead, Coates reported details of the lives of those who attended the meetings. One such report notes that one of the Anarchy Collective belonged to a tenants association and intended to become a school governor where his daughter attended nursery.  The children’s names were recorded in the report by Coates.

One report also contains personal information on a member of the Anarchy Collective who had two young children.  Coates said: 

The purpose of reporting the existence of these children is that it enables Special Branch to anticipate [Privacy]’s movements. She may have scaled down her activities or taken an interest in educational groupings due to her having young children. For example, she was unlikely to be leaving the children at night to go on long vigils. The information gives a broad picture and allows SB to consider what they could expect from a young mother. 

In another report, Coates describes the child of a couple attending the meeting as a ‘mongol’.  Seeking to justify his language, Coates said:

The fact the child had Down's Syndrome would have been included simply because it was information about a known activist. The appropriateness of reporting such personal information was never discussed. I appreciate that the term "mongol" is now considered offensive, but this was not the case at the time.

Another report of a personal nature focused on a member of the Anarchist Workers Association.  It questions the parentage of the children of a couple who are cohabiting: 

 is living with, [redacted] have three young children (exact parenthood not known) and seem content to exist in conditions of the utmost squalor.

Coates said in his statement that he wrote several articles for Anarchy and Zero magazines. 

I said I would write an article about "work" and gave an impromptu talk about true work and exploitative work. I then wrote an article in greater depth on the same subject. I recall volunteering for this as I felt that eventually I would be asked to write or say something anyway. I thought that, if I could do so on my own terms by giving an acceptable talk on a topic of my choosing, I could avoid having to do so later on a topic I knew nothing about.

This article would appear to be from Issue 24 of Anarchy Magazine in 1977, titled ‘Work and Non-Work’, which bears the initials ‘GC’.  

Image
Article from 'Anarchy' Magazine by 'Graham Coates'
'Work and non-work' by HN304 Graham Coates

Coates claimed in the Inquiry hearing that the article expressed his genuine feelings about the subject matter – even though it was from an anarchist viewpoint.

Persons Unknown

The Persons Unknown support group was created to provide solidarity and legal assistance to a high-profile trial of seven people who had been arrested in 1977.  Six people were charged with ‘conspiracy to cause explosions’, but replaced with charges relating to conspiracy to rob based on a found cache of firearms and explosives. Four of them were eventually brought to trial in 1980, and found not guilty.

The group’s name came from the conspiracy charges against the defendants, stating that they ‘conspired with persons known and unknown’. The idea was that with the vagueness of the conspiracy charges anyone else could be a potential suspect. Graham Coates reported on the legal support group.

The 1978 SDS annual report boasted that two of the people put on trial were identified by the SDS.  Special Branch detective inspector HN3093 Roy Creamer , formerly of the SDS, oversaw, or at least was involved in, this investigation. However, in his evidence to the Inquiry he did not mention the SDS’ role in this, which calls into question whether the claim in the annual report was accurate. 

Graham Coates also said in his statements to the Inquiry that he never had direct contact with people who took part in such serious offences.  Just prior to the group being set up, a Coates report discussed the predicament of one of those charged, Iris Mills, who was being held in solitary confinement in the men’s prison in Brixton.  

The support group was also discussed in umbrella organisation Federation of London Anarchist Group (FLAG) meeting on 3 June 1978, where Dave Morris announced that a group had been set up.  Morris said the group was intended to run along similar lines as the support group for another significant political trial during the late 1970s, the ‘ABC Case’.  

The Persons Unknown prosecution was also discussed at an Anarchy Collective meeting on 8 June 1978.  There is even a report on the benefit gig for the Persons Unknown defendants on 11 January 1979 at North London Polytechnic, which provides details of those attending.

There follow reports on the support group itself, including one from 16 June 1978 that outlined the group’s intentions to use the original conspiracy charges during the trial.  One of the issues discussed in the Inquiry has been undercover officers’ access to, and reporting on, sensitive legal information, which has always been prohibited.

Dave Morris and other target groups 

Graham Coates claimed he befriended Dave Morris, a well-known activist within the London anarchist scene and core participant in the Inquiry. 

Coates used his fake friendship with Dave Morris as an entrée into many groups.  This is supported by the first report where Coates mentions the Anarchy Collective, on 25 May 1976, which focused on Dave Morris. It included details of Morris’ employment as a postal worker.

Despite the targeting, Morris did not recall Coates. In fact, none of the handful of people that were contactable and involved with either Anarchy or Zero collectives have any recollection of him at all. 

In one of Coates’ reports on the Anarchy Collective, it was implied that Morris has confided to a close friend that: ‘He regards it as inevitable in fact that he will eventually have to resort to violence in order to achieve his ideals.’   However, when the Counsel to the Inquiry asked whether Coates ever witnessed Morris being violent, or whether he thought he was violent, Coates answered ‘no’ to both questions.

Another report focused on a meeting involving Dave Morris, looking to form a worker-focused anarchist network.  There is also a single report on a newly formed group named the British Anti-Nuclear Group. This again named Dave Morris amongst its organisers.  

Dave Morris commented on Coates’ monitoring:

Looking back on the surveillance and infiltration of groups I was involved with in the 1970s […] and how I was personally targeted, I feel disgust at this cynical and blatant breach of trust. Not just for me but also for the other victims I knew and know – such as the family with young children whose home was where the Anarchy Collective held meetings.  

Another group that Coates reported on was Black Aid, which focused on the treatment of imprisoned Red Army Faction (RAF) members in Germany. The SDS singled out its monitoring of Black Aid when it wrote to the Home Office in 1979, asking the government to renew its funding.  

Issue four of Zero Magazine, from December 1977, has a lengthy article on the captivity and death of some of the RAF members.  

Coates also produced reports on East London Libertarians (ELL).  Coates said he could not remember them at all despite there being 11 reports on ELL between 8 Feb 1977 and 5 May 1977.  In addition, during 1976 and 1977 several reports were also filed on the umbrella group, Federation of London Anarchist Groups (FLAG) , whose members included the Anarchy Collective.

Redeployment: Croydon SWP

At some point during 1979, Coates was stopped from spying on anarchist groups and moved to the Croydon branch of the Socialist Workers Party. Coates said that this was a sanction, due to his lack of output during the previous few months of surveillance of the anarchist groups. Coates commented that he did not report much on Croydon SWP group as by this time he was ‘burnt out’.

Misogyny and Knowledge of Sexual Relationships in the SDS

Graham Coates broke ranks with other police witnesses who gave evidence that covered the initial years of the SDS operations (1968-1982). He testified to a widespread misogynistic culture present in the SDS safehouses, including jokes about undercover officers having sex with activists. 

In Coates’ view, it was inconceivable that managers at the time did not know that sexual relationships were occurring. This contrasts with evidence given to the Inquiry by SDS managers denying they had knowledge – or even suspicions – that such relationships happened.

Misogyny in the SDS Safehouses

Coates described how SDS officers came to discuss female activists in a derogatory way:

The overlap and intermingling between the various activist groups meant that different UCOs would sometimes come across the same individuals who would sometimes be discussed at group meetings. These discussions could spill over into more informal banter and comments, and this had possibly been the context for the joking, e.g., about a particular woman.

Coates was also questioned about the degree of sexism within the police. Coates said that in the late 1970s there was a widespread misogynistic culture, but that even by those standards many people would have found the SDS banter deeply offensive.

Knowledge of sexual relationships

In Coates’ view, it was inconceivable that managers at the time did not know that sexual relationships were occurring between undercover officers and members of their target groups.  This contrasts with evidence given by SDS managers to the Inquiry denying they had any knowledge – or even suspicions – that such relationships happened. 

Former SDS bosses giving such evidence included HN34 Geoff Craft  and HN307 Trevor Butler , who denied to the Inquiry that they knew anything about any sexual relationships.

Coates told the Inquiry that managers must have at least known that sexual relationships were ‘almost bound to happen’ because officers like HN300 ‘Jim Pickford’ and HN297 ‘Rick Gibson’ had ‘a predilection for chasing women... before, during and after’ their time with the SDS.

Coates was clear that he never had any sexual relationships while undercover himself. Nor did he witness such relationships. However, he gained the impression via his interactions with other officers in the safehouses that those relationships had, and were, taking place, and – as importantly – were widely known within the SDS. 

He stated:

I am aware that some UCOs did engage in sexual activity or relationships while undercover, although this was not commonplace or routine and was nothing to do with their official duties. I had no first-hand knowledge of or involvement in such matters, but jokey remarks were occasionally made in SDS meetings which I took at face value and believed to be based on truth. I assumed that the women said to have been involved were activists but cannot say whether this was the case or not. My supervising officers would have been aware of these remarks because they were present at the meetings when they were made.

He said SDS management never told him explicitly not to have sexual relationships with activists. Nor did Coates witness anyone challenging the behaviour – or the nature of the ‘offensive’ jokes in the safehouse. Instead, he said, management’s attitude was to turn ‘a blind eye’ to the whole issue.

Given some undercovers’ reputations with women, SDS managers including HN34 Geoff Craft and HN307 Trevor Butler must have known that sexual relationships were ‘almost bound to happen’, Coates stated, as some officers had ‘a predilection for chasing women’.

Asked what he knew about particular SDS officers regarding this topic, Coates provided information about two; HN297 Richard Clark ‘Rick Gibson’  and HN300 ‘Jim Pickford’. 

Managers, being around the safehouses, would have overheard, or even joined in with, sexual banter about Rick Clark’s relationship with ‘Mary’.  Coates had firm recollections of ‘banter’ about Clark’s sexual activity and said it was his understanding that a sexual relationship had taken place.

Coates recalled Jim Pickford as ‘someone who was always chasing after women’  and that Pickford was widely known within Special Branch as a ‘philanderer’ – ‘his name would be mentioned as a gauge’ when joking about women.

Asked to spell out Pickford’s reputation, Coates said:

 it was common knowledge outside – within and outside of S squad that that was the nature of the person, that he could not be in the presence of a woman without trying it on.

Coates also recalled Pickford talking about having sex with someone he met while undercover.

Again, this recollection contrasts with SDS bosses including HN34 Geoff Craft and HN307 Trevor Butler denying to the Inquiry that they knew anything about this or any other sexual relationships.

Cooperation with MI5

There are only two MI5 documents provided in Coates’ disclosure. The first is an account of a meeting between MI5 and SDS manager detective inspector Mike Ferguson.  

The connection with the undercover is slight, being a discussion about the ‘indoctrination’ of MI5 desk officers in the identification of SDS’ sources – ‘particularly [in the] anarchist field’. The other MI5 document mentions that Coates was asked to identify photographs of a demonstration outside the Persons Unknown trial in 1980.

Exit

In 1978, while still in the field, Coates received a glowing personnel report. However, a year later Coates described himself as ‘not happy’ during his last weeks of deployment and admitted ‘not performing well’ because he had issues within his life at home. 

He added:

I made an error of judgment on a particular day which resulted in my immediate withdrawal and posting back to Scotland Yard.

Coates said the ‘error of judgement’ occurred during a traffic stop by uniformed police. He gave his real name by mistake even though he had his driving licence in his cover name – contrary to SDS policy.

Although the police officer let Coates go, the incident somehow reached SDS management. His manager detective inspector HN135 Mike Ferguson  was ’incandescent with rage’ and immediately terminated Coates’ deployment. And so Coates’ deployment came to an abrupt end, with no exfiltration process.  

Coates also said that he did not admit this in an interview with officers from Operation Herne  as he was embarrassed by his mistake. He offered additional reasons why Ferguson might have been dissatisfied with his work:

The dip in my level of work refers to the fact that I attended fewer meetings and produced fewer reports toward the end of my deployment. I am not known for being a depressive person, but the undercover work got me down and for one reason or another I did less as a result.

Coates said working within the SDS had ‘significant’ effects on his mental health that contributed to ending his relationship with his partner and to him deciding to leave the Metropolitan Police:

In the initial months after my deployment, I was very twitchy when I was out and about in public, even though I had cut my hair and was no longer wearing my thick-rimmed glasses. I was out in central London on one occasion when I recognised someone, and just took a detour down a side street to avoid them. 

In the Inquiry

On 15 January 2018, Inquiry chair John Mitting ‘minded to’ grant a restriction order over HN304 Graham Coates’ real name. On 3 July 2018, HN304’s cover name and targeted groups were released by the Inquiry. 

Later, on 2 October 2018, the application by the Metropolitan Police to restrict HN304’s real name was released. On 8 November 2018, Mitting accepted this application, and the restriction order was made public on 23 October 2020. 

Coates submitted a written statement to the Inquiry on 11 October 2019 and gave live evidence on 7 May 2021. 

Statements

Title
Hearing Day
Groups
Exhibits
First Witness Statement of HN304 ‘Graham Coates’

Transcripts

Title
Hearing Day
Index
Transcript UCPI Evidence Hearings: 7 May 2021

Reports

Date
Originator
MPS-UCPI
Title
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000012329
Report submitting a copy of the Libertarian Industrial Network's Bulletin No. 4 (attached)
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021741
Report on personal education, employment, accommodation and phone details of Dave Morris, 'a leading figure in anarchist circles'
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021715
Report on declining attendance at the Federation of London Anarchist Groups, Dave Morris ready to step in to try to save it
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000009749
Report on a meeting of Tower Hamlets IS discussing the Campaign Against Criminal Trespass Law, held at Music library, Cambridge Heath Rd, Bethnal Green E2 on 27 May 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000009764
Report on a meeting of NE London Workers Action Support Group featuring a speaker from the International Communist League, held at Centreprise bookshop, Kingsland High Road E8 on 1 June 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011265
Report on personal details of an anarcho-feminist inc photograph (attached but redacted)
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011266
Report that Dave Morris has infrequent contact with an imprisoned anarchist
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010659
Report on a regular weekly meeting of the Hackney International Socialists inc speech from a member of Building Workers branch of IS about Right to Work campaign, held at Centerprise on 8 July 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010789
Report on meeting of the Socialist Worker discussing politics in Southern Europe, held at Roebuck pub on 22 June 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010712
Report on public meeting of the Hackney International Socialists titled 'Black Workers in Struggle - Jamaica - Africa - Britain', held at Princess May School, Hackney on 14 July 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010769
Report on the first public meeting of the Hackney Community Relations Council, defended by a guard of left-wing groups, held at Stoke Newington Hall on 22 July 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010770
Report on personal details of a member of Hackney International Socialists
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010779
Report on aggregate meeting of Inner East London District International Socialists discussing questions raised at the National Conference of the IS, held at Britannia pub, Mare St E8 on 23 July 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010825
Report on meeting of representatives of Big Flame and Croydon Collective discussing tactics at the formation of Croydon Anti-Fascist Committee to ensure International Socialists don't take over, held at redacted private home on 10 Aug 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010823
Report on regular weekly meeting of Finsbury Park International Socialists inc talk 'Women - the fight for equality' and discussion of Right to Work march, held at redacted venue on 18 Aug 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010831
Report on educational meeting of Hackney IS 'The Labour Party - can Socialism come through Parliament?' inc 20 minute speech by HN304, held at redacted venue on 11 Aug 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010868
Report on meeting held by the Trico Strike Committee chaired by the AUEW Divisional Organiser for the strike, held at 1 Woodlands Rd, Southall on 31 Aug 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010898
Report on personal details of the secretary of Finsbury Park IS who is also a member of the National Union of Journalists
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021409
Report on a house jointly owned by members of the Hackney International Socialists who ae struggling to meet the mortgage payments
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021431
Report on personal marital details of the secretary of Hackney International Socialists
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021460
Report on upcoming picket of a National Front meeting, organised by the Brent Trades Council and supported by International Socialists, to be held at Burnt Oak library on 14 Oct 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021474
Report on contact details provided to members of Hackney and Tower Hamlets International Socialists who want to help with the pre-election campaign in Walsall
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021493
Report on a Southern area aggregate meeting of the North London District of International Socialists, held at North London Polytechnic, Holloway Rd N7 on 6 Oct 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021532
Report on a planned demo by N London International Socialists against cuts in public expenditure, to be held during PM James Callaghan's visit to Woodberry Dean estate on 9 Nov 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021537
Report on a regular meeting of Hackney International Socialists, held at Centerprise on 21 Oct 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021556
Report on meeting of Islington Committee for Community Relations, held at Islington Town Hall on 22 Oct 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021558
Report on the formation of the International Socialists / Socialist Worker Youth Movement [later called Rebel]
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021577
Report on routine meeting of Hackney International Socialists, held at Centerprise, Kingsland High St E8 on 4 Nov 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021620
Report on public meeting of Hackney International Socialists on 'the History of Black Workers in Southern Africa'
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017615
Report on inaugural district aggregate meeting of the North London District of the International Socialists, held at North London Polytechnic, Holloway Rd N7 on 1 Dec 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010756
Report on a meeting of North London International Socialists titled 'The fight against racialism', held at Earlshead School, Broad Lane N15 on 22 July 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017637
Report on aggregate meeting of NW London District of International Socialists, held at Acton Town Hall on 8 Dec 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017639
Report on Federation of London Anarchist Groups seeking a new meeting place after Freedom withdrew from FLAG
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017641
Report on a Federation of London Anarchist Groups day school 'The Fight to Live' held at The Tabernacle, Powis Sq W11 on 18 Dec 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017643
Report on public meeting of Islington International Socialists supported by the Finsbury Park branch with speaker Duncan Hallas on the socialist alternative to the Labour government, held at Essex Rd Library on 8 Dec 1976
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017735
Report that a member of the SWP is also an executive committee member of Campaign Against Racism in the Media
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017723
Report on fortnightly meeting of East London Libertarians on ‘What's wrong with the Women's Movement’, held at redacted private home on 2 Feb 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017786
Report on campaigns organised by N London District SWP - hospital closure, anti-jubilee and Islington 18 Defence
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017787
Report on a picket planned by N London District SWP and N London Women's Voice at the surgery Michael O'Halloran MP who voted to amend the Abortion Act, to be held at the corner of Holloway Rd and Pemberton Gdns N19 on 11 March 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017733
Report on personal family, accommodation and vehicle details of a member of the Islington Teachers branch and North London District Committee of the SWP
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017759
Report that Islington International Socialists will support the Islington 18 Defence Committee
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017760
Report on plans by the Zero Collective to publish an anarcho-libertarian newspaper
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017761
Report on a meeting of East London Libertarians, held at redacted private home on 16 Feb 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017762
Report on personal details of a member of the East London Libertarians
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017793
Report that East London Libertarians say the Zero Collective plans to publish the first edition of its newspaper
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017806
Report on personal employment details of a member of the Freedom Collective
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017816
Report on personal physical, dietary and musical details of a member of East London Libertarians who is looking for premises for ELL's proposed bookshop/cafe
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017296
Report on a weekly meeting of the East London Libertarians on the subject of Anarchy and Libertarianism, held at redacted venue on 10 March 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017300
Report that the Zero Collective is planning to publish the first edition of its magazine Zero
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017304
Report on a meeting of the East London Libertarians discussing Marxist economic theory, held at redacted venue on 30 March 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017323
Report on personal political and sexual details of a member of the Finsbury Park, Islington and Enfield branches of the SWP
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017327
Report that the Socialist Worker has discontinued the employment of full-time organisers following an award of damages for libel against it to a member of the ASTMS
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017349
Report on meeting of East London Libertarians inc report from National Deviance Conference, held at 123 Lathom Road E6 on 25 April 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017351
Report on personal details of a member of the East London Libertarians
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017352
Report on personal details of a member of the East London Libertarians
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017382
Report on meeting of N London International Communist League discussing Labour's failure to win seats in and victory of NF in local elections the previous day, held at 118 Tollington Park N4 on 6 May 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017457
Report on state of N London District SWP inc reference to failure of party invovlement with the Islington 18 Defence Committee
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017463
Report on weekly meeting of Seven Sisters SWP preparing for national conference, held at redacted private home on 1 June 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017465
Report on personal accomodation, vehile and employment details of the SWP's Women's Voice organiser
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017496
Report on public meeting of N London District SWP on law and order inc reference to Islington 18 Defence Committee, held at the Forth Library, Manor Gardens on 1 June 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000017523
Report on personal family details of a member of the SWP who is having a relationship with a participant in Women's Voice activities
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011244
Report on a threat received by a member of the SWP Central Committee from neo-Nazis Column 88 saying they'll burn down his house
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010936
Report on a meeting of various anarchists led by Dave Morris, held at Rising Free Bookshop, Upper Street on 30 Aug 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010946
Report on a meeting of the Anarchy Collective, including discussion of the publication ‘Anarchy’ and an upcoming meeting of the Federation of London Anarchist Groups, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave on 1 Sept 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010956
Report on the debate about the Rank and File Movement at the SWP National Conference, gleaned from account given to meeting of Finsbury Park SWP on 6 July 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010596
Report on regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective inc discussion of proposed premises of the Anarchist Centre, held at redacted private home on 8 Sept 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010971
Special Branch report stating that a woman now has two daughters and speculation about the identity of the father
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010974
Report on a regular monthly meeting of the Federation of London Anarchist Groups discussing premises for Anarchist Centre and security, held at Freedom, 84b Whitechapel High St on 3 Sept 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010598
Report on regular weekly meeting of Anarchy Collective discussing proposed premises of the Anarchist Centre and the forthcoming edition of Anarchy, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave on 15 Sep 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010988
Report on a member of the Anarchy Collective who is also involved in the Grosvenor Avenue Tenants Association and intends to be a governor at her child's nursery
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011003
Report that Dave Morris has expressed a willingness to use violence in pursuit of his anarchist aims
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010996
Report on personal details about a member of the Anarchy Collective inc info about a criminal conviction and his sexuality
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010997
Report on private meeting of various anarchists on the subject ‘How should we react to racialism and anti-fascist demonstrations’, held at the Roebuck pub, Tottenham Court Rd on 17 Sept 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011005
Report on a regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective at which envelopes were addressed for the distribution of Anarchy magazine, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave N5 on 22 Sept 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011076
Report on the financial position of the Anarchy Collective
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011086
Report on personal details of a member of the Anarchy Collective and his family
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011094
Report on regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the forthcoming edition of Anarchy, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave N5 on 6 Oct 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011082
Report on the third meeting of the recently formed ‘working’ anarchists group, held at Rising Free Bookshop, 182 Upper Street N1 on 11 Oct 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011139
Report on personal and political details of a member of Finsbury Park SWP
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011505
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing a potential firework display outside Wormwood Scrubs but deciding against, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave N5 on 20 Oct 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011525
Report on personal and family details of a member of East London Anarchist Workers Association
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011559
Report enclosing a leaflet titled ‘Statement from the Rank and File Trade Unionists’ supporting the firefighters' strike (copy attached) distributed by the SWP in North London and Enfield
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011555
Report on a weekly meeting of North London District SWP discussing the firefighters' dispute, held at redacted venue on 15 Nov 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011564
Report on a weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the decision to accept premises for the Anarchist Centre, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave on 10 Nov 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011568
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective inc discussion on an upcoming march organised by Black Aid, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave on 17 Nov 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000008336
Report on regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the firemen's strike, held at 29 Grosvenor Ave N5 on 1 Dec 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011648
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the firefirghters strike, held 29 Grosvenor Avenue N5 on 8 Dec 1977
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011654
Report on personal details about a student who is a member of the Anarchy Collective and Black Aid
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000024598
Report on the newly-formed British Anti-Nuclear Group and its plans to propose combined activity to Greenpeace
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011706
Report on personal bank account details of a member of the Islington NALGO SWP
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021710
Report on private meeting of anarchists and Black Aid supporters inc discussion of plans to 'attack' a school, held at London School of Economics on 8 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021709
Report on a private meeting of anarchists and Black Aid supporters to compose a pamphlet to distribute in a 'school action', held at London School of Economics on 15 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021703
Report on a meeting of anarchists inc talk from a member of the Paedophile Information Exchange used to bait the National Front into a counter-demo, held at the London School of Economics on 19 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021706
Report listing attendees at the Anarchist May Day Picnic, held at Finsbury Park on 1 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021713
Report on financial trouble of the Zero Collective due to expense of aertwork preparations
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021714
Report on the Anarchist Centre - at 109 Back Church Lane E1 - the premises of the Anarchy Collective, and description of AC's financial dispute with the Zero Collective
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021776
Report that Dave Morris is secretary of the Federation of London Anarchist Groups, and physical description of him after recent change of appearance, inc photo (not attached)
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021740
Report on monthly meeting of the Federation of London Anarchist Groups inc discussion of arrests in Persons Unknown case, held at 13 James Street WC2 on 3 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021750
Report on weekly meeting of Anarchy Collective at which copies of Anarchy were addressed & dispute with Zero Collective discussed, held at 29 Grosvenor Avenue N5 on 18 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021769
Report on weekly meeting of Anarchy Collective discussing copy for the next edition of Anarchy magazine & planning Persons Unknown trial support, held at 29 Grosvenor Square N5 on 8 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021771
Report on the formation of Persons Unknown to support three people arrested for conspiracy
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021764
Report on the first meeting of Persons Unknown, held at the Rising Tree Bookshop, 182 Upper Street N1 on 13 June 1978, inc leaflet outlining the case and PUNK's demands (attached)
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021796
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective inc discussion of money owed by Zero Collective, held at 29 Grosvenor Avenue N5 on 15 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021806
Report on private meeting of Persons Unknown inc discussion of the condition of Iris Mills in Brixton prison, held at the Earl Russell pub, Pancras Way NW1 on 20 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021807
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing a Persons Unknown meeting and paedophiles, held at redacted venue on 22 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011292
Report on a meeting of the recently-formed Persons Unknown, held at the Earl Russell pub, Pancras Way NW1 on 27 June 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011297
Report on private meeting of LSE Anarchist Group and Black Aid supporters, held at the London School of Economics on 10 July 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000011393
Report that Dave Morris has recently bought a motorbike, inc registration details
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000008355
Report on regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective at which Dave Morris showed three short films, held at redacted venue on 11 May 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000012857
Report personal details of two co-habiting members of the Zero Collective
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000012859
Report listing the main members and the weekly meeting location of the Anarchy Collective
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000012915
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective, held at redacted address (the home of Chris Broad) on 19 Oct 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010626
Report on weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective, held at a private residence on 12 Oct 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010631
Report on redacted person planning prison visits to Durham and Gertree
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013056
Report on a public meeting of Persons Unknown to discuss prison conditions and the law relating to conspiracy and terrorism, held at the Drill Hall, 16 Chenies Street WC1 on 14 Dec 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013011
Report on the burglary of the flat of the Treasurer of Persons Unknown in which PUNK funds were stolen on 10 Nov 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013023
Report on the weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the forthcoming edition of the magazine Anarchy, held at redacted venue on 23 Nov 1978
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0527309
Memo from David Bicknell to D2 Branch listing names and warrant numbers of officers sitting promotion exams
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013093
Report on a benefit concert for Persons Unknown attended by 'anarchists, students and admirers of punk rock music', held at North London Poly, Holloway Road on 11 Jan 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010651
Report on a regular weekly meeting of the Anarchy Collective discussing the location of future meetings, held at unspecified venue on 25 Jan 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013125
Report on casual meeting of the Anarchy Collective, held at redacted venue on 1 Feb 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013134
Report that the Federation of London Anarchist Groups is now defunct
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013226
Report on a private meeting of Persons Unknown discussing participation in a television program on anarchists, held at redacted address on 4 March 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013234
Report on a private meeting called by Persons Unknown to form a federation of anarchist groups to oppose increasing police powers, held at Conway Hall on 6 March 1979
MI5
UCPI0000028835
MI5 note for policy file reporting meeting with DCI Ferguson to discuss how cooperation between F6 and SDS could be developed, held at MI5 offices on 22 Feb 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013241
Report on a redacted individual's plans to travel to France to participate in 'May Day' demos
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000013269
Report that a member of Persons Unknown and Rising Free has moved in with a person waiting to stand trial for conspiracy to rob in the PUNK trial
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021197
Report on a meeting of anarchists to discuss the anarchist May Day picnic to be held in Highgate woods, held at the Metropolitan pub, Farringdon Rd EC1 on 19 March 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000021215
Report on meeting of the People's Commission on policing, held at Conway Hall on 30 March 1979
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
UCPI0000010632
Report on poor attendance and internal dynamics of the Anarchy Collective

Procedural

Date
Title
Document Type
Topic
SDS officers – Directions on restriction order applications (Direction 17)
Direction
Anonymity
HN304 Graham Coates – Open application for restriction order
Application
Anonymity
SDS officers – Restriction Orders (Minded-To Note 3)
Minded-To Note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers (January 2018 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
Press Notice: Minded-To Note and explanatory note: SDS anonymity applications
Press Notice
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 5
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 6
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 7
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 8
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 9
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 11
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 12
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 13
Explanatory note
Anonymity
SDS officers – Directions on restriction order applications (Direction 38)
Direction
Anonymity
Press Notice: Anonymity applications – 9 officers’ documents published for review
Press Notice
Anonymity
SDS officers – Restriction Orders (Ruling 13)
Ruling
Anonymity
Press Notice: Special Demonstration Squad anonymity ruling made
Press Notice
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 14 and Ruling 14
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 16
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 17
Explanatory note
Anonymity
HN304 Graham Coates – Anonymity restriction order
Order
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 18
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 19 (March 2021 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 19 (September 2021 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 20
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 16
Explanatory note
Anonymity

References

Author(s)
Title
Publisher
Year
HN304 Graham Coates
Work and Non-Work
Anarchy Magazine
Hans Schmidt
West Germany: A Model of Repression
Zero Magazine