Details
Details
Alias:
Don de Frietas
Deployment:
-
Dead child identity:
No
Targets:
(1968 - 1968)
Overview

Born in the 1930s, HN330 'Don de Freitas' joined the Metropolitan Police in the 1950s. Towards the end of the decade he joined Special Branch's C Squad as a detective constable and worked across several other Special Branch squads during his career. 

De Freitas joined the SDS in September 1968 as a detective sergeant and left shortly after the 27 October 1968 Vietnam Solidarity Campaign 'Autumn Offensive' demonstration. Returning to conventional Special Branch duties, including close-protection work, he resigned from the Metropolitan Police at an unknown later date after being demoted to a uniformed sergeant.

De Freitas was unhappy to be asked to give evidence to the Undercover Policing Inquiry, arguing that his involvement with SDS almost 50 years earlier had lasted a matter of weeks and that he wished to be left in peace. He did not remember details of his SDS deployment such as his cover name. In his witness statement, he wrote that being in the SDS was very similar to being in other Special Branch squads, but this could be because he has few specific memories from spending just over a month in SDS.

The information in this profile comes from the his first witness statement to the Undercover Policing Inquiry unless otherwise stated.

Pre-SDS Career

Documents from May 1968 released by the Inquiry show de Freitas was working for C Squad prior to joining the SDS. 

The first document is a report, dated 13 May, on a planned speech by Tariq Ali to the Havering Young Liberals a week later.  It is not clear whether de Freitas was the source of this information or merely received it over the phone and typed up the report. Havering Young Liberals did not have a Special Branch registry file when this report was made. 

It is worth noting, however, that de Freitas's final Havering VSC meeting report  lists five attendees, all redacted, one of whom, it was noted, had 'previous mentions re Havering Young Liberals and Committee of 100 activity'. It is likely, therefore, that the planned activity outlined in the 13 May report was surveilled by Special Branch officers, possibly even de Freitas, and attendees' names recorded.

The next three documents are all telegrams dated 25 May 1968.      They are reports on a joint demonstration between the Notting Hill VSC and the Notting Hill People's Association about the lack of access for local children to a communal garden in Powis Square, Notting Hill, west London. 

Special Branch and uniformed police attended and ten arrests, including of the organisers, were made. Plain-clothes Special Branch officers watching the march identified two Black Power activists also observing it and anarchist group, the Hyde Park Diggers, in attendance. 

Although the aim of the march seems mundane, the people involved in the demonstration represented many of the political groups that Special Branch suspected of being subversive and/or a threat to public order in the febrile atmosphere of 1968.

In the Special Demonstration Squad

De Freitas' time with the SDS was very short. He appears to have been tasked with infiltrating the Havering branch of the Vietnam Solidarity Campaign (VSC)  immediately upon joining in late September 1968. 

There is no documentary evidence of him doing any work for SDS beyond submitting reports on the Havering VSC and he says he left straight after the October 1968 demonstration.

De Freitas remembers SDS as being run without a clear chain of command – everyone reported to HN325 Conrad Dixon  regardless of rank. Tasking for de Freitas' activities came from Dixon. Working for SDS had no impact on his pay.

When not undercover with Havering VSC, which was most of the time, de Freitas spent his days at Scotland Yard. He thinks there were two SDS flats in Bayswater for undercover officers but did not visit them. 

While in the office he met regularly with Dixon to discuss Havering VSC and typed up written reports; his own and others’. One report dated 14 October 1968 , noting that a group of up to 50 students from Swansea was planning to attend the October march, bears de Freitas' name but was almost certainly based on intelligence from a different officer and just typed up by him in Scotland Yard.

He also remembers having a lot of downtime, as SDS officers were exempt from being asked to do ad hoc tasks for other Special Branch squads: '[To] be honest this was a little like being on holiday as during the day you would have little to do.' 

He does, however, appear to have been given one ad hoc task on 3 October 1968. This was to investigate a tip off that had arrived via telegram from a Special Branch officer that someone had been trying to procure chemicals from pupils at a school in Forest Gate to make smoke bombs for the October demo.

Recruitment

De Freitas' recruitment to the SDS was very casual. He says he knew Conrad Dixon socially and one day, while passing each other in a corridor in Scotland Yard, Dixon asked him if he'd like to join SDS. 'My attitude was that I would try anything once so I joined.' No one explained what the job would involve or the impact it might have on de Freitas and his family. No managers talked to his spouse before he joined.

Training and welfare

He says the SDS operated quite informally and 'the job evolved as we were doing it'. He was not told how long he would be on the squad but understood that his task was to collect as much intelligence as possible in the run-up to the October 1968 demonstration. 

Shadowing a more experienced SDS officer was usual way to learn the ropes. After that, 'so long as you got the information that was needed, you were left on your own'. 

De Freitas was not given any training, advice or instructions on the parameters of ethical behaviour while undercover but says he would have 'reviewed the Special Branch files or criminal record files of attendees of the Havering VSC meetings, if they had such files'. He did not receive any support for his welfare during or after his deployment.

Tradecraft

For de Freitas, his time in SDS was similar to his regular Special Branch work, the main differences being that he used the same false name for several weeks rather than one day, and that his work focused solely on the 27 October demonstration. He therefore relied on the tradecraft he used for regular Special Branch work.

Even though Dixon warned him that the people he was spying on might try to verify his identity, de Freitas does not seem to have put much effort into his legend. He says he carried his warrant card with his real name on it while undercover, did not use cover accommodation and drove his own car to Romford, near where the Havering VSC was based.

In terms of his appearance: 'For my work on the SDS I stopped wearing a tie'. He let his hair grow for the month of his deployment and wore his weekend clothes. His cover job was as a driver for Shell, though his attempt to get a Shell employee to pretend he worked there if anyone rang did not go well. 

He did not use a deceased child's name and says his undercover name was not based on a living person. In September 1968, a London-based Black Power activist called Michael de Freitas, aka Michael X, was regularly appearing in the press and in Special Branch records. Subconsciously, this might have inspired de Freitas' cover name.

Target Groups

De Freitas recalls that: 'My remit was to find out as much as possible about the plans of the Havering VSC  for the demonstration on 27 October 1968, in particular what they hoped to do at the demonstration and identify the people involved in the group'. Within these parameters, he says, he and HN334 'Margaret White'  were 'left to our own devices'.

On 26 September, de Freitas attended an open meeting of Havering International Socialists  in Romford attended by 29 people including members of the VSC and Young Communist League. During the meeting, committee members for a newly formed Havering VSC were elected and the branch's first meeting planned for 30 September.

White and de Freitas infiltrated the Havering VSC between September 30 and 29 October 1968, de Freitas submitting reports from branch meetings on 30 September, 5, 19 and 29 October. 'The work with the Havering VSC generally occurred in the evenings or for the duration of an event during the day', de Freitas remembers, 'after which the group and I might go to the pub'.

In his witness statement, de Freitas asserted that White was deployed alongside him as his girlfriend simply to give him cover and played no active role in intelligence gathering. In fact she had been working for SDS for about seven weeks before he joined, surveilling various groups in plain clothes. 

White submitted three reports on Havering VSC, albeit brief ones. Although de Freitas outranked White, there is no evidence that she was the lesser partner in the infiltration of Havering VSC.

De Freitas' 30 September report , describes a private meeting of nine members of the new Havering branch; it is not clear whether this number includes the two undercover police officers. The report is notable because the meeting took place in the house of a local Labour Party official, who had been recorded by Special Branch as belonging to two other groups on which it was gathering intelligence. 

A subsequent report revealed that the official, secretary of the Emerson Park ward, had just resigned his Labour membership.  De Freitas said in his witness statement that an activist holding a position in a mainstream political party would have been of particular interest to MI5 which, he knew, would receive his reports.

Membership fees were taken during the meeting, including new members' dues, so it is likely that de Freitas was considered a member of the branch, contrary to his witness statement. The meeting also elected a branch secretary and treasurer, most likely a combined role.

Both de Freitas and White submitted reports on a meeting at the King's Head pub in Romford on 5 October.  De Freitas' report names the chairman and committee members of the Havering VSC and he has clearly had time to cross reference them with existing intelligence on IS, as he notes by each one that they have 'mentions' or 'several mentions re International Socialism'. 

He also records that the Havering VSC members decided to restrict their activities to handing out leaflets locally and 'perhaps' fly-posting posters for the 27 October march and that they would concentrate most of their activity until the week before the march to avoid 'running out of steam'. 

They arranged for 2,000 leaflets to be printed. De Freitas thinks he may have done some fly-posting while undercover in the Havering VSC, but cannot remember whether he discussed his participation with Dixon.

The next meeting of the Havering VSC on 15 October 1968  was again held in a private house, where membership dues were taken and 200 leaflets each given to the eight members present to distribute. Three copies of this leaflet were included in a report submitted by White on 19 October.  

There is no report by White or de Freitas from the 27 October march itself, though de Freitas remembers attending the October 1968 demonstration, chanting 'Ho Ho Ho Chi Min' alongside the rest of the Havering VSC branch. 

This was the full extent of their protest: 'They were peaceful. On the day of the demonstration itself they didn't even attend Grosvenor Square and disbanded before that point in the demonstration.'

The last report by de Freitas, is dated 29 October 1968.  It concerns a meeting of eleven Havering VSC members to have a post-mortem on the recent demonstration. 

One striking feature of the report is that there is a greater level of detail and intelligence about attendees. For example, comments on individuals present include the note that '[redacted] has in the past been wrongly identified as [redacted] in reports dealing with the October 27th demonstration' and, as previously discussed, another member is involved with Havering Young Liberals.

As with previous public Havering VSC meetings, Socialist Worker was for sale and under 'future activity' de Freitas noted a recruitment drive for International Socialists was planned for November. It seems that VSC activity was stopping and the branch was returning to IS activities. 

Attendees were recorded describing the 27 October march as 'a complete and utter disaster', although reasons why are not explained, and de Freitas remarked that 'the morale of Havering V.S.C. and I.S. has hit an all time low'. Given the state of morale, he did not think the planned IS recruitment drive was likely to be very successful.

After the demonstration de Freitas had no exfiltration strategy other than to stop attending meetings, which he did after a post-march post-mortem meeting on 28 October 1968. Conrad Dixon told him his deployment was over and de Freitas believes HN326 'Douglas Edwards'  replaced him in SDS, though not in Havering VSC. 

De Freitas was not debriefed at the end of his deployment or offered any support or advice; he didn't feel he needed it. He thinks Conrad Dixon told the SDS that its work had been commended by the home secretary after the October 1968 march.

Cooperation with MI5

Although he did not personally have any contact with MI5, de Freitas knew the information he gathered for the SDS was being shared with them. '[E]verything we did was generally reported to the Security Service, it was just how it was.’ 

As noted, the presence of a local Labour Party official in the group would have been of specific interest to MI5. '[I]t was part of [MI5's] remit, as I understood it, to consider whether there was any infiltration of legitimate left wing political organisations by extremists.' 

By de Freitas' own admission, however, Havering VSC was not an extremist group: 'I don't think what I witnessed in the Havering VSC amounted to subversive activity.'

Post-SDS Career

De Freitas went back to C Squad immediately after his SDS deployment. Seven reports between January 1969 and June 1970 show him reporting on public meetings of various other groups for Special Branch. 

These are a telegram containing future events dates announced at a meeting of the International Marxist Group  on 25 January 1969 , a two-page report on a South Africa Freedom Day commemoration event by the Anti-Apartheid Movement at The Roundhouse in Camden on 6 July 1969 , two contemporaneous telegrams reporting on a peaceful demonstration by the Anti-Apartheid Movement outside South Africa House on the morning of 25 October 1969  and a report on the same event.   

The last two reports show how intelligence from SDS was circulated to other Special Branch squads for action. The first is a telegram dated 25 June 1970  from Detective Inspector HN1251 Phil Saunders , an SDS manager. 

It contains information from a 'reliable but delicate source', almost certainly HN294  who signed the telegram, about a planned action outside 10 Downing Street by the Anti-Apartheid Movement  four days later. De Freitas's name is handwritten at the top of the document, presumably because he was tasked with attending the event. 

His report on the event, dated 29 June 1970, notes that it was peaceful and uneventful and that a petition against selling arms to South Africa was handed into 10 Downing Street. This was copied to MI5, with a note that all the signatures on the petition would later be forwarded to the Security Service too.  

Some time later, de Freitas resigned from the Metropolitan Police 'on bad terms' the day after being transferred to a uniformed branch by the assistant commissioner. This was not related to his work on SDS and may have been many years later, as he has not disclosed the date. 

He was not given any guidance about using his undercover training in the private sector when he left the Metropolitan Police and says he did not do any undercover work in the private sector.

In the Inquiry

The Metropolitan Police Service applied to restrict HN330's real name in June 2017 and put forward supplementary submissions, a personal statement and a risk assessment in support of this. 

HN330 refused to meet with the risk assessor, described the risk-assessment process as 'a pantomime' and made his desire to be 'left in peace' very clear in his personal statement. He is not a core participant in the Inquiry. 

Mitting acceded to MPS's request, issuing a Minded To notice on 3 August 2017 and making a restriction order on 8 December 2017. 

As HN330 could not remember his cover name, his identity remained completely anonymous until another former officer remembered his cover name in their evidence. 

No further application was made to restrict HN330's cover name, and so it, and his target group, were released on 6 March 2018. The procedural documents relating to his involvement in the Inquiry can be found on the Procedural tab of the Documents page of this profile. 

Statements

Title
Hearing Day
Groups
Exhibits
Second Witness Statement of HN330 ‘Don de Freitas’
First Witness Statement of HN330 ‘Don de Freitas’

Transcripts

Title
Hearing Day
Index
Transcript of UCPI Evidence Hearings: 13 Nov 2020

Reports

Date
Originator
MPS-UCPI
Title
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0733676
Telegram on upcoming action of the Anti-Apartheid Movement at Downing St on 29 Jun 1970
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0746715
Telegram on upcoming action by supporters of the Anti-Apartheid Movement, to be held at Downing Street on 29 Jan 1970
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731913
Two telegrams to Special Branch on demo by the Anti-Apartheid Movement outside South Africa House assembling and dispersing, 25 Oct 1969
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731914
Report on demo by the Anti-Apartheid Movement outside South Africa House, 25 Oct 1969
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731915
Report on a demo by Anti-Apartheid Movement against he sale of arms to South Africa, held on Parlaiment St and Whitehall SW1 on 29 June 1970
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0736021
Report on meeting of Anti-Apartheid Movement about the liberation of South Africa and guerrilla warfare, held at the Roundhouse, Chalk Farm NW1 on 6 July 1969
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731905
Telegram from HN330 listing events announced at IMG meeting held at Beaver Hall EC4 on 25 Jan 1969
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731912
Report on meeting of Havering International Socialists reviewing the 27 Oct Vietnam War demo, held at Edwin Lambert Hall, Romford on 29 Oct 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731910
Report on a meeting of Havering International Socialists ahead of 27 Oct Vietnam War demo, held at redacted private address on 15 Oct 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731907
Report on Swansea University students ('who call themselves "Anarchists"') plan to attend the 27 Oct Vietnam War demo
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731911
Report on a meeting of Havering International Socialists plannsing for 27 Oct Vietnam War demo, held at the King's Head, Romford on 5 Oct 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0733982
Report on Havering VSC members’ arrangements to attend the 27 Oct 1968 Vietnam War demo
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731909
Telegram on a person allegedly asking kids for materials to make smoke bombs, and who 'has an interest in' the 27 Oct Vietnam War demo
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731906
Report on meeting of Havering International Socialists planning for the 27 Oct Vietnam War demo, held at a redacted private address on 30 Sept 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0733932
Report on a meeting of the Havering International Socialists, talk 'What is Revolution' and info on 27 Oct Vietnam demo, held at Laurie Hall, Romford on 26 Sept 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731916
Telegram on demo by the VSC and the Black Power Movement in details of 10 arrests, held on Portobello Rd and Powis Square W11 on 25 May 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731917
Telegram on demo by the VSC and the Black Power Movement in details of 10 arrests, held on Portobello Rd and Powis Square W11 on 25 May 1968
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731918
Report on demo by the VSC at Powis Square W11 on 25 May 1968, inc details of skirmishes and arrests, sent from Notting Hill police station
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0733958
Report on march by people inc W London VSC, the Black Power Movement, and the Wednesday Group Powis Square to tear down fencing inc details of 10 arrests, held on 25 May 1968 from Portobello Road
Metropolitan Police Special Branch
MPS-0731919
Report that Tariq Ali will be addressing Havering Young Liberals on 'Will Britain see a Revolution?', to be held at 1A Westland Avenue, Hornchurch on 21 May 1968

Procedural

Date
Title
Document Type
Topic
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 16
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 Ruling 19 (September 2021 update)
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 18
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Ruling 17
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 Minded-To 14 and Ruling 14
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers following Minded-To 13
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 11
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 8
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 6
Explanatory note
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 4
Explanatory note
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers (January 2018 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
HN330 Don de Freitas – Anonymity Order (Order 34)
Order
Anonymity
SDS officers – Restriction Orders (Ruling 1)
Ruling
Anonymity
Press Notice: Ruling on Special Demonstration Squad anonymity applications
Press Notice
Anonymity
Transcript of UCPI Procedural Hearing 8: Anonymity II, Restriction Order Approach (Day 2)
Transcript
Anonymity, Restriction order approach, Photographs
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers (November 2017 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
MPS – Submissions re SDS anonymity restriction orders, responding to points made by media and NSCPs
Submissions
Anonymity
Designated Lawyers – Skeleton Argument on behalf of various SDS officers re restriction orders
Submissions
Anonymity
Supplementary Minded-To Note on restriction orders for various SDS officers
Minded-To Note
Anonymity
Press Notice: Supplementary Minded-To Note on SDS anonymity applications. Hearing on 20-22 Nov 2017
Press Notice
Anonymity
NSCPs – Submissions re Minded-To Note of 3 August 2017 on restriction order applications
Submissions
Anonymity, Photographs
The Guardian – Submissions on restriction order applications in response to the 3 August 2017 Minded-To Note
Submissions
Anonymity
SDS officers – Restriction Orders (Minded-To Note 1)
Minded-To Note
Anonymity
SDS officers – List of documents published on 3 August 2017 to accompany Minded-To Note 1
Hearing bundle index
Anonymity
Press Notice: Minded-to Note, ruling and directions in respect of anonymity applications relating to the SDS
Press Notice
Anonymity
CTI – Explanatory note on restriction order applications for SDS officers (August 2017 update)
Explanatory note
Anonymity
Designated Lawyers – Supplementary submissions supporting MPS restriction order applications for SDS officers
Submissions
Anonymity
HN330 Don de Freitas – Open application for restriction order
Application
Anonymity
HN330 Don de Freitas – Impact Statement
Impact Statement
Anonymity
HN330 Don de Freitas – Open Risk Assessment
Risk assessment
Anonymity
Extension of time for service of anonymity applications by the MPS in respect of the SDS (Direction 12)
Order
Anonymity, Restriction order approach