Daily Telegraph news stories the EU Stasi ordered Google to take down
And here’s the full list of Daily telegraph content removed from Google search results
• A story about a British former convent girl who was jailed in France for
running a ring of 600 call girls throughout Europe in 2003.
Police were tipped-off about Margaret MacDonald’s operation by a former
colleague following an argument.
• An article from 2008 about a
former Harrow pupil, Alex Fiallos, who returned to his halls of residence after
a night out drinking and drove his £4,000 car around the grounds at speeds of 30mph
before crashing. He eventually collided with a set of steps in a
scene reminiscent of the 1969 cult classic movie starring Michael Caine. His
parents had given him the silver Mini just the day before.
• A story from 2009 on our
property page documenting how Paul and Fiona Godwin-Brown and their two boys
Tom and Charlie gave up pressured London life and moved into a
rolling Devon valley.
• A news story from 2003 on former
president of the Law Society, Robert Sayer, being accused of inventing a phantom identity in order to have his former
deputy expelled from the profession.
• Two stories from 2010 relating
to football referee Dougie McDonald coming under scrutiny for a penalty decision
in a Celtic v Dundee United match, and subsequently resigning. Both links were
subsequently reinstated by Google.
• Four images - which are actually
two unique images, each hosted twice as separate copies on the Telegraph
website - relating to Max Mosley's 2008 sex scandal. (First image, second image)
• Two 2001 stories reporting that three men had
appeared in court after being arrested when explosives were found in a Dublin
apartment. The three men had been seen looking at something in a car, then
refused to stop when police later attempted to pull them over. Inside the car
were balaclavas and plastic boxes with switches attached to them, which “could
be used as incendiary devices”. Follow-up searches of a number of homes found
explosives and similar equipment to that found in the car.
• An article from 2001 about a newspaper sales director who
“terrorised” a shopkeeper and his wife in an incident before a
football game after receiving a request under the EU’s “right to be forgotten”.
Patrick McVeigh, who was 30 at the time and earning more than £40,000 a year at
Yorkshire Post newspapers, was heading for a football game at Leeds United with
his brother Terence and a group of friends when he stopped to steal beer from a
newsagent. His brother was also seen removing a security camera.
• An article from 2000 detailing the jailing of a butcher who
threatened to send his estranged wife's wealthy parents videos of her
participating in group sex, which he filmed. Julian St Quinton was sentenced to
two and a half years imprisonment for blackmail and nine months for indecent assault.
• A 17 year-old being issued with a
Comment for being held responsible for almost
40 per cent of the crime in a single town. Kyle Ivison, aged 17 at the time,
was held responsible for a crimewave of more than 120 offences in the town of
Clitheroe, Lancs.
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