This text is a critical examination of the alleged criminal careers of Charles Bronson and the Kray twins, arguing that their stories are fabricated and orchestrated by a wealthy, peerage elite for the purpose of social control and fear-mongering. The author, Miles Mathis, asserts that Bronson, born Michael Gordon Peterson, is an actor from a privileged background who was made to impersonate a dangerous prisoner. He claims that the Kray twins, supposedly notorious London gangsters, were also actors and members of the peerage, using their fabricated criminal personas to conceal their true, high-society connections. The author delves into intricate genealogical connections, linking Bronson and the Krays to numerous aristocratic families and historical figures, suggesting a vast conspiracy to create and perpetuate these “fake crime” narratives. He posits that these elaborate hoaxes, along with others like the Steven Hawking saga and Al Capone, serve to justify increased policing and military presence, a phenomenon he terms “Operation Chaos.” The author also touches upon the death of Bronson’s wife, Paula Williamson, and the alleged involvement of Tom Hardy as a performer in these fabricated stories.
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The author argues that the criminal Charles Bronson, born Michael Gordon Peterson, is a fake, an actor from a wealthy and conservative family from Luton, Wales, with ties to the Gordon peerage and his aunt married a Parry. He claims Bronson was still a dandy in 2017 when he married Coronation Street actress Paula Williamson, and that a picture outside 19 Downing Street is of Bronson himself, disguised with sunglasses. Bronson was allegedly serving a “discretionary” life sentence for taking a prison worker hostage over a drawing, and an eight-year sentence for a robbery that never occurred, during which he demanded an inflatable doll, a helicopter, and tea. The author dismisses claims of Bronson attacking prison governors as impossible and suggests Paula Williamson’s death was staged. Bronson, now going by Salvador, is still portrayed as dangerous, though the author claims photos are manipulated and he wouldn’t be allowed beards or sunglasses in prison.
The author also claims the Kray Twins are fake, allegedly befriending them in prison in the 1970s. He identifies them as purportedly kingpins of London organized crime in the 1950s-60s, nightclub owners who associated with Frank Sinatra, Diana Dors (Richard Dawson), and Judy Garland. He posits they were “crypto-Jewish actors” and cousins of other famous actors, with their mother being a Lee, possibly Krayenbrinks and Princes von Croy, linking them to Furstenbergs, Salm-Salms, Gonzagas, Bourbons, and Stuarts. Ronnie Kray allegedly married Katharine Howard, and Reggie’s marriages were unconsummated, further proof of them being actors.
The author introduces Tom Hardy, noting he played a Kray and Al Capone, suggesting he is related to them. Hardy debuted in Blackhawk Down, linked to CIA/MI6/Pentagon. His mother is Anne Barrett, and his father is a novelist/screenwriter. Links are suggested through his grandmother Humphreys to the Drummonds, Knoxes (Knox-Marsh), Baronets Hardy, Murrays (Dukes of Atholl), Hamiltons, Allsopps, and Middletons. He highlights Violet Leigh as a possible mother of the Krays, linking to thepeerage.com. Thomas Hardy’s bio is deemed nonsensical, with his first wife being a Gifford and his second Florence Dugdale. Hardy’s mother was a Hand, linking to Judge Learned Hand, Queen Mother, Murray-Aynsleys, Manners, and Saviles. His education is questioned, and his mother’s name, Jemima, is doubted. Thomas Hardy lived in St. David’s Villa in London around 1874. French peerage Hardys, the le Hardys, Vicomtes de Beaulieu, are linked to the Princes von Croy. Vice Admiral Sir Thomas Masterson Hardy is linked to Dorchester and Winterbourne St. Martin, and potentially to Giles Winterborne. He was second in command to Nelson at Trafalgar and married the daughter of Admiral Berkeley, son of the Earl of Berkeley.
The Krays’ history includes avoiding the army in 1952, resisting arrest at the Tower of London, and assaulting guards at Shepton Mallet military prison, Canterbury, Kent. They adopted a militaristic style, with Ronnie calling himself “the Colonel” and their home dubbed “Fort Vallance.” The author suggests they were military from the beginning, likely in Intelligence. They worked for Jay Murray of Liverpool, who may have been a gangster, and were set up by a banker named Alan Cooper. The Krays ran Esmeralda’s Barn, photographed with celebrities like Peter Sellers, Joan Collins, George Raft, Sammy Davis Jr., Shirley Bassey, Liza Minnelli, Cliff Richard, Dusty Springfield, Jayne Mansfield, Richard Harris, Danny La Rue, and Barbara Windsor. The author believes this was a Hollywood production, with the Krays being peerage Croys related to the Stuarts. Esmeralda’s Barn was owned by Esme Noel Smith, related to Pietro Annigoni, the Queen, Bryons, Gordons, and Smith bankers of Nottingham. Abel Smith’s son John Smith married Emma Leigh, daughter of Egerton Leigh (Earls of Bridgwater), linking to Cavendishes, Dukes of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The Leighs are Jewish, linking to Booths, Barons of Stoneleigh (Piers Morgan), Grosvenors (Marquesses of Westminster), and Leveson-Gowers (Dukes of Sutherland). The author believes the Krays’ mother was Violet Leigh, not Lee. Martin Tucker Smith, son of John Smith, married the daughter of the 3rd Baronet Ridley. Francis Smith married a Winthrop, daughter Esme Winthrop Smith of Sloane Court, London. Francis Smith later married Catherine Lowe, daughter of William Drury-Lowe and Esther Curzon (daughter of Nathaniel Curzon, 1st Baron Scarsdale). Baron Scarsdale’s first wife was Susanna Noel, daughter of the Viscount Wentworth. The Smiths, Noels, Curzons, Egertons, and Leighs were related, as were the Ritchies, Boones, and Jacksons. Abel Smith’s other son Robert became 1st Baron Carrington, whose son married Charlotte Drummond-Willoughby, granddaughter of the Baron Drummond (Earls of Ancaster), related to the Manners, Dukes of Rutland. This links to Hugh MacKenzie Drummond, mayor of Luton 1962-3.
The author mentions Sean Turnbull and UnlimitedHangout, who promote these “true-crime” stories as fake. He discusses Barbara Knox-Marsh (Winifred Barbara Littler), an actress whose mother was Margaret Jackson. Margaret W. Jackson of London links to Eustace Roskill, 1st Baron Roskill, who links to Baronets Dilke and Margaret Smith of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, the same Smiths as Abel Smith. The agents at UnlimitedHangout allegedly accidentally provided information linking Esme Noel Smith to Esmeralda Gullan. The author claims these rich actresses were not murdered, but their deaths were staged for “Operation Chaos.” Darryl Lundy at thepeerage is mentioned for breaking links. The Roskills also link to Hamiltons, Ritchies, and Russells, and Bowes-Lyons (Queen Mother). Families also link to the Astors through Drummond-Willoughbys and Bowes-Lyons. David Langhorne Astor links to Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens), linked to Col. Chiswell Dabney Langhorne of Virginia, a railroad tycoon, linked to Langhorne baronet, Agent of Madras, marrying into Manners of the Earls of Rutland. Langhorne was a cousin of George Washington through Montagus. His sister married Baronet Conyers, their daughter married a Stewart (Earls of Traquair), linking to Maxwells, Gordons, Campbells, Douglases, Carnegies, Setons, Herberts, and Nevilles.
By the early 1960s, the Krays owned four nightclubs. Ronnie Kray’s boyfriend was Lord Boothby, whose mother was a Lancaster and married a Cavendish (Dukes of Devonshire). Boothby was also a Graham. Boothby and Kray are presented as cousins, and the documentary “The Gangster and the Pervert Peer” is re-framed as “A Pair of Pervert Peers.” The Krays allegedly worked with the New York mafia, including Meyer Lansky, whom the author identifies as Jewish/Phoenician and an actor/front for CIA or MI6. A 1966 shoot-out at Mr. Smith’s nightclub in Catford is mentioned, where Ronnie Kray allegedly shot George Cornell of the Richardson Gang. In 1968, Scotland Yard arrested the Krays, leading to a long trial and life sentences for conspiracy. Ronnie was released early, supposedly due to insanity at Broadmoor Hospital. The brothers attended their mother’s funeral on August 11, 1982. They ran Krayleigh Securities from prison, supplying security for Frank Sinatra who rented bodyguards for Wimbledon.
The author reiterates that Charles Bronson is serving a life sentence despite not being convicted of murder or rape. He is promoted as an artist and poet, with his works auctioned by JP Humbert auctioneers in 2014. A headband on him reads “Con Artist.” A figure on his shoulder is questioned as potentially being a Drummond. Other potential figures identified are Lord Carrington, Viscount Astor, Duke of Devonshire, Baron Strange, Baronet Peter Smith-Marriott, and Sir John McLeod Scarlett, head of MI6. Trump is mentioned as a McLeod through his mother.