The royal family is ashamed by another sex scandal

The royal family is startled by a fresh pedophile sex scandal.
Disturbing allegations have surfaced in a new book, Kincora: Britain’s Shame – Mountbatten, Mi5, The Belfast Boys’ Home Sex Abuse Scandal and the British cover-upBy journalist Chris Moore.
The book revealed claims from four former inhabitants of the Belfast Children’s Home, including Arthur Smyth, who claims that Lord Mountbatten, killed in 1979 at the age of 79, sexually abused and raped boys in the summer of 1977.
The allegations came only a few hours after Prince Andrew, 65, was reportedly celebrated by the FBI in the Jeffrey Epstein Investigation, Radaronline.com.
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The allegations only come a few hours after Prince Andrew, 65, was reportedly celebrated by the FBI in the Jeffrey Epstein Investigation.
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Kincora Boys’ Home, which was closed in the 1980s, has long been notorious for accusations of organized sexual abuse and trade in vulnerable children.
Despite proof of dozens of victims and reports from high-profile visitors, only three senior employees-William McGrath, Raymond Semple and Joseph Mains-up were imprisoned in 1981 for abuse of 11 boys.
Survivors and campaigners have consistently accused the police and British security services of orchestrating a cover-up to protect powerful figures.
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Lord Mountbatten, known as Dickie, was connected to the Kincora Boys’ Home in Belfast by former resident Arthur Smyth, who called Prince Philip’s Uncle as his alleged abuser in 2022.
His claim was part of legal action against institutions in Noord -Ireland for breach of care provision and negligence.
Smyth, who was then 11, described how McGrath, then 54, brought him to a room on the ground floor to meet a ‘friend’.
“It was on the ground floor. It was not the front room, it was somewhere near the middle. And it had a big desk and a shower. I had never seen a shower in my life,” Smyth Author Chris Moore told.
He said that Mountbatten, whom he knew as Dickie, reportedly said that he “had to stand on top of a box or something” and “told me to take my pants down.”
Smyth claimed that he had been raped twice that summer and said: “When he was ready, he said I had to take a shower. And I was going to take a shower. I felt sick and I cried in the shower. I just wanted it to stop all.”
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Lord Mountbatten was killed in 1979 at the age of 79.
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Richard Kerr, 62, another survivor, claims that he was traded next to colleague -Teenage Stephen Waring, then 16, to a hotel near Mountbatten’s Classiebawn Castle in County Sligo, where both were attacked in the boat house.
Kerr claimed to have been driven by the main courses, then 52, and picked up by the guards of Mountbats.
“The police made it clear to us couple that we never had to talk to anyone about this incident again,” Kerr said in the book.
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Waring, who succeeded in taking a ring of mount bats, was later questioned by the police after the ring was missing.
Shortly thereafter, Waring died in what was ruled as a suicide after apparently jumped overboard during a ferry from Liverpool to Belfast.
Kerr, who disputed this, claimed: “Stephen would never have thrown himself overboard. He would never have jumped in the ice cold November sea. He was smart and a hunter.”
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For these men, the pain is exacerbated by the knowledge that mountbats and others never have to deal with justice.
Moore’s book also contains claims from two other alleged victims, including Amal, who was 16 when he was brought to Classiebawn to offer ‘sexual favors’, and Sean, also 16, who described Mountbats as ‘a sad and lonely person’ who told him: ‘I hate these feelings.’
Many survivors say that the trauma stays with them.
“Arthur’s watchfulests are both dead, but they live in his memory and bring back how he felt like an innocent eleven -year -old boy,” Moore wrote.
For these men, the pain is exacerbated by the knowledge that mountbats and others never have to deal with justice.





