Taylor’s Kangaroo Court – Case One: The Crime of Impersonation.

26 days ago
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Welcome to Taylor’s Kangaroo Court – my new project where the crimes committed against me are laid out, the evidence presented, and the guilty verdict delivered.

The Charge: Impersonation.

The first case is one of the most serious: impersonating me online.

The evidence is clear. A fake Facebook account was set up in my name. Whoever ran this account posted extremist remarks – vile comments about blowing up Parliament and shooting at immigration boats. These were not my words. I did not write them.

But because someone pretending to be me did, I was reported to Prevent – the government’s anti-extremism watchdog. That’s how damaging impersonation can be.

The Law.

Under UK law, impersonation of this kind falls under identity fraud and malicious communications offences. Depending on the severity, sentences can include up to two years in prison and/or a substantial fine.

This isn’t banter. This isn’t trolling. It’s a crime.

The Confession.

And now to the smoking gun. The Christ Brindle evidence.

Brindle openly confessed that he pretended to be me in order to get me into trouble. His own words admit the crime. He admitted it was him posting under my identity, for the sole purpose of damaging my reputation.

The Verdict.

Here in Taylor’s Kangaroo Court, we deal in truth.

The accused is found GUILTY of malicious impersonation. The sentence? Eternal shame, branded forever as a fraudster. In a real court, this could mean prison and fines.

But in this court, the judgment is simple: guilty of the crime of impersonating Matthew Taylor for malicious gain.

Case closed. Next!

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