Ms Dallimore had earlier learnt by the same means that she had stomach cancer, and, later, that she had been cured.As a result of her new beliefs, she left her family and home, and is now living in a Christian community in Dorset. She still apparently believes that her parents molested her, though a police investigation was able to find no evidence of it.The Bishop of Huntingdon has appointed two retired priests to mediate between the diocese and her furious parents. It is to draw up guidelines for dealing with such cases, though it continues to believe in the existence of ritual abuse.
One of the cases discussed at the consultation was that of Rebecca Dallimore, now 21, who came to believe that her parents had abused her after she started attending charismatic meetings at the home of the Rev Arthur Rowe, Rector of Hockwold in Norfolk.The revelation came in the form of a “word of knowledge” – as divinely inspired prophecies are called by modern evangelicals. The alliance’s decision was reached at a private consultation held in London this week. The Evangelical Alliance, which represents about a million charismatic Christians, has finally admitted the existence of false memory syndrome, the condition sceptics believe explains all accounts of Satanic ritual abuse and similar horrors. Although expensive, it is essentially a cut-price machine because it will piggy-back on top of an existing machine, known as Lep. The tunnel was deliberately made large enough to accommodate both machines.The LHC will accelerate protons, nuclei of hydrogen, the simplest of all the atoms, to speeds approaching those of the speed of light It will then collide two counter-rotating beams head on.
At ultra-high energy, the fireball created by the collisions will re-create conditions close to those of the Big Bang with which the entire universe started.At these high energies, scientists believe, the fundamental forces and constituents of matter behave more simply than in the everyday world. By studying the debris of the collisions, they hope to understand the most fundamental forces governing the physical universe.The physicists hope the LHC will produce a particular type of particle known as the Higgs Boson. This may hold the key to understanding why there are such things as massive bodies (such as people, stars and planets) in the universe at all, instead of everything being as insubstantial as a ray of light.Professor Chris Llewellyn Smith, the British Director General of Cern, welcomed the decision to build the LHC: “I believe this to be a unique commitment to fundamental scientific research. Today’s decision has assured a great future for world particle physics.”The machine will be built in two stages. A lower energy version will be constructed to be operational by 2005 After three years, it will be upgraded to the full energy.
However, if the USA and Japan decide in the interim that they would like to contribute (allowing their scientists to make use of the machine) then progress will be reviewed in 1997.A decision could be taken then to go to the full energy by 2005 Construction will be funded out of Cern’s existing budget.. A unique case in which a double killer won the right to a retrial after it emerged that jurors at the first hearing dabbled with a Ouija board ended yesterday with the fresh jury convicting him of murdering a newly wed couple. Stephen Young, 35, an insurance broker, was given two life sentences for the “horrific” shootings of Harry and Nicola Fuller at their cottage in Wadhurst, East Sussex, in February last year.
Young was still protesting his innocence as he was led to the cells, shouting to Mr Justice Blofeld: “I did not do it, my Lord.” Relatives of his victims shouted back: “You did it all right, you bugger – rot.”The judge told Young: “The jury has convicted you of terrible and horrible offences – two human beings were shot down.”The circumstances relating to the deaths are totally horrific. After an altercation the Johnsons left to recover in the Victim Support suite.The judge commended the police team, led by Detective Chief Superintendent Graham Hill, for its hard work in solving the crime.. “It opened a legal minefield,” he said.The first jury’s verdict was correct and it was wrong that jurors were questioned about their deliberations, he said.Mr and Mrs Johnson were interrupted by the head of police at the Old Bailey, Chief Inspector Barry Smith, who told them they could not conduct interviews within the precincts of the court.
It has been 22 months and now at last we can put Nicola and Harry to rest in peace.”He said he hoped the House of Lords would now overturn the Court of Appeal’s decision to quash the first trial and order a retrial. Mr Fuller had about £13,000 in the house days before he was shot.”He dealt in cash and often had a wad of notes on him or even a briefcase full of money. He had people who would shun him and people who disliked him intensely,” Mr Lawson said.”Nicola was a different person altogether – younger, quieter and more sensitive.”Police searched the house after the killings but found no substantial sums of money, only £80 hidden under a sofa and £130 in a shoe.Young admitted that he had been at the murder scene but said he found the couple dead and fled, fearing for his life.The Court of Appeal quashed Young’s convictions when it became known that some jurors at the original trial used a Ouija board after a drinking session during an overnight hotel stay.Outside court the dead man’s brother, Tom Fuller, said the second trial was a terrible ordeal for the family, particularly his elderly parents.Nicola Fuller’s father Michael Johnson said: “We are very relieved at the verdict. His 27-year-old wife died from a combination of four separate shots – the final bullet was fired into her head as she tried to make a 999 call.The telephone operator thought her attempts to speak through her splintered jaw were noises made by children playing on the line and did not re-route her call to police.Young had debts estimated at £100,000 and his creditors were closing in. Mr Fuller, 45, a car dealer, was killed by a single bullet in the back. The precise circumstances relating to the death of Nicola will remain in everyone’s mind for years to come.”The Fullers were murdered deliberately and cold-bloodedly, Michael Lawson QC, for the prosecution, had told the court.

August 18th, 2010
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