- Hakluyt & Company
Hakluyt & Company is a British corporate investigation firm. It was founded in
1995 by Christopher James and Mike Reynolds, both former MI6 officers. James retired in mid-2006, stepping up to the firm's advisory board, and was replaced as managing director by another MI6 “old boy”, Keith Craig who has since recruited so many former MI6 officers that it is now believed to be the biggest collection of MI6-trained intelligence officers outside of MI6 itself. [ cite news
title=The Financial Times: Change of guard at Hakluyt
url=http://search.ft.com/ftArticle?queryText=hakluyt&y=7&aje=true&ct=0&id=060207001268&x=21&nclick_check=1/
date=February 7th, 2006
author=Ruth Sullivan
work=The Financial Times] Hakluyt even operates in a similar fashion, maintaining a large number of "associates" around the world who form an international network of what are effectively its agents, although it insists that it is an entirely independent business organisation.The advisory board has included many high-profile figures in British industry and government, including William Purves, the former
HSBC chairman; Peter Holmes, the former Shell chairman;Brian Cubbon , the formerpermanent under-secretary of state at the Home Office; Peter Cazalet, former deputy chairman ofBP ; Lord Inge, former Chief of the General Staff; Lord Trotman, former chairman and chief executive of Ford; Baroness Smith, widow of the former Labour leader; andFrank G. Wisner , former U.S. ambassador to India. More recent appointees includeBill Bradley , the former U.S. presidential candidate;Rod Eddington , the former CEO ofBritish Airways ;Chris Gent , the former chief executive ofVodafone ; andRalph Robins , the former Rolls-Royce CEO.In
2001 the "Sunday Times" reported that documentary film-maker Manfred Schlickenrieder was paid by Hakluyt to investigateGreenpeace on behalf of BP, and other environmental groups on behalf of Shell. [ cite news
title=The Sunday Times: MI6 ‘Firm’ Spied on Green Groups
url=http://royaldutchshellplc.com/2001/06/17/the-sunday-times-mi6-firm-spied-on-green-groups/
date=June 17th, 2001
author=Maurice Chittenden and Nicholas Rufford
work=The Sunday Times] Shell believed that ultra-left German activists had infiltrated Greenpeace and were responsible for threats of violence to its staff. Schlickenrieder had previously worked for theBundesamt für Verfassungsschutz , the German domestic security and intelligence agency.References
External links
* [http://hakluyt.co.uk/ Hakluyt & Company website]
* [http://www.michaelsmithwriter.com/pdf/intelligence_companies.pdf Website Presentation. Private Intelligence Companies. How the Spooks Moved in on Big Business]
* [http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/headlines01/0617-01.htm MI6 'Firm' Spied on Green Groups]
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