Difference between revisions of "C2i International"

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'''C2i International''' is the "UK's premier 'special risk management' and investigation company".<ref name="Milmo">John Vidal and Dan Milmo, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/apr/09/activists.travelandtransport Mystery over who hired mole to dig dirt on Plane Stupid's environment activists], Guardian, 9 April 2008</ref>
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'''C2i International''' was the "UK's premier 'special risk management' and investigation company".<ref name="Milmo">John Vidal and Dan Milmo, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/apr/09/activists.travelandtransport Mystery over who hired mole to dig dirt on Plane Stupid's environment activists], Guardian, 9 April 2008</ref> According to Companies House, in April 2009 it changed its name to [[Lynceus (Consulting) Ltd]].<ref> Companies House, [http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/7ad48351b66112ca1f370cf9ba491506/compdetails Lynceus (Consulting) Limited], accessed 1 March 2011 </ref>, which also shares the same founder and address as [[Lynceus]]'s chief executive [[Justin King]].
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==

Revision as of 15:22, 1 March 2011

C2i International was the "UK's premier 'special risk management' and investigation company".[1] According to Companies House, in April 2009 it changed its name to Lynceus (Consulting) Ltd.[2], which also shares the same founder and address as Lynceus's chief executive Justin King.

Background

According to The Guardian in 2008:

Security firms that offer spying services are very reserved when it comes to describing their products and C2i International is no exception. The company describes itself as a "special risk management" business, a common euphemism in its trade. C2i was founded by Justin King who, according to the company's website, was a helicopter pilot in the special forces, and is trained to "British police special operations standards" in surveillance and counter-espionage. From its offices a few hundred metres from Oxford Street in London's West End, the firm offers services in "business protection". However, the Plane Stupid incident is unlikely to join the list of case studies on its website. Examples of C2i's work include providing round-the-clock protection to a foreign company working in Russia and upgrading personal security for the president of a Mexican bank. The company claims it works closely with clients to understand their "unique threatscape" and that the security firm has experience of protecting aviation businesses from external threats. C2i also lists the aerospace industry as one of the industries that has benefited from its expertise in the past.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

C2i's founder, Justin King, claims to be an expert in surveillance and counter-espionage who has flown helicopters for the special forces. C2i has said Kendall was operating on his own.[3]

Energy companies exposed hiring private security firm Vericola

The energy giant E.ON, Britain's second-biggest coal producer Scottish Resources Group and Scottish Power, one of the UK's largest electricity-generators, have been paying for the services of a private security firm that has been secretly monitoring activists, revealed Indymedia. A statement on Indymedia claims Rebecca Todd is a former employee of C2i International, a private security and intelligence gathering firm best known for their employment of Toby Kendall / Ken Tobias who attempted to infiltrate Plane Stupid. She has since struck out on her own to set up her own company, Vericola Ltd.[4] It was at C2i that Todd appears to have learned her trade before setting up Vericola in 2008, claims The Guardian. Todd's lawyers declined to comment on whether she had worked for C2i, but she is listed by a professional association as being employed the company. They denied Vericola conducts corporate spying or "infiltration", saying instead that Todd gathers information from publicly available sources such as mailing lists or open websites. "Our client has not obtained any confidential information nor has she been guilty of any dishonesty," they said.[5] However, both Indymedia and The Guardian claim to have evidence with demonstrates that Vericola agents were attending activist meetings in person.[4]

Contact, References and Resources

Contact

21 Berners Street
London W1T 3LP
Tel: +44 (0)20 7323 6630
Fax: +44 (0)20 7323 6635
Website: www.c2i-international.com

Resources

Notes

  1. John Vidal and Dan Milmo, Mystery over who hired mole to dig dirt on Plane Stupid's environment activists, Guardian, 9 April 2008
  2. Companies House, Lynceus (Consulting) Limited, accessed 1 March 2011
  3. Paul Lewis and Rob Evans Green groups targeted polluters as corporate agents hid in their ranksThe Guardian, 14/02/11, accessed 14/02/11
  4. 4.0 4.1 Indymedia UK Spying company, Vericola Ltd, uncovered after incompetence,Indymedia website, 14/02/11, accessed 25/02/11
  5. Paul Lewis and Rob Evans Green groups targeted polluters as corporate agents hid in their ranksThe Guardian, 14/02/11, accessed 24/02/11