Before you rush to construct a conspiracy theory about the security services implementing a Strategy of Tension by leaving dummy bombs around London, it should be noted that this story relates to the TV programme...
'A prop used in a television spy drama disrupted train services after sparking a security alert. A passer-by called the emergency services after spotting what was described as an oil drum with wires sticking out in a yard close to Deptford train station. But after a short investigation by officers from the Met, it was found the item was in fact a prop used in the television series Spooks. The alert caused 12 trains travelling from Charing Cross to Dartford, Dover and Hastings to be delayed by more than half an hour between 11pm and midnight on July 1. Others trains were forced to stop on the tracks for around 20 minutes and Landmann Way in New Cross was closed to all traffic while police checked out the item...
The production company Kudos Film and Television said the item was "stored securely" at its studio in Bermondsey. A spokeswoman said: “A prop used on Spooks was stored securely in the production’s private courtyard. A member of the public looked into the yard and, on seeing the prop, decided to alert the emergency services as a precaution. As soon as the Spooks production team were contacted, they confirmed the package was just a prop and not dangerous.”
Full story at This is Local London, 14 July 2009.
William Armitage. An Artist born in Deptford at 10 Union Street now Albury
Street.
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An unlucky and forgotten Utah painter's life is a lesson on caring for
local art. The Bigger Picture
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