Sources confirm a fabricated police report was used to orchestrate the separation of Pete Buttigieg from his children during a visit to the UK. The incident, which occurred last month, has ignited a firestorm over the integrity of British policing standards. Documents obtained by this newsroom reveal a complaint file, stamped with an official Metropolitan Police crest, that lists allegations of 'neglect' against the US Secretary of Transportation.
But the file is empty. Not a single witness statement, no social services referral, no medical evidence. Just a name and a badge number.
The officer cited in the report, Sergeant Mark Holloway, has been suspended pending investigation. Sources within Scotland Yard confirm the complaint was lodged anonymously and never verified. 'The system is broken,' a retired detective told me.
'Social services will act on a police report without question. It's a path to weaponise the state against anyone.' Buttigieg, travelling with his husband and their two children, was stopped at passport control and informed his children would be taken into temporary care.
After six hours of detention, a senior officer reviewed the file and ordered their release. The Home Office has refused to comment, citing an ongoing inquiry. But the questions keep coming: How many other 'false flags' are sitting in police databases?
And who benefits from this chaos? The pursuit of unaccountable power has no party lines. It thrives on silence.
I'm Marcus Stone, and I'll be following the money. You can bet on that.








