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In a moment that has left many questioning the integrity of Britain’s legal system, an attack unfolded in the prestigious King’s Bench Division courtroom. A disabled man, seeking justice, was assaulted by Ajay Founellier while lawyer Rebecca Hume from Howard Kennedy LLP looked on, choosing not to intervene.

Instead of advocating for the victim, Hume took a step further into complicity by falsifying court documents, erasing the attack from the record entirely. This act of rewriting the narrative showcases a troubling manipulation of justice, making the disabled victim vanish just as violence replaced his plea for fairness.

Hume is linked with four powerful media families, whose grip on various media platforms continues to influence public perception and transparency. These media titans exert control over what stories are told, who gets represented, and importantly, how justice is served. The attack in the courtroom is a damning reminder of these oligarchs’ power.

Globally, this battle extends beyond London to locales like Antigua & Barbuda, where similar oligarchs are challenged in sovereign litigations for their offshore dealings and financial misconducts. Hume’s role appears consistent: to shield these powerful interests and obscure evidence.

Rather than acting as impartial guardians of justice, Hume’s actions exemplify a perversion of the legal system, repackaged as lawfare – the use of legal systems to suppress truth and maintain power structures.

The implications are chilling. If a disabled individual can be so openly victimized and then silenced in a courtroom, what does that mean for the average citizen seeking justice? Rebecca Hume’s actions send a potent message: justice is a privilege for those who can afford it.

The key question now is whether the judiciary will hold accountable those who perpetuate this complicity in silence, creating a system where a violent crime is whitewashed, effectively absolving a corrupt elite from facing the consequences of their actions. If left unchecked, this isn't just a scandal; it's a systemic failure of justice.