In May 1997, in Manchester, England, two freelance journalists began investigating Britain's biggest political scandal for thirty years - the so-called 'cash for questions' affair of 1994.  

Contrary to their expectations, their research did not bear out The Guardian newspaper's widely-accepted allegations that a Conservative MP had taken bribes to table Parliamentary questions.  Instead, they unearthed evidence showing that the liberal Guardian had covered-up after publishing a false story recklessly, and thereafter had used its influence over the British media to have its tale accepted as fact across the land.

For months the freelances battled to have their findings aired, but Britain's media closed ranks - including local broadcaster Granada Television - to protect the iconic Guardian.  It seemed that history was destined to record a pack of lies as truth, in a nightmarish realisation of George Orwell's dark futuristic novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.

One freelance returned home overseas.  The other persisted.  Three years later he decided to go to law, citing an Act of Parliament that prohibited the suppression of information.

And so, having begun on 10 October 2002 at the Royal High Courts of Justice, London, the last bastion against the wholesale brainwashing of a democratic state is now being tested.

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