WAR HERO DEAD

Lord Bramall dead – D-Day hero wrongly accused of child abuse by fantasist Carl Beech dies aged 95

D-DAY hero Lord Bramall who was wrongly accused of child abuse by fantasist Carl Beech has died aged 95.

The highly-decorated Field Marshal passed away at his home in Crondall, Hampshire.

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D-Day hero Lord Bramall has died
Edwin Bramall receiving the Military Cross from Field Marshal Montgomery on March 1 1945

Lord Bramall's final years of his life were dominated by false allegations by fantasist Carl Beech who wrongly claimed he was part of a VIP paedophile ring.

In July Beech, 51, was caged for 18 years for making up claims of a Westminster network of child abusers.

Speaking at the time the war vet said the Met Police “perverted the course of justice more than” fantasist  Beech.

He added: “All [the Met] would tell me was that 40 years ago I had abused an underage male.

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"They showed me a warrant and 20 policemen in overalls came in and searched the house for ten hours.”

His exoneration came too late for his wife, who died in 2015.

Lord Bramall's death comes before a single police officer has been brought to account for the botched investigation.

He took part in almost every major UK military campaign from World War Two until his retirement in 1985.

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After being educated at Eton College he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the King's Royal Rifle Corps on 22 May 1943 during the Second World War and took part in the Normandy landings in June 1944.

He went on to become Commander-in-Chief of British forces in Hong Kong, then Commander-in-Chief of UK Land Forces and retired as Chief of Defence Staff, a role he was appointed to in 1982.

The father-of-two married his wife in 1949 and they lived at Bulford Manor in Wiltshire during his time as head of the army.

Earlier this year it was found that a police raid at his home should never have gone ahead because of doubts about paedo fantasist Carl Beech, it was claimed last night.

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A warrant application presented to a district judge reportedly ignored eight problems with his evidence.

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Instead, Det Sgt Eric Sword wrote “N/A” next to a box asking for “anything that reasonably might call into question the credibility of the information you have received”.

Police reportedly knew that no other witnesses had come forward to back Beech’s story of a VIP paedophile ring.

Lord Bramall later received £100,000 in compensation from the Met Police over its probe into the lies told about him.

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