• Source: Hugh Johnstone
    • Colonel Hugh Anthony Johnstone (1 May 1931 – 30 June 2014) was a British Army officer who ended his career as the administrative head of Signals Intelligence during the 1970s.


      Career


      Johnstone trained at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst for two years and on 8 February 1952 was commissioned into the Royal Corps of Signals. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1954, captain in 1958, major in 1965, lieutenant-colonel in 1970, and colonel in 1975. He retired in September 1979.
      Johnstone became known when he was identified by the magazines Peace News and The Leveller as the much-publicised anonymous witness Colonel B in the ABC Trial in 1978. This led to prosecutions for contempt of court which ultimately failed in the House of Lords. The case became a great embarrassment to the Crown, due to its attempts to disguise the identities of people and well-known defence establishments .


      Personal life


      In 1954, Johnstone married Daniele Louise Genevieve Alzingre, a daughter of Ambroise Sebastien Alzingre, of Île-de-France, and they had two daughters. He died at Grasse, Alpes-Maritimes, France, on 30 June 2014, aged 83, and his widow died there in 2018. They are buried in the cemetery at Spéracèdes.


      Honours


      MBE, 1965 Birthday Honours
      OBE, 1975 New Year Honours


      See also


      Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ)
      Duncan Campbell


      References

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