
INTRODUCTION
On the morning of 19th May 2026, a most unusual financial transaction took place in the reception area of Hassans. A total of £1,500 of never‑before‑seen GIBOPOLY money was handed over to Molly, the secretary of Darren Martinez. In a peaceful and pleasant encounter, Molly also took possession of Supreme Court documentation.

What on Earth is meant by £1,500 in GIBOPOLY money?
Earlier, on 8th May 2026, an email had been received from Hassans concerning the civil case of Helen Carter v Anthony Farrell. The email referred to a Supreme Court order for court costs of £1,500. In Mr Liam Yeats’ unlawful court order, originating from the Supreme Court hearing on 23rd April 2026, a deadline for financial settlement was stipulated as 21st May 2026.
For Anthony Farrell, the Hassans email became a tipping point. It seemed appropriate to invoke a peaceful symbolic gesture, over and above vital criminal evidence that was otherwise seemingly being criminally shelved by Gibraltar’s judiciary.
Alert to the likelihood that the Hassans tag‑team would continue to track postings on The Gibraltar Messenger website in their capacity as Helen Carter’s legal representatives, a “95 Theses” outlining the reasons for being unable to settle an unlawful court order was published on 13th May 2026 under the title “Gibraltar Supreme Court’s Criminality.”
Mindful that Liam Yeats had previously requested me to release the package to Hassans — a reasonable request in its own right — the £1,500 GIBOPOLY plan was implemented on 19th May 2026. Yet long before the deadline for payment had elapsed, it had already been established between Anthony Farrell and The Gibraltar Messenger that no payment of £1,500 would be made.
So what caused a sudden change of mind? What caused Anthony Farrell to make a payment of £1,500 when he had so unequivocally declared in court documentation that he would not do so?
Had Anthony Farrell suddenly lost his nerve?
Had he, by sending a courier into the Hassans reception area instead of attending in person, become so fearful that he could not bring himself to show his face because of an “embarrassing climbdown”?
The truth is that there was no climbdown. The GIBOPOLY money handover was undertaken in full knowledge that the payment would never be accepted as legal tender. There was no illusion about that. But it was thought that deploying a personal courier would take Hassans staff by surprise — mirroring what Hassans had previously done to Anthony Farrell on two separate occasions.
HOW & WHEN DID A PAYMENT OF £1,500 GET MADE?
By the morning of 19th May 2026, a willing and able one‑legged homeless former Army veteran — often seen sitting on a bench in Main Street — became, for a day, Anthony Farrell’s personal courier of choice. After a briefing, Peter Rogers confidently entered The Madison Building in Midtown and hand‑delivered not only the GIBOPOLY notes but also the complementary package to Hassans’ reception desk.
The combined package included three things:
1 – A cover letter addressed to Darren Martinez
2 – Two Supreme Court bundles concerning a previous Challenge to Jurisdiction
3 – A wad of 54 paper notes amounting to £1,500
The method was not the bank transfer Hassans had requested. The notes handed over were clearly not of a conventional kind.
The GIBOPOLY money featured some very well‑known public figures connected in one way or another with Gibraltar’s biggest international legal institution.
Apologies are made in advance to Peter Montegriffo, Chair of the Police Authority. His omission from the mix was an oversight, made all the more disappointing given he remains in possession of my previous complaints about Operation Talla, the Speirs Directive, and my complaint about the Royal Gibraltar Police for failing to properly investigate my allegation of perjury against Helen Carter when she acted as a witness in the Magistrates’ Court on 16th October 2025.

Following positive feedback from my courier, I would like to personally thank the reception staff at Hassans and Molly. Their professional manner in taking possession of the package — GIBOPOLY money included — did not go unnoticed. I am immensely grateful for Peter Rogers’ efforts.
As of today, 21st June 2026, there has been no further correspondence from either the Supreme Court or the international legal firm known as Hassans. What, if anything, they do in response, remains to be seen.
“If my disciple Anthony Farrell were to pay the costs that Mr Yeats unlawfully awarded to Helen Carter and Hassans, Tony would be equally guilty of financially supporting very serious crimes and terrorism, and therefore Anthony cannot by law comply with Mr Yeats’ unlawful order.
Signed: Christ”
My Gibopoly Money Briefing With Peter The One-Legged Courier

From where did the idea of a GIBOPOLY Board Game originate?
The civil litigation case against me stems from an article posted on The Gibraltar Messenger website entitled “Offensive — A Story from Tony Farrell”, dated 20th November 2024. The inspiration behind the title came from a 2012 documentary Tony Rooke made about my dismissal from South Yorkshire Police in 2010. Rooke titled his documentary “Offensive — The Story of Tony Farrell.”
A memorable feature of Rooke’s film was its opening scene, which used footage from the board game “Scot Free”, originally featured in the 1977 comedy sketch film The Kentucky Fried Movie. The game was a satirical Parker Brothers‑style parody based on Dealey Plaza, poking fun at the conspiracy theories surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
A traditional game of Monopoly starts with each player receiving £1,500. The recurring pattern of £1,500 court costs, coupled with my conceptual model of Hassans’ Monopoly‑like grip on Gibraltar, led me to reconfigure the traditional board to resemble Gibraltar’s locations and street names — GIBOPOLY.
Intuitively, I felt it necessary to turn up the heat within the battleground of a Supreme Court case described by my boss, The Gibraltar Messenger, as the most important court case in the last two thousand years.
At no stage did The Gibraltar Messenger task me to open this GIBOPOLY battlefront. However, He was consulted as the idea emerged. He did not attempt to alter the course of the plan. He allowed it to unfold during a phase when His priority was implementing an extensive leaflet‑dropping campaign across Gibraltar.
Intuitively, and with reference to my own courtroom battles with the claimant Helen Carter, I felt that what was needed — over and above shelved, pre‑sealed Supreme Court documentation — was a symbolic gesture, visually and peacefully illustrating my opposition to what I considered tyrannical practices being waged against me by people in elevated positions of public power. This included, but was not limited to, the recent actions of the Hassans tag‑team of Darren Martinez and Gilbert Licudi, and Supreme Court Judge Liam Yeats.
The traditional metallic Monopoly tokens were replaced with five locally available 6‑inch solar‑powered dancing figurines and a tortoise. The figurines aligned absurdly with the stage reached in the Supreme Court:
• a fake king of England
• a former fake queen of England
• a Gibraltar monkey — Stefan’s choice
• a Grenadier Guard — Peter’ choice
• a uniformed police officer dressed in the old traditional navy blue colours, unlike the all Satanic all black of the modern-day policy-enforcers
• a tortoise — Will’s choice

Two Unlikely Lads and a Frenchman enjoy a playful game of GIBOPOLY – the first ever of its kind on The Rock
During the first ever game of GIBOPOLY, played on an outside table in the Morrisons Café extension area, overlooked by the Rock of Gibraltar, an entirely unexpected and absurd incident occurred. The helmeted head of the figurine of the old-style traditional police officer in navy blue unexpectedly fell-off as if to sadly signify the death of Peelian Principled Policing. The scene was captured on video. The spontaneous laughter of all the unlikely lads may have been more reflection of a contempt for modern day policy enforcement practice and for me personally it moreover represented a rueful craving for the return to that by-gone policing era in Gibraltar. Whatever, I was ultra keen to have the head of the blue uniformed copper glued back on.
Symbolically, that unanticipated imagery as gifted, stayed with me and reshaped my thinking as the GIBOPOLY project gathered a momentum of its own.
The solar‑driven bobby figurine had been unusually stiff compared with the liveliness of the others. But the instant its head fell off, the headless body suddenly began doing a strange jig. After some banter about who was responsible for knocking the copper’s block off, I had the figurine repaired. After a nine‑hour operation, the head was successfully glued back on. For three days and nights the figurine remained stiff — until, placed on the pavement in the scorching midday sun on Main Street, it suddenly began dancing again just as the traditional Gibraltar re‑enactment ceremony passed by.
The four unlikely lads unanimously named the revitalised bobby in blue LAZARUS.

The broken figurine above was later repaired, his head was replaced, and three days later visibly came back to life, so we nick-named him Lazarus in the hope that the modern-day policy enforcement practices will soon be replaced by enforcement of God’s Law, here on The Rock of His Defence.
What About the Four Larger Images Shown in the Centre of the GIBOPOLY Board?

These images were as follows:
Teia Tephi – The Queen of Gibraltar and Tara
The Three Wise Monkeys from a Face Mask Madness article published on 8th May 2023 on The Gibraltar Messenger website.
It is recommended that readers click on each of the four links above, in order to attune themselves with their intriguing and important relevance to Gibraltar, The Rock of His Defence.
Anthony Farrell
PS. Owing to the fact that the challenge to jurisdiction of my case placed within the Gibraltar’s Supreme Court disclosed evidence of a serious criminal nature, as committed by Charles Battenberg, together with the fact that in The Book of Teia Tephi, as detailed in Christ’s King of kings’ Bible, on two separate occasions mentions chess-play, then one final imagery of a chess board with The White King triumphing over the floored black king is thought appropriate to share as a parting shot. A picture paints a thousand words, so the saying goes.
