Brief Info about Mosley :-
Max Rufus Mosley (born 1940, London, England) is president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), a non-profit association that represents the interests of motoring organisations and car users worldwide. The FIA is also the governing body for Formula One and other international motorsports.
Mosley is the son of Sir Oswald Mosley, former leader of the British Union of Fascists (BUF), and Diana Mitford. He was educated in France, Germany and Britain before going on to attend university at Christ Church, Oxford where he graduated with a degree in physics. In his teens and early twenties Mosley was involved with his father's post-war party, the Union Movement (UM). He has claimed the association of his surname with fascism stopped him from developing his interest in politics further, although he briefly worked for the Conservative Party in the early 1980s.
Hot News : Four women who took part in sadomasochistic role-playing with FIA Boss??
Four women who took part in sadomasochistic role-playing with motor racing chief Max Mosley told a court Tuesday that the event was not the "Nazi-themed orgy" described in a tabloid newspaper.
Mosley, 68, is suing the News of the World for invasion of privacy over a March story that alleged he attended a five-hour sex session in which participants played concentration camp inmates and guards.
Mosley, the son of late British fascist leader Oswald Mosley, acknowledges a lifelong interest in sadomasochism, but said Monday that he found the idea of Nazi sex fantasies abhorrent. He said he and the women acted out a German prison scenario, but without any Nazi aspect.
On Tuesday, one of the women - labelled "Mistress Switch" by the newspaper - told the High Court that she organized "spanking parties" attended by Mosley, whom she knew as Mike.
The woman, whose identity is protected by a court order and was called "A" in court, said Mosley was "an extremely charming, mild-mannered and interesting man." She denied there were Nazi overtones to their activities.
"I would not contemplate putting on such scenes, which I would find distasteful, and I would expect most people to be disgusted at the suggestion of a Nazi theme and respond similarly," she said.
She said that S&M role-play was "like children playing Cowboys and Indians, it's adults having fun."
Another woman, identified as "D," said the scenario they acted out that day was a "prison fantasy."
"I did not see anything Nazi," she said.
A third woman, "B," said she had joined in the activities wearing a suspender belt, stockings, high heeled shoes and a German Luftwaffe jacket that she had bought in London's Camden Market.
B, who is German, was asked if it had been a Nazi scenario.
"Under no circumstances, and I'm very upset and offended because it is an insult and offence if a newspaper equates German with being Nazi - my grandparents were not members of that party," she said.
A fourth woman, "C," said she had attended between five and eight parties with Mosley and also denied there had been any Nazi overtones.
The fifth woman at the March encounter, identified as "E," covertly recorded it for the News of the World.
After the story broke, Mosley faced calls to quit as president of the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile, which oversees Formula One racing. Despite the pressure, the FIA chief won a confidence vote last month allowing him to stay until his fourth term ends in October 2009.
Mosley's lawyers say the expose devastated his family and are demanding the tabloid pay large punitive damages to discourage similar stories.
The News of the World says readers have a right to know about the behaviour of Mosley because he is a public figure and his conduct was reprehensible.
Hot News : Mosley & Four women who took part in sadomasochistic role-playing
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