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ENIGMA: A German 'Enigma" machine, used for encoding military information, at the wartime intelligence centre at Bletchley Park, which is to be turned into a museum of communications technology. 29/01/01 The Duke of York is due to visit the home of Britain's Second World War codebreakers and the birthplace of modern computing and communications. The Duke was invited to visit Bletchley Park after presenting an Enigma cypher machine to the Polish people on behalf of the British Government during a visit to Poland last autumn. 12/05/01 Visitors to Bletchley Park were enjoying a trip back in time as staff re-enacted D-Day preparations and explained the mystery behind the Enigma code-breaking machines. The secret wartime arm of the Foreign Office hit the headlines last year when one of its Enigma code-breaking machines was stolen from its Buckinghamshire base. Although that machine is still in police custody other models will be demonstrated by members of the original 1940s deciphering team. *...04/06/2001 Nazi Enigma encoding machine similar to the one stolen from Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, last year. Retired antiques dealer Dennis Yates, 57, of Sandiacre, Derbyshire, is due to appear at Aylesbury Crown Court, Bucks, June 4, 2001 over the disappearance of the machine. The unemployed father-of-three is charged with blackmail and handling stolen goods. The machine was eventually returned to Newsnight presenter Jeremy Paxman following months of ransom demands to Bletchley Park staff. 26/09/01 A self-employed dealer in Second World War memorabilia was due to stand trial in connection with the disappearance of an Enigma encoding machine from Bletchley Park, Bucks. The machine, used by German intelligence during the Second World War to encrypt top secret messages, went missing from a display cabinet during a public open day at the former top-secret site on April 1 last year. Dennis Yates, 48, of No Mans Lane, Sandiacre, Notts, was due to appear at Aylesbury...
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