The victim's family said the former police chief's peerage was a "final slap in the face".
The man who invented the zip fastener was today honoured with a lifetime peerage.
It is notable, too, that representation from the hereditary peerage on that plutocrats' list is falling too.
Composer and broadcaster Michael Berkeley will also get a peerage, the independent House of Lords Appointments Commission announced.
Ex-MP Ann Widdecombe has renewed her complaint that she was "deliberately" snubbed by David Cameron for a peerage.
He seems to think (he would not be the first, nor wrong) that you can buy a peerage.
The SNP's Angus MacNeil called on Mr Clegg to lead by example and rule out the prospect of a peerage.
The addition of a hyphen to her surname for the purposes of her title was required under peerage rules, she confirmed.
Having a peerage has never, in itself, been a badge of merit.
Sir Leon was offered a life peerage when he left the Commons in 1989 but he chose to become a European commissioner.
Even worse, creator Julian Fellowes is the holder of a Tory Peerage.
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Welsh assembly deputy presiding officer John Marek, also a former Labour member, said Mr Law also told him he was offered a peerage.
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In April, the Telegraph reported that Miss Widdecombe said she thought Mr Cameron denied her a peerage because she was "too traditional".
Foster, like his former partner Richard Rogers (who has a peerage, but no Pritzker as yet), is a pivotal figure in British architecture.
Davenport claims to be a lord but he is not listed in Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage, which is a reference of the British aristocracy.
Many of the Tory life peers created during 18 years of Conservative rule were ex-Cabinet ministers who saw a peerage as a retirement perk.
The peerage had been created for his grandfather, who was chief justice of Ireland in the days when it was still part of Britain.
Meanwhile the Daily Mirror predicts TV property expert Kirstie Allsopp could be awarded a peerage - a "relocation, relocation, relocation" to the House of Lords.
"I accepted the kind invitation to enter the House of Lords as a working peer for practical political reasons, " he said when his peerage was first announced.
He also recognised that some people gave money in the hope of becoming peers and suggested it should be more difficult for donors to get a peerage.
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There is scarcely a family that is long established in the peerage or baronetage which has not married into the non-titled but sometimes more solidly upper-class gentry.
While he produced the party's best-ever showing in a contest for a Westminster seat, he was never elected as an MP and was later given a peerage.
Health reasons may be the official reason, but it would not be surprising to learn Mr Harrison was offered a job or peerage to fall on his sword.
Before accepting a peerage, he was a senior insurance executive.
Asked to define a commercial loan, Mr Yates said it was an important point, as lending money to a political party should not be a bar to being nominated for a peerage.
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His struggle nearly 40 years ago to renounce his peerage so that he could sit as a commoner in the elected house seems a small thing now that hereditary peerage itself is on the point of being evicted from Westminster.
Unelected he may be, but Mr Macdonald is far from being the first minister who has been brought into government by the gift of a life peerage: Margaret Thatcher followed just this route when she ennobled Lord Young and then employed the successful businessman in a variety of ministerial jobs.
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