Tag: Police

  • Crime boss crony arrested over Hatton Garden raid (Sunday Times)

    Crime boss crony arrested over Hatton Garden raid (Sunday Times)

     

    Crime boss crony arrested over Hatton Garden raid
    Michael Gillard and Adrian Gatton
    August 7 2016
    The Sunday Times

    An associate of the gangster David Hunt is under police investigation for allegedly plotting to help launder the proceeds of the Hatton Garden safe deposit burglary.

    The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has been arrested and bailed over claims that he conspired to handle stolen jewellery that detectives found at his business premises in east London.

    Police surveillance material obtained by The Sunday Times suggests that Terry Perkins, one of the Hatton Garden ringleaders, wanted to offload some of the stolen jewellery through the man’s company.

    Car numberplate recognition technology revealed that Perkins, 68, visited the firm’s …

    Read the story here.

  • Colombian takes BP to court in UK over alleged complicity in kidnap and torture (The Guardian)

    Colombian takes BP to court in UK over alleged complicity in kidnap and torture (The Guardian)

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    Colombian takes BP to court in UK over alleged complicity in kidnap and torture
    By Mary Carson, Adrian Gatton, Rodrigo Vázquez and Maggie O’Kane

    The Guardian
    22 May 2015

    BP says it will defend unprecedented claim by trade union leader Gilberto Torres in case that spotlights role of big carbon in one of Colombia’s darkest periods

    A Colombian trade union leader is beginning an unprecedented claim for damages against BP in the high court in London, alleging the oil company’s complicity in his kidnap and torture 13 years ago.

    Read the rest of this story on The Guardian site here.

  • British hostage held by al-Qaeda in Algeria was shot by troops in failed rescue bid

    British hostage held by al-Qaeda in Algeria was shot by troops in failed rescue bid

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    Vehicles destroyed during the fatal convoy at In Amenas on Thursday 17th January 2013

    British hostage held by al-Qaeda in Algeria was shot by troops in failed rescue bid 

    By Robert Mendick, Adrian Gatton and Mark Olden
    The Sunday Telegraph
    14 September 2014

    An inquest into the In Amenas siege at a gas plant in Algeria will raise serious doubts over the safety of staff at the facility, part run by BP.

    At least one British hostage was killed by the Algerian military as it fought with al-Qaeda terrorists who had taken control of a gas plant in the Sahara desert, an inquest will hear this week.

    The inquest into the massacre at the In Amenas facility, which begins on Monday, will raise serious questions over Algeria’s handling of the hostage crisis. Seven British residents were killed during a four-day siege along with more than 30 other foreign hostages.

    The men were taken hostage when jihadists, led by the al-Qaeda linked terrorist Mokhtar Belmokhtar stormed the facility in January 2013. The incident was deeply embarrassing to the Algerian government because the plant was in a militariesd zone that should have been protected by the army.

    The inquest will also raise serious questions about security inside the camp which was run in a joint venture by BP, the Norwegian state oil company Statoil and the Algerian government owned Sonatrach.

    Read the rest of this story on The Sunday Telegraph site here.

  • Tycoon who killed family was allowed to keep guns despite earlier death threats (Daily Telegraph)

    Tycoon who killed family was allowed to keep guns despite earlier death threats (Daily Telegraph)

    Tycoon who killed family was allowed to keep guns despite earlier death threats 

    By James Orr and Adrian Gatton
    The Daily Telegraph
    11 November 2011

    A FAILED businessman who murdered his family before committing suicide was allowed to keep an arsenal of guns despite warnings to police that he had threatened to kill his accountant, leaked documents have shown.

    Christopher Foster, 50, made a series of death threats against Tim Baker, 38, after the collapse of a property deal, but was able to retain two firearms certificates.

    In 2008, he shot dead his wife and teenage daughter and burned down their £1.2million family home before dying from smoke inhalation.

    Yesterday, it emerged that police have opened a new investigation after complaints that Foster should have had his firearms licences revoked, preventing him from legally holding the weapons he used to kill his family.

    Anne Giddings, 60, Foster’s sister-in law, of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, told a TV producer researching the incident: “If his guns had been taken away then my sister and my niece would still be alive. The fact he was allowed to keep those guns is absolutely terrible.”

    Foster had been beset with financial worries in the months leading up to the shooting at his family’s five-bedroom home, Osbaston House, near Oswestry, Shropshire, in August 2008.

    He killed his wife, Jillian, 49, and daughter, Kirstie, 15, using a .22 rifle before burning down the house. He also shot dead the family’s three horses and four dogs.

    His inquest heard that at the time of his death he had assets of £3.1million but debts of £4.4million, including three mortgages on Osbaston House.

    Coroner John Ellery recorded a verdict of suicide for Foster and unlawful killing for his wife and daughter.

    Leaked police interview transcripts seen by The Daily Telegraph showed that police were warned that he posed a danger as far back as 2006.

    His accountant, Mr Baker, told West Mercia Police that Foster had made “several death threats” towards him after the failure of a property deal in Cyprus.

    Foster held both a shotgun licence and a firearms licence and kept six shotguns, a single barrel .22 calibre rifle, and a .22 air rifle.

    A spokesman from West Mercia Police said: “West Mercia Police can confirm there is a complaint under investigation which we received via the Independent Police Complaints Commission.”

    See further coverage of this story was it was picked up in The Daily Mail, Shropshire Star and other papers.

  • Isle of Man financier faces ban over role in US scam (Observer)

    Isle of Man financier faces ban over role in US scam (Observer)

    Isle of Man financier faces ban over role in US scam
    Conal Walsh and Adrian Gatton
    The Observer, Sunday 8 September 2002

    An Isle of Man financier is facing disciplinary action after details of his role in a huge money-laundering scam emerged in a US court.

    Peter Bond, who denies wrongdoing and has not been charged by the US authorities, could be disqualified from company directorships following a legal move by the Financial Supervision Commission (FSC), the island’s regulator.

    He managed the personal fortune of Robert Brennan, a notorious American fraud ster who used the Isle of Man’s banking secrecy laws to stash a fortune away from his creditors.

    Brennan was sentenced to nine years in jail last year by a New Jersey federal court. Bond, who was unavailable for comment this weekend, gave evidence against him under a guarantee of immunity from prosecution.

    The two men met after Brennan’s high-profile broking firm, First Jersey Securities, collapsed in 1995, leaving him with debts of $75 million.

    Brennan held $4m of non-traceable bearer bonds, which he did not declare to creditors and detectives in the US. Instead, he placed this money with Bond, who invested it in the stock market via Bank of Scotland accounts and shell companies.

    The fortune quickly swelled to $20m. Brennan used the money to fund a lavish lifestyle, including gambling trips to Monaco and Sun City, a 450-foot yacht and several luxury homes.

    Bond, who lives in Douglas, the Isle of Man’s capital, told the court of an elaborate system of passwords and covert meetings, which Brennan devised to have cash delivered to him in hotel lobbies and homes.

    Brennan’s lawyers claimed Bond was an unreliable witness in the case, accusing him of involvement in laundering Russian money.

    But Bond rejected the allegations and insisted that he had not been aware that Brennan was defrauding creditors. He was backed by US prosecutors.

    John Apsden, head of the Isle of Man’s regulator, confirmed that a disqualification application was filed against Bond at the island’s High Court last week, but declined to comment further.

  • ‘Spearmint Rhino’ lap-dancing clubs boss is convicted fraudster (IoS)

    ‘Spearmint Rhino’ lap-dancing clubs boss is convicted fraudster (IoS)

    ‘Spearmint Rhino’ lap-dancing clubs boss is convicted fraudster
    By Adrian Gatton and Paul Lashmar
    Independent on Sunday
    17 February 2002

    John Gray pretty much has it all. Cars, cash, planes and girls –
    especially girls. His Spearmint Rhino table dancing empire has made
    him wealthy. And he plans to have even more, to expand his empire from
    six clubs to 100. Now those plans are in doubt, after an Independent
    on Sunday investigation revealed that Mr Gray has not disclosed that
    he served a jail sentence for fraud.

    Mr Gray, 45, originally from California, has two convictions and
    served time in his home state. Questioned last Thursday night about
    the jail sentence, Mr Gray flatly denied that he had any convictions
    for anything: “I’ve never been convicted of fraud.”

    However, after the IoS produced court documents Mr Gray changed his
    story, saying: “I was caught off guard.” Adding that he now wished to
    be “candid”, Mr Gray admitted to the convictions and apologised for
    his past.

    Licensing authorities in Camden, where the European headquarters of
    the chain is based, may now re-examine its entertainment licence. The
    convictions were not known to Camden at the time the original licence
    was granted.

    Spearmint Rhino’s flagship club in Tottenham Court Road features nude
    girls who dance around poles or for clients at their tables. The club
    also has a number of booths where clients can ask girls for a private
    dance.

    Mr Gray used several aliases in the United States, including Johnny
    Win, John Luciano and John Luciano Gianni. He refused to comment last
    week when asked about the names.

    Spearmint Rhino has been a hit with City firms where prestigious
    clients have office parties at the club. On the back of his success,
    Mr Gray has just bought a mansion in Buckinghamshire for more than
    £1m. He owns two Mercedes, a Cessna 421 plane and boasts ownership of
    a Gulfstream G4 private jet and a 55-ft boat. He says his personal
    wealth here is around $2m (£1.25m).

    Mr Gray started out running a building firm, Grayco Construction, in
    California. He got into the table-dancing business after opening a
    string of Peppermint Elephant restaurants across the state and later
    giving them the even more unlikely Spearmint Rhino branding. There are
    even rumours that he plans to float his company on the London stock
    exchange.

    The disclosure of his convictions may prove a major setback.
    Councillor Ernest James, a barrister and former chairman of Camden
    Council’s licensing committee, said: “I believe there are grounds for
    a major re-examination of Spearmint Rhino’s licence in the light of
    these disclosures.”

    Mr Gray is the sole director of Spearmint Rhino Companies (Europe)
    Ltd, which holds the public entertainment licence from Camden. His
    date of birth is incorrectly given in Companies House records as 2 May
    1957. Mr Gray, whose birthday was on Friday, told us yesterday that it
    was a clerical error that will be rectified. He added that the mistake
    arose from the way Americans write dates.

    However, Mr James said: “If he has given inaccurate particulars, and
    in this case material particulars – because the police do checks
    based on the date of birth – then there is a question of whether
    the licence is voided.”

    A spokesman for Camden Council said: “The mistake might be relevant,
    especially regarding police checks. We don’t know whether the police
    have checked Mr Gray. But they raised no objection at the original
    licensing hearing. But we would be interested to know and may well
    raise it with the police.”

    On Mr Gray’s convictions, he added: “That may be material. We need to
    know more about the exact nature of the offences.”

    In August 1995, Mr Gray, then described as the owner of a Spearmint
    Rhino topless bar near Los Angeles, was arrested after 10 complaints
    that he had written cheques that bounced. As a result, Mr Gray was
    facing a potential five-year sentence. However, after plea bargaining,
    he was sentenced to six months in jail.

    At the time of his sentencing, Mr Gray was already in a federal prison
    for an unrelated case of making a false statement to win a contract
    from the US Navy.

    Mr Gray told the IoS that his financial problems arose following the
    illness and death of his father and problems from his father’s
    construction firm. “I am ashamed of what I have done and I have paid
    my debt to society,” he said. “I would not do it again and I have not
    erred since.”

    The club has had a number of recent setbacks. Two weeks ago, a
    waitress from the Tottenham Court Road club won £60,000 in a sex
    discrimination case. The pregnant Miss Samantha McGaw, 27, wanted to
    wear a less revealing outfit at the club but bosses refused. She
    claimed that dancers were referred to by male colleagues as “mingers”
    and “wildebeest” and that managers allegedly used weekly planning
    meetings to discuss whom they would like to sleep with.

    In July last year, Camden police said that, in their view, “activity
    within the club, intentionally or otherwise, borders on offences of
    prostitution and permitting the keeping of a brothel”.