News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Police in Seven Forces Investigated for Drugs, Bribery and Robberies |
Title: | UK: Police in Seven Forces Investigated for Drugs, Bribery and Robberies |
Published On: | 1998-09-25 |
Source: | Independent, The (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 00:26:26 |
POLICE IN SEVEN FORCES INVESTIGATED FOR DRUGS, BRIBERY AND ROBBERIES
MORE than 110 police officers in at least seven forces in England and Wales
are being investigated, or face charges, in an unprecedented series of
anti-corruption inquiries.
There are at least 25 investigations into allegations of wrongdoing by
police officers, involving a wide range of suspected offences, including
taking bribes, planning robberies and providing confidential information to
criminals.
The scale of the national anti-corruption drive emerged as Detective Chief
Inspector Elmore Davies, of the Merseyside force, was jailed yesterday for
five years for selling sensitive police information for UKP20,000 to a
crime syndicate.
A senior officer said last night: "It has not been politically convenient
to accept there is a growing danger of corruption. But this is the policing
issue for the next century."
Merseyside Police said a special team formed to investigate Davies,
described in court as "a bent copper stewed in corruption", would continue
its work.
The Chief Constable, Sir James Sharples, said: "This took place when there
was a large amount of shooting between various gangs. There was a
considerable danger to the community of Merseyside."
Superintendent Phil Jones, of Merseyside Police, said the case had revealed
the vulnerability of British police officers to corruption and the
"fabulous" bribes that drug dealers could offer. "Officers have seen their
income decrease sharply as overtime and allowances have been abolished. At
the same time, the money at the disposal of the drug dealers has become
huge. It has not been politically convenient to accept there is a growing
danger of corruption. But this is the policing issue for the next century."
Davies became the most senior policeman to be convicted of corruption for
almost three decades when a jury at Nottingham Crown Court decided he had
perverted the course of justice in return for UKP20,000 from one of
Europe's biggest drug traffickers.
Bugged phone calls and conversations caught Davies, 50, betraying personal
details of a police constable shot at while arresting a gunman outside the
Venue nightclub, Liverpool, in July 1996.
Two accomplices, including his friend Michael Ahearne, who played Warrior
in the TV show Gladiators, were convicted of perverting the course of
justice. Ahearne, 36, was sentenced to 15 months, and Tony Bray, 38, was
jailed for three years. The three, all from the Wirral, Merseyside, had
denied a total of six charges.
Davies passed case notes and advice through intermediaries to Curtis
Warren, a drug dealer with a fortune estimated at UKP180m.
Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson
MORE than 110 police officers in at least seven forces in England and Wales
are being investigated, or face charges, in an unprecedented series of
anti-corruption inquiries.
There are at least 25 investigations into allegations of wrongdoing by
police officers, involving a wide range of suspected offences, including
taking bribes, planning robberies and providing confidential information to
criminals.
The scale of the national anti-corruption drive emerged as Detective Chief
Inspector Elmore Davies, of the Merseyside force, was jailed yesterday for
five years for selling sensitive police information for UKP20,000 to a
crime syndicate.
A senior officer said last night: "It has not been politically convenient
to accept there is a growing danger of corruption. But this is the policing
issue for the next century."
Merseyside Police said a special team formed to investigate Davies,
described in court as "a bent copper stewed in corruption", would continue
its work.
The Chief Constable, Sir James Sharples, said: "This took place when there
was a large amount of shooting between various gangs. There was a
considerable danger to the community of Merseyside."
Superintendent Phil Jones, of Merseyside Police, said the case had revealed
the vulnerability of British police officers to corruption and the
"fabulous" bribes that drug dealers could offer. "Officers have seen their
income decrease sharply as overtime and allowances have been abolished. At
the same time, the money at the disposal of the drug dealers has become
huge. It has not been politically convenient to accept there is a growing
danger of corruption. But this is the policing issue for the next century."
Davies became the most senior policeman to be convicted of corruption for
almost three decades when a jury at Nottingham Crown Court decided he had
perverted the course of justice in return for UKP20,000 from one of
Europe's biggest drug traffickers.
Bugged phone calls and conversations caught Davies, 50, betraying personal
details of a police constable shot at while arresting a gunman outside the
Venue nightclub, Liverpool, in July 1996.
Two accomplices, including his friend Michael Ahearne, who played Warrior
in the TV show Gladiators, were convicted of perverting the course of
justice. Ahearne, 36, was sentenced to 15 months, and Tony Bray, 38, was
jailed for three years. The three, all from the Wirral, Merseyside, had
denied a total of six charges.
Davies passed case notes and advice through intermediaries to Curtis
Warren, a drug dealer with a fortune estimated at UKP180m.
Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson
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