Thursday, 28 January 2010

Bank Security Guard Batters Boss


A Royal Bank of Scotland security guard – angry following a reprimand – faces a date with the Old Bailey (pictured) after launching a vicious attack on his boss who was left covered in blood.

Mark Chantel, 34, of Barnsley Street, Whitechapel, pleaded guilty at City of London Magistrates’ Court to assaulting Ken Fisher, causing him actual bodily harm, at the Bishopsgate branch on October 30, last year.

The first-time offender destroyed seven years’ service at the bank and was sacked a month later.

The shaven-headed victim was left with two bleeding cuts to the back of his head, a lacerated lip, bruising, swelling and his glasses and £380 watch were smashed in the attack which has left him suffering panic attacks.

Prosecutor Mrs Varinder Hayre told the court Chantel confronted his boss at 7pm in the bank’s security room.

“The victim was his supervisor and had reported him five days earlier for failing to carry out his duties.

“He challenged him for reporting him and the defendant began striking him with his clenched fist and he fell off his chair onto the floor.

“The defendant kicked him to the torso three times and struck him on the back of the head,” added Mrs. Hayre. “Blood was dripping from the victim’s head.”

Mr. Fisher needed stitches to the back of his head and it took four weeks for the “large amount of bruising and swelling” to go down.

“He says he suffers dizziness and panic attacks and has been unable to return to work,” said Mrs. Hayre.

“The victim says he used to be happy go lucky, but now feels nervous, unsafe alone and depressed. He says Chantel was a close friend, but since the attack he cannot trust anyone and seeks justice for an unprovoked violent attack.”

Chantel’s lawyer Mr. Tony Meisels told the court: “He felt the complainant was always putting him down and felt anxious about his position there.

“There was a verbal confrontation and my client says the complainant pushed him first and he admits he overreacted as the incident escalated and punched the victim a number of times.

“He can’t understand why it happened. It was totally out of character.”

The magistrates committed Chantel on bail for sentencing at the Central Criminal Court on February 23.

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

Wedding On Despite Punjabi-Night Attack


The wedding is still on for an angry boyfriend who chased his fiancĂ© along the street when she fled a night out at a top City restaurant – slapping her violently across the face in front of shocked passers-by.

Restaurant manager Rakesh Kumar Sharma, 25, was forgiven by his bride-to-be, but it is unlikely U.S. visa officials will be as understanding, throwing their planned New York honeymoon into doubt.

First-time-offender Sharma, of Lambourne Road, pleaded guilty at City of London Magistrates’ Court to assaulting Sulata Paul in Cheapside on September 12, last year.

Prosecutor Mrs. Varinder Hayre told the court it was midnight when Miss Paul fled ‘Tiffinbites’, Russia Row, (pictured) with Sharma in pursuit.

“Witnesses saw the defendant chasing his girlfriend of the past eighteen months, grab her by the arm, turn her around and slap her hard in the face.

“He started to tell the people gathering around to mind their own business and became aggressive.”

Passers-by raised the alarm and police arrested Sharma.

“Miss Paul was distressed and crying and told police she did not want to make any allegations against her partner,” added Mrs. Hayre.

“Sharma told police he had gone to ‘Tiffinbites’ for Punjabi night with his future wife and she said she wanted to go home because she was not comfortable and he said he became angered.”

The July wedding date is still on confirmed Sharma’s lawyer Mr. Tony Meisels. “They have loved each other for a long time.

“The honeymoon is due to take place in New York and there may be implications for that following this conviction.”

Sharma was fined £200 with £90 costs.

Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Cornwall Domestic On The Streets Of London


A Cornishman arrested after being caught on CCTV launching a drunken attack on his girlfriend during a weekend London visit is “sickened by his behaviour” a court heard today (Tuesday).

Near shore driller George Anthony Matthews, 27, of The Steppes, Higher Penponds Road, Higher Penponds, Camborne had been drinking tequila slammers and beer for hours with his girlfriend before a row suddenly broke out.

He pleaded guilty at City of London Magistrates’ Court (pictured) to assaulting Talutha Landry, by beating, outside Blackfriars Train Station on November 2, last year and was given a nine-month supervision order and ordered to pay £75 costs.

Matthews, currently employed on a short-term contract in the capital, was visited that weekend by his girlfriend of three years, Ms. Landry, who did not want to press charges.

Prosecutor Mrs. Varinder Hayre told the court a witness in the near-deserted late-night street dialled 999.

“The witness heard Mr. Matthews calling his girlfriend a ‘fucking bitch’ and shouting ‘fuck you’ and threatening her.

“He pushed her over and she hit her head on the pavement and he kicked her while she was on the floor to the upper part of her body,” added Mrs. Hayre.

“The female was visibly distressed and the witness felt she must have sustained some injury.”

Ms. Landry ran off, but was chased and grabbed by Matthews. “He slapped her on the side of the face, causing the victim to fall backwards.”

The CCTV camera captures Matthews pushing her over in the middle of the road, then pushing her over again on the pavement and landing a kick with his right foot as she lies on the ground.

Ms. Landry struggles to her feet and is pursued by Matthews who appears to grab her around the throat, slaps her face, causing her to fall again, then follows-up with another slap.

When shown the footage by police Matthews, who earns £35,000 a year, was visibly distressed and said he “felt sick” watching it.

His lawyer Mr. Roland Ellis told the court: “Mr. Matthews cannot fully explain what he did that day.

“He has suffered depression since he was a child and has been on medication, but had been unable to get a repeat prescription from his doctor in Cornwall.

“His job is stressful, he works twelve hour shifts, and unfortunately turned to excessive drinking. He is sickened by his behaviour, aghast at what is described.”

Since the attack Matthews has been attending counselling sessions and the couple remain living together despite the incident.

Ms. Landry begged police not to arrest Matthews – currently signed-off work for three weeks with depression - the night he attacked her and refused to go to hospital.

She urged police not to prosecute and refused to give a victim statement, urging counselling not a prosecution. “Their relationship is still strong,” explained the lawyer.

Ms. Landry and Matthews’ mother travelled with him to court for the sentencing. “She is in no way frightened of him,” added Mr. Ellis.

“This was reported in the local newspaper and has caused him great shame. It is a small community and now everybody knows what has gone on.”

Monday, 25 January 2010

Wife Helps Bully-Boy Mortgage Broker Husband Fake Surveys


A loyal wife who used her IT skills to help her “overbearing” mortgage broker ex-husband secure £2.4 million worth of fraudulent loans by forging valuation reports dodged jail with a suspended sentence today (Monday).

Nicola Hardy, 27, of Water Lane, Pontefract, Yorkshire photoshopped the reports on her laptop, resulting in nine properties being re-mortgaged in excess of their market value.

“You were in a difficult position of saying ‘no’ to this overbearing bully of a husband,” Judge Michael Gledhill QC told her at London’s Southwark Crown Court (pictured).

At the time Hardy shared a home at Highams Park, Chingford, East London with her husband and worked for West End-based commercial property consultants Lambert Smith Hampton.

Typically Hardy altered the number of bedrooms in a property to falsely inflate its value or increased its potential rental yield on independent valuers’ reports.

Negative findings such as rising damp were removed and in one case a property deemed unfit for the open market was described by Hardy as in a “modernized condition.”

She was sentenced to six months imprisonment, suspended for eighteen months, ordered to perform 100 hours community service work and pay £500 costs.

Her ex-husband Neil Edward Durbidge, 30, of Peel Road, Wembley, has pleaded not guilty to the charges and is due to stand trial early next year.

Hardy pleaded guilty to four charges relating to City-based Basinghall Finance plc in that she dishonestly made false representations regarding the mortgage valuation on 62 Brownlow Road, 55b Bruce Road, 17a Essex Road, Willesden and 5 Villiers Road, Cricklewood, North-West London on various dates between November 20, 2007 and January 31, 2008.

She also admitted five similar charges relating to Capital Home Loans Ltd., of Admiral House, Harlington Way, Fleet, Hampshire, regarding Flat 14, Norfolk Court, Harrow, Flat 12, Nicoll Court, Willesden and 23, Woodford Place, 21 Flamstead Avenue, and 21a Flamstead Avenue, Wembley, on various dates between January 11 and February 26, 2008.

Prosecutor Mr. Matthew Banham told the court: “She is not the prime mover. She only became involved as a result of her husband, but she did provide essential assistance and this fraud could not have been completed without her technical assistance.”

No financial loss has occurred because all the clients have kept up with their mortgage repayments, but all the lending companies agree they would never have advanced the loan amounts if they knew the true valuations.

A total of £2,418,850 was loaned on the properties and another £862,000 worth of remortgages applied for were refused.

Although no loss has yet occurred all the lenders consider the loans “at risk”.

“No bonuses were received for securing the mortgages and there was no financial incentive apart from Mr. Durbidge’s employers believing he was busy and successful,” said Mr. Banham.

In May 2008 Basinghall Finance spotted the forgeries and a month later Hardy’s husband was sacked for gross misconduct.

City of London Police raided the matrimonial home on June 13, 2008 and in Hardy’s laptop, recovered from the boot of a car parked outside, officers found evidence of her forgeries.

“When questioned Hardy answered all questions and admitted using photoshop on her laptop so her husband could fill his quota,” said Mr. Banham. “She said she felt she was pressured into it by her husband.”

Hardy’s lawyer Mrs. Isabelle Forshaw described her client’s former marriage as “unequal”, “exploitative” and “flawed”.

“This defendant had nothing to gain whatsoever apart from trying to keep a difficult relationship together.

“Mr. Durbidge had been her whole life. She was with him for ten years from the age of sixteen. It was her first relationship and he was all she had ever known.”

After the arrests Hardy returned to her native Yorkshire.

Hardy even paid for the couple’s “lavish” 2007 wedding as Mr. Durbidge struggled to keep a failing mortgage business afloat before getting a job as a broker.

“I am dealing with a young lady of good character acting under some pressure from her husband,” announced Judge Gledhill. “Over a pretty long period of time this lady has altered reports in order for her husband to assist clients.

“There is no direct benefit, but it was thoroughly dishonest,” added the Judge.

He told Hardy: “I know you have suffered since you were arrested, but you have continued working and tried to pay off your debts and rebuild your life and have a new boyfriend who is in court along with your father today.”

Sunday, 24 January 2010

Welcome To The Olympics. East End Style!


Two 18 year-old students were left with near-fatal stab wounds near the 2012 Olympic Stadium for simply exchanging looks with a teenage knifeman locked-up for thirteen years last week.

Aaron Wembo, 17, of Manor Park, East London, caught the eye of the pair – sitting on a bench - as he rode a bike through nearby Stratford Park on June 19, last year.

Wembo (pictured) called a twenty-strong gang to the park and launched a frenzied knife attack on Adnan Ali, who was stabbed six times – suffering a punctured lung - and Mehtab Kamal who he stabbed twice in the buttocks.

They were left with life threatening injuries and Adnan struggled to breathe as Wembo – who used a kitchen knife he previously hid in bushes – fled the park, warning others not to identify him to police.

An Old Bailey jury convicted him of attempting to murder Adnan, inflicting grievous bodily harm on Mehtab and violent disorder.

Detective Superintendent Jeannie Haggerty of Newham Borough said: "Incidents of serious youth violence in Newham, whilst uncommon, will always be a matter of concern to the community.

"In this instance the hard work and persistence of the investigating officers and the co-operation of the public, enabled the police and courts to get a successful prosecution, reassuring the public that this type of behaviour will not be tolerated and individuals involved will be brought to justice.

"Police in Newham are committed to fully supporting victims and witnesses of all crime and would like to thank all those involved."

Judge Peter Thornton told Wembo:"This was knife crime at its worst. The victims had done nothing to you, but you stabbed them both in the back, intending to wound one and kill the other.

"This looks very much like gratuitous violence, for the sheer pleasure of it. Both victims will never forget their terrible experience.”

Saturday, 23 January 2010

Kidnap Gunmen Jailed


Two gun-toting kidnappers who bundled their 50 year-old victim into the back of a stolen van at a drug meeting – robbing and pistol-whipping him – were locked up for a total of eighteen years.

They were part of a five-man gang who snatched Jamaican Alston Robertson off the street in Connaught Road, Harlesden, on November 13, 2008, but were stopped by uniformed police for driving without lights.

Gunman Shaul Toney, 25, of Donnington Court, Donnington Road, Harlesden, was sentenced to a total of ten years imprisonment at Inner London Crown Court (pictured).

His accomplice, 21 year-old Ezekiel Burton, of Pippin Close, Neasden, received a total of eight years imprisonment.

“An organized kidnap, as this was, at gunpoint in relation to drugs is an act of gangsterism,” Judge Austin Issard-Davies told the duo.

Both men denied, but were convicted following a ten-day trial of kidnapping Mr. Robertson and robbing him of cash, keys and his mobile phone.

They were also both convicted of possessing a fully loaded 9mm automatic pistol, with intent to commit an indictable offence and possessing ammunition without a firearms certificate.

The trial heard Mr. Robertson confess to agreeing to meet Toney to buy a modest amount of cannabis, but found himself forced into the rear of the Mercedes van at gunpoint.

Inside he was pistol-whipped by Toney and robbed of an estimated £200 cash, plus other items and £5,000 was demanded.

Uniformed police on routine patrol pulled the van over for driving without lights in nearby Acton Lane and five men fled the scene in different directions.

Officers caught and arrested Toney, who tried to hide the gun in a front garden, and Burton was later identified via forensics from clothing he removed while making his escape.

The other three members of the gang have never been identified.

“The rendezvous was in relation to drug business. That is what you were sorting out when you met that night,” said Judge Issard-Davies.

“This is a very grave series of offences, the kidnap was on the face of it only intended to be for a short period of time for the immediate extraction of money.

“You were in possession of a fully-loaded 9mm automatic firearm and you, Toney, were the prime mover in this case.”

The court heard Toney has previously served eighteen months for robbery and has convictions for drug offences, assault and having a dangerous fighting dog.

Burton had only been freed from custody eleven days before the offence and has convictions for burglary, possessing an imitation firearm, shoplifting, assault and drug possession.

During the trial Toney claimed he was the victim of a kidnap plot hatched by Mr. Robertson and his lawyer Mr. David Jones said: “The firearm was not discharged and it was over shortly due to incompetence and the police being on the scene in a short time.”

Burton maintained he was never involved and his lawyer Mr. Shaun Wallace said: “Hanging around with a negative peer group has led to more and more trouble.”

The Judge refused to deem the defendants “dangerous” and therefore not subject to greater punishment.

“Toney may have chosen to solve a problem, probably a commercial one in relation to drugs, in this way, but I do not see that he does this on a regular basis.”

Both defendants were sentenced to the minimum five-year term for possessing a firearm, with intent, and Toney was given two years for kidnapping plus three years for robbery to run consecutively.

Burton was given one year for kidnapping and two years for robbery to run consecutively and both received concurrent twelve-month terms for possessing ammunition.

Afterwards Detective Constable Tanya Fyffe, of Brent’s Violent Crime Unit said: “The sentences are fair. It sends out a clear message that people involved in drugs and these types of violent offences will be dealt with robustly.

“We will always support the victims of violent crime.”

Friday, 22 January 2010

Cherie Blair Allows "Religious" Thug To Walk Free


A devout Muslim who broke a fellow bank customer’s jaw in a violent ‘queue rage’ incident shortly after leaving his local mosque dodged jail because ex-PM’s wife Cherie Blair deemed him a “religious person.”

Birmingham-born Shamso Miah, 25, of Empress Avenue, Redbridge, punched the victim inside Lloyds TSB, High Street North, East Ham and delivered another blow when followed outside.

Sitting as Recorder Cherie Booth QC at Inner London Crown Court she told first-time offender Miah: “I am going to suspend this sentence for the period of two years based on the fact you are a religious person and have not been in trouble before.”

Jobless Miah pleaded guilty to assaulting Mohammed Furcan, causing him actual bodily harm, on August 7, last year.

The court heard a row erupted between the pair over who was next in line to see the cashier and Miah grabbed the victim and struck him with a clenched fist.

He ran outside, but was pursued by the victim who demanded to know why he was hit and Mr. Furcan was punched to the right side of the face, causing him to collapse to the ground.

His car’s registration number was reported to police and when arrested Miah claimed self-defence, but the bank’s CCTV footage showed he was the aggressor.

When the victim sought medical attention the doctor confirmed he had suffered a slight fracture to his jaw.

“You caused a mild fracture to the jaw of a member of the public standing in a queue at Lloyds Bank,” Cherie Blair (pictured) told Miah. “You are a religious man and you know this is not acceptable behaviour.

“Violence on our streets has to be taken seriously,” she added, sentencing Miah to six months imprisonment, suspended for two years.

He was also ordered to complete 200 hours community service work and pay £200 costs.

Thursday, 21 January 2010

Women Rob 84 Year-Old Bank Customer


Two Eastern European women pinned an 84 year-old disabled man against a bus shelter and robbed him of £500 cash after trailing him from a bank.

The suspects (pic. r.) followed the pensioner from the Halifax building society in Liverpool Road, Islington, on November 12, last year and on to a number 30 bus.

They pretended to help him on to the bus and into a seat and made an unsuccessful bid to steal the money from the victim's coat pocket.

The pensioner got off the bus in St Paul's Road, Islington, and when he stopped to rest at a nearby bus stop, the suspects grabbed him and pinned him up against the shelter before stealing the cash.

Both women are described as being of Eastern European appearance.

The first is described as aged about 35, approximately 5'6" tall, well built, with short black hair with a short fringe and the second is described as aged about 55, approximately 5'3" tall, of slim build with long black hair.

The victim, who is from Islington, was very shaken up as a result of the incident.

His daughter, 53, said: "I think it's terrible that they pick on vulnerable people and have resorted to this.

“They seem to be pickpockets who have upped their game. Fortunately, my dad was not physically hurt - the next victim might not be so lucky."

The investigation is being carried out by PC Jo Miller from the Islington Robbery Squad with support from the Visual Images and Identification Office (VIIDO), which specialises in the investigation of CCTV images.

PC Jo Miller said: "I am doing everything I can to ensure that these offenders are brought to justice however so much relies on the CCTV images. If you know who these people are, then please contact us immediately."