Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Jailed: Fraudster Who Scammed 74 Year-Old Cancer Patient

A fraudster, whose heartless gang preyed on a 74 year-old cancer patient, swindling him out of £74,000, has been locked-up.

Klaudiusz Majewski, 49, provided fraudulently-opened bank accounts into which his Indian accomplices “cashed out” the proceeds of their cruel scam.

He fled to Germany when City of London Police investigated the fraud and was eventually hunted down and extradited back to the UK.

Fortunately, most of the money was traced and returned to the retired nuclear physicist, but sadly he has since passed away.

At Inner London Crown Court Majewski, of Wolsey Avenue, East Ham received two-and-a-half years imprisonment.

He pleaded guilty to:

    Possession / control identity documents with intent.

    Possession / control article for use in fraud.

    Possession / control identity documents with intent and Possession / control article for use in fraud.

Majewski had been operating as part of an organised crime group, alongside Avinash Kakumanu, Dinesh Alavala and Ranjit Nellikondi, who were previously convicted in 2018 for their role within the scheme.

The bank accounts he provided were utilised to transfer the stolen funds into from call centre scams operating from India.

The group had been cold calling elderly and vulnerable victims, claiming to have been officers from the National Crime Agency. 

Victims were informed that their devices were being used for criminal purposes and they needed to transfer large amounts of money to other accounts.

One of the victims was a 74-year-old man, who had been diagnosed with a rare form of tongue cancer at the time of the offending. 

He was told to carry out a number of transactions, having believed he had been the victim of money laundering.

Detectives seized roughly £120,000 and managed to return the majority of the stolen money to the victim during the earlier stages of the investigation.

Detective Inspector Michael O’Sullivan from the City of London Police said: “The victim in this case has unfortunately passed away, but we did not give up in our relentless pursuit of justice. Majewski will now answer for his crimes.

“Although this heinous act took place many years ago, we have not forgotten and will not forget victims of fraud.”

Monday, 7 July 2025

Decorated Policeman's Career Over After Molesting Two WPC's

An award-winning Police Sergeant’s career is in ruins after he molested two female officers during his alcohol-fuelled birthday celebration with colleagues at an O’Neills pub, a court heard.

Tim Clarkson, 37, was described as taking the evening as an opportunity to “try it on” with multiple female officers as his marriage to a policewoman fell apart.


A visibly emotional Clarkson today appeared in the dock at Staines Magistrates’ Court, where he received an eighteen-month Community Order, which includes 200 hours community service work.


The court heard he has quit the Hampshire Constabulary, where he was facing certain dismissal and is £40,000 in debt and continuing to co-parent his children with his estranged wife.


Last year, he and four fellow-officers received a National Police Bravery Award after he was first on the scene and successfully disarmed a suspect brandishing a handgun and two explosive devices.


At the Gosport address on August 28, 2023 the 54 year-old suspect detonated one of the devices and pointed his gun at Clarkson, who tasered him and dragged him from the smoke-filled property.


Clarkson, of Shore House, Newton Road, Warsash, Southampton pleaded guilty to two counts of indecent assault at the Winchester pub on July 20, last year.


He will now also suffer the ignominy of signing the sex offenders register for the next five years at Southampton Central Police Station.


District Judge Julie Cooper said: “I am not going to name the ladies, who were also police officers at the time.


“Both offences are incidents of touching with the first lady’s hand being taken by Clarkson and placed on his penis over his clothing and pulling another lady towards him and his apparently erect penis.”


Elaborating on the first incident Judge Cooper explained: “He pulled her close to him and said quite a few sexually-related things.


“He said to her: ‘What the f*** did you have to bring your boyfriend for?’ and that he would like to take her back to his hotel and touched her on top of her clothing.


“It was Mr Clarkson’s birthday and he had clearly been drinking and the second lady was dancing when he pulled her into him and caused her to touch what she believed to be his erect penis.”


In her victim impact statement the first female officer said: “As a result of this incident I have lost my trust in supervisors and I am very wary and want to keep my distance.


“Sometimes I question myself since this happened and ask myself why I did not turn around and say something.


“He had relationship issues with his wife and this occasion was an opportunity to get drunk and try it on with multiple people.


“It was a works night out with colleagues I trusted.


“He was in a position of trust and I feel depressed, stressed and hurt.”


The second female officer said in her impact statement: “I think about what happened, going over and over the events as to why this happened.


“I did not want to make a formal complaint, but I feel really angry about what happened and I no longer enjoy the job I loved.


“I have had to start taking anti-depressants again and have had three panic attacks at home.


“I am concerned he believes he can behave like this in the future around other female officers and I would feel guilty if I did not report it as I could have prevented it for them.”


Judge Cooper also ordered Clarkson to pay £500 compensation to each victim and complete ten days of a rehabilitation activity requirement.


“The pre-sentence report sets out clearly what happed and as a result of this the marriage, that was rocky, has completely broken down and I am aware Mr Clarkson has resigned, knowing that he would have been sacked.


“He has given service, excellent service to the public and is a person of good character, but acted appallingly against two women he worked with,” said the judge.


“They were all on night out and all seemed to have been drinking, but this does not excuse his behaviour.


“To impose less than five hundred pounds compensation to each woman would be derisory.”

Saturday, 5 July 2025

Cancer Expert's Internet Child Sex Shame

A consultant cancer specialist’s brilliant career is in danger of ruin after he was caught in a police sting downloading hundreds of explicit images of underage girls.

Consultant urologist Paul Sturch, 41, who treats prostate cancer, received a suspended prison sentence on Thursday and will also face professional disciplinary proceedings.


He pleaded guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children between September 9 and October 17, 2023.


The charges reflect 831 Category A - the most serious - moving and still images; Category B images and 6776 Category C.


Police raided his Thameside apartment in Hitch Quay, Wandsworth after he was identified chatting online with an undercover officer concerning his interest in girls aged four years-old and up.


Sturch, who studied at the Royal College of Surgeon, has not returned to work at King’s College Hospital, Camberwell and describes himself as: “Appalled, crushed and overwhelmed by remorse and shame.”


Kingston-upon-Thames Crown Court heard his mental health deteriorated while working on the medical front-line of the Covid pandemic.


“The General Medical Council (GMC) are aware and a custodial sentence would almost certainly end his career, but not if you follow the recommendation of the pre-sentence report of a community sentence,” Simon Ray KC, defending, told Judge Anne Brown.


Earlier, prosecutor Jonathan Gold told the court: “His address was searched and he was seen attempting to tamper with or destroy a memory stick on which images were found along with a white iPhone.


“There are some aggravating features, the ages of some of the children are quite young, some are as young as four years-old.”


His KC reminded the court Sturch’s offending was purely online and did not involve physical contact with children and he still has ambitions to return to the medical profession.


“There is nothing professionally that brings him into contact with children. His speciality is very much adult men,” said Mr Ray.


“He was working to exhaustion to save lives during the Covid 19 pandemic and he has dedicated his life to the care of others.


“This frontline work on the Covid ward contributed to his mental disintegration that led to the commission of these offences.


“He takes full responsibility for his actions and offending, although he recalls little of his offending actions.


“He is a consultant urological surgeon with a speciality in prostate cancer, undertaking life-saving procedures. He has skills that are rare.


“If ever there was a case where the court can be sure offences will not be repeated its is this one.


“The effect on the defendant losing his career and everything he has worked for would be devastating. Work is his identity and it is something he has worked on all of his life,” added Mr Ray.


“If the defendant is struck-off it would be a personal tragedy and the NHS would lose a talented surgeon.”


Judge Brown sentenced Sturch to six months imprisonment, suspended for eighteen months, which includes thirty days of a rehabilitation activity requirement.


He will also be under Probation Service supervision for eighteen months, must sign the sex offenders register for seven years and was made subject to a seven-year Sexual Harm Prevention Order, which restricts his internet use, plus further conditions.


“There were children under obvious distress and I will not go into details in open court,” announced Judge Brown. “We must take the age and vulnerability of the children into account.


“It is not for me to second-guess the GMC. I have to decide if there is an alternative to a custodial sentence.


“I do not think it is helpful to guess what the GMC will do in the future. I don’t know their work,” said the judge.


“By the time the police came to his flat he was no longer going to work,” said Mr Ray. “The police bodyworn camera presents a powerful of where he was at the time in his life. his state and the state of his flat.”


The defence submitted medical reports revealed Sturch had a depressive disorder that led to “poor judgement and impulsivity.”


“People can function when they really, really have to, but behind the scenes they are collapsing,” added Mr Ray.

Thursday, 3 July 2025

NOT GUILTY: City Executive Innocent Of Embarrassing Square Mile Encounter

A City pension fund executive has finally been cleared after his arrest and prosecution for an explicit display of public affection with a drunken female financier.

Craig Brown, 62, has always admitted to the embarrassing incident in the heart of the Square Mile, but insisted the woman was consensual and this week a jury agreed.


His four-year ordeal finally ended with a not guilty verdict at Inner London Crown Court after a retrial on a charge of sexually assaulting the complainant by penetration.


The first trial heard the woman, who had been drinking all day, was the equivalent of four times the drink-drive limit and had no memory of the incident or the hours before it.


Grammar school-educated Brown, who lives in a £1.5m house in the Surrey commuter belt in Harestone Hill, Caterham, was the director of a company based in the City of London.


He told jurors he was “disgusted and mortified” by the CCTV images, which show his hand up the skirt of the woman under a covered walkway, near the Bank of England.


Motherwell-born Brown had met the experienced professional at a casual business lunch on July 21, 2021 and they continued drinking into the evening.


“I watch the video and being in that situation was very embarrassing. I should not have been there or in that situation,” he told the trial. “Obviously we were doing something we shouldn’t be doing in a public place.”


He graduated from Edinburgh’s Heriot-Watt University with a degree in Maths & Statistics and had separated from his wife of sixteen-years a few months before the incident.


“I was flattered, slightly surprised and enjoying the moment. I was single again and it was fun,” father-of-two Brown said. “We continued to kiss each others’ face and neck and I like massaging legs, it is something I do.”


The jury watched CCTV of the woman sitting on the ground with a kneeling or crouching Brown running his hands up and down her legs and feet in the public area at approximately 9.30pm.


“She was giggling and enjoying the relaxation,” recalled Brown. “I massaged closer to the top of her thighs, becoming more sexual and I moved my hand up further.”


He admitted placing his hand between her legs and underneath the white lacy thong she was wearing. “It was initially stroking and then rubbing and she was clearly enjoying it. She was laughing and smiling and making murmurs of pleasure.”


However, the prosecution argued the compliant was too drunk to consent, but this was rejected by the jury’s verdict.


A group of friends, who had been attending a cricket match, stepped in and interrupted the couple, with the complainant assuring them: “He’s a good guy.”


Brown always maintained the activity was reciprocal and told the trial: “The complainant was consenting and capable of consenting that night.


“I thought she was good fun with an interesting and vibrant personality and we got on well.”


He told the court he intended to get the train home until the woman suggested continuing to drink. “It was two days after the Covid lockdown and we were pleased to be out.”


Brown had joined a lunch the complainant was enjoying with a City financial consultant at Cabotte French restaurant earlier in the day and after that man left they continued drinking at two other bars.


“We were kissing and cuddling in the bar and we were both being foolish, kissing and touching in the lift. We were laughing and joking, two people fairly drunk in London on a Summer’s night.


“We left the bar and I went to Tesco. It was a foolish decision, a bad drunken decision, but she suggested having more wine where we were sitting.”


The cricket group alerted police and Brown found himself arrested and placed into a cell for the evening.


“I was disgusted, bewildered, ashamed of everything that happened that previous night. I was very stressed and feeling terrible  that I had got myself into that situation,” he told the court. 


CCTV showed the pair enjoying their evening together, with the complainant smiling and exchanging moments of affection with Brown.


Nine days later the woman gave a video-recorded interview to police, confirming she had been drinking wine that day and was introduced to Brown.


“He seemed a pleasant guy and he knew his stuff and was very well-versed in the industry,” she recalled.


“I do not remember leaving the pub with him. It is a complete blank.


“I vaguely remember shouting, but don’t know how that related to what happened.


“I don’t know if I was attacked, I have no recollection. I have no recollection until the police and paramedics.”

Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Square Mile Bag Thief Banged Up

A City of London bag thief is starting a four-month prison sentence after suspicious police caught him red-handed.

Emad Lechhed, 26, snatched an unsuspecting man's bag from the ground outside a pub in the heart of the Square Mile.

Fortunately, officers from the City of London Police's Proactive Acquisitive Crime Team were patrolling the area and spotted him.

On the evening of June 12, Lechhed was loitering around a pub in Cannon Street, where plain-clothed officers were keeping an eye on him.

At around 9:30pm, Lechhed sneaked up behind a group standing outside the pub and picked-up the victim's bag, without him even noticing and made off.

Officers immediately sprang into action, running after Lechhed, who dropped the bag during the chase.

Lechhed was caught and arrested on London Bridge, just five minutes after committing the offence.

The bag was returned to the owner before he even realised it had been taken.

Inspector Dan Green said: The stolen bag, and the contents, was soon returned to the owner, before they knew it was stolen. 

The victim was full of praise for our officers when he got his bag back so quickly and we made an arrest.

This is another fantastic result from our plain-clothed officers.

Our warning to criminals; don’t come into the City to steal bags. If you do, you risk being spotted by our plain-clothed officers, who will track you down, arrest you and bring you to justice.”

Lechhed was also handed a Criminal Behaviour Order, banning him from entering the City for two years.