Friday 18 March 2011

"I Have Really Been Screwed" Says Businessman In Bogus Medication Scandal


A successful businessman, who denies knowingly funding the mass importation of fake life-saving drugs, told a jury he has "hate" for the alleged co-conspirator who talked him into the deal.


"I feel as if I have really been screwed by him," Richard Kemp, 61, of School Lane, Y Waen, Flint Mountain, Clwyd told Croydon Crown Court.


The ex-boss of pharmaceutical wholesaler Kemco claims he was used by alleged ringleader Peter Gillespie, 64, of Carey Close, Windsor, Berkshire.


"Do you want me to say I hate the man for what he has done?" asked Kemp from the witness box. "Because that is how I feel inside."


Medicine watchdogs ordered a Class One recall of all suspected drugs - taken by heart and cancer patients and the mentally ill - resulting in shelves cleared in pharmacies all over the country and half of the 73,000 fake packs recalled


The other defendants are: Peter's brother Ian Gillespie, 58, of The Green, Marsh Baldon, Oxford; Ian Harding, 58, of Lower Westwood, Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire and James Quinn, 69, of Gillespie House, Holloway Drive, Virginia Water, Surrey.


"I am very unhappy with the way he has used my name on the documents," Kemp told the jury. "I am annoyed and have been used."


After twenty-five years of trading Kemco - which enjoyed a £4-£5m annual turnover - was shut down by the Medicines and Health Care Products Regulatory Agency, part of the Department of Health.


Kemp funded Basingstoke-based Consolidated Medical Supplies (CMS) and agreed to bankroll the purchase of Zyprexa tablets - an anti-psychotic drug - at a cost of 400,000 Euros.


He drove Peter Gillespie in his delivery van to a warehouse near Brussels Airport, Belgium to collect the stock - knowing they were Chinese-manufactured fakes, insist the prosecution


"I did not know it was coming from Singapore," claimed Kemp. "I trusted Peter and assumed everything was in order. Everything just happened and I got dragged along.


"This was obviously not the normal deal that you would expect. It was spur of the moment and I should have done more due diligence."


The 'Singapore Airlines Cargo' stickers on the boxes should have rang alarm bells, say the prosecution, but Kemp said: "I did not notice the stickers, I was more interested in the stock."


Kemp immediately pulled out of the deal because the stock was water-damaged, but the prosecution say the trip proves the defendant knew bogus drugs were being imported and would continue to be imported.


"I believed Peter Gillespie did the right things and this stock was coming from a licenced wholesalers. I would not have gone into business with him otherwise."


Another red-flag, say the prosecution, was Kemp's knowledge the source of the medication was Mauritius-based Multiscope Trading Ltd.


"I thought it was an off-shore office. I did not think the stock came from Mauritius," he insisted.


Kemp maintains he believed all the drugs were French-manufactured and would be repackaged for the UK market by CMS.


"Maybe it was the trip to Belgium I was looking forward to."


Approximately 100,000 doses of fake medication ended up in the hands of patients.


The charges relate to 'Casodex', used to treat advanced prostate cancer, 'Plavix', a drug prescribed to prevent blood clots and prevent heart attacks for angina patients and 'Zyprexa' a anti-psychotic drug prescribed to schizophrenic and bipolar patients.


All five have pleaded not guilty that between January 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007, they conspired together and with others to defraud pharmaceutical wholesalers, pharmacists, the public and holders of Intellectual Property Rights in pharmaceuticals by dishonestly distributing for gain counterfeit medicines.


They also deny two counts each of selling or supplying the three drugs without authorisation and selling or supplying counterfeit goods, namely the three medicines, between January 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007.


Peter Gillespie alone denies one count of breaching a company director disqualification order between July, 2005 and June, 2007, following his bankruptcy.


The drugs were manufactured by the notorious Chinese pharmaceutical counterfeiter Lu Xu aka Kevin Xu, currently serving a prison sentence for a similar scam in the United States.

Thursday 17 March 2011

Double Knife Murderer Caged For Life


A double murderer, convicted today of the “brutal and frenzied” killing of a mother-of-three he met hours earlier, has been jailed for life.

David Baxendale, 40, (pictured top) had already stabbed a friend to death years earlier during an alcohol and drug-fueled attack and was free just over a year when he murdered 38 year-old Sarah Thomas (pic. bottom).

After fatally stabbing her in the throat at her Nutfield, Surrey flat on May 10, last year Baxendale fled to the Costa del Sol via a Portsmouth to St. Malo ferry and was captured after a Crimestoppers appeal.

Baxendale, of Chequers Lane, Walton-on-the-Hill, Surrey was arrested in Fuengirola, near Malaga on June 21, last year and was convicted by a Guildford Crown Court jury after a three-week trail.

"She was subjected to a brutal and frenzied attack and was stabbed and struck repeatedly," prosecutor Mr. Richard Jory told the court. "The fatal wound was to the neck, severing the carotid artery.

"The prosecution say it was this defendant, who had just met her that same day, who inflicted these injuries and caused her death."

Miss Thomas had returned to her flat in The Spinning Wheel, High Street in a taxi with Baxendale after they had met through friends.

Her worried "on-off" boyfriend found her bloodstained body in the flat at 5:30pm and raised the alarm.

Meanwhile, Baxendale had fled the scene on foot, dumping the murder weapon, which contained traces of his and the victim's blood at the foot of a tree, the jury were told.

He also dashed across the busy M23 motorway in his desperation to escape. "He was narrowly missed by a number of vehicles," said Mr. Jory.

Baxendale also dumped his jacket, stained with his and the victim's blood, in woods and dumped more clothing, including bloodstained trainers near his mother's home.

He was circulated as wanted by Crimestoppers and identified in a nightclub and arrested at 3am.

The court heard he had a history of violence involving knives – receiving 11 years in Spain in 2001 – after stabbing an acquaintance 14 times.

He was deported back to the UK in June 2008, but was released from prison nine months later.

Just five days before murdering Sarah, Baxendale threatened to kill another woman he met while attending probation requirements and who had stopped returning his calls.

Detective Chief Inspector Steve Hayes, who led the investigation, said: “This was a truly tragic case.

“Sarah Thomas was the victim of a sustained and savage attack in her own home at the hands of a man she had only just met that afternoon.

“The number of injuries she suffered and the ferocity used was truly shocking.

“David Baxendale already had a history of offences involving knives spanning the last 20 years, including a previous conviction for murder.

“He is clearly an extremely dangerous and callous individual whose propensity for violence knows no bounds.

“He has not shown a shred of remorse for this horrific crime and instead tried to flee the country in a bid to evade capture.

“Our thoughts and sympathies remain today with the family and friends of Sarah Thomas, particularly her two eldest sons, and I hope today has brought them some justice and closure for what happened to her.”


Wednesday 16 March 2011

Prison Grub On The Menu For Chef Who Gobbled Pensioner's Savings


A church’s Meal Club chef – who delivered dinners to a lone 88 year-old woman – was jailed for twenty-one months today (Monday) for looting her entire savings.

John Neesam, 62, of Kirkdale, Sydenham was treated as a member of the family by the trusting victim as he drained her bank account of £4,500 in just six months.

Neesam, employed by Grove Centre Church, Jews Walk, Sydenham denied, but was convicted by a Croydon Crown Court jury of theft from Doreen Lovell, who passed away eight days after the trial.

“This was systematic theft over a period of six months,” said Judge Timothy Stow QC. “She must have been very distressed to discover the money had gone.

“At the end of the day this offence is so serious only an immediate custodial sentence is justified. This was a very mean type of offence.”

Widow Mrs Lovell trusted Neesam to write cheques on her behalf to pay for the meals, but on seventeen occasions between July, 2009 and January, last year he wrote increasingly large amounts to himself.

“It was an awful lot of money for her. It was her savings and she did not get a penny back,” added Judge Stow. “She was extremely distressed to suddenly find her savings had been stolen.

“She regarded you and your wife as very good friends and trusted you completely,” the Judge told Neesam. “You were like a family to the victim.

“She regarded you as family and trusted you completely and it must have been an appalling shock to realise you had let her down.”

Tuesday 15 March 2011

Nigerian Couple Arrested In Swoop On 'Passport Factory'


An illegal immigrant couple – whose Lewisham home was a HQ for producing bogus documents – were arrested during a swoop, which smashed an “organised set up” a court heard.

Abiola Olatunji-Orelope, 33, and his wife Folashade Olatunji-Orelope, 28, of Claxton Path, (pictured) were removed from the property along with 60-70 passports, forged marriage and death certificates, national insurance cards and other bogus identity documents.

“This was quite an organised set up,” prosecutor Miss Katherine Mansfield told Croydon Crown Court. “Strewn about the house in envelopes and carrier bags were handwritten details of various people, dates of birth and addresses.”

Abiola pleaded guilty to possessing articles in relation to making false identity documents; using a false national insurance card to obtain leave to remain in the UK and possessing a false identity document, namely a French passport.

Mother-of-three Folashade pleaded guilty to possessing a false identity document, with intent, namely a Nigerian passport.

The UK Border Agency became suspicious of Abiola’s application for permanent leave to remain because he supported it with a forged national insurance card.

Armed with a warrant, officials raided the couple’s rented home on September 9, last year.

“In the couple’s room a considerable amount of documents were found stuffed inside a carrier bag hidden in the airing cupboard,” explained Miss Mansfield.

“Also found were passport-sized photographs, superglue, a metal ruler, razor blades and ink thinner.

“It was quite clearly a kit for the manufacture of false documents and also included the laminate sheets for passport pages already embossed.”

Officers found further passports and identity cards in the kitchen.

“Neither of the defendants have leave to remain in the UK,” added Miss Mansfield.

When Abiola’s phone was checked it contained text messages from people requesting identity documents, including utility bills.

He has been in the UK since 1994 and the couple’s children are aged four, three and eighteen months.

They will be sentenced on April 11.

Monday 14 March 2011

Free Night Out Comes At A Price


Two cheapskates are paying the price for trying to get away with a free night out in which a restaurant was left with a £226 bill and a smoker had his remaining cigs snatched out of his hand.

Jobless Gavin Trendell, 34, pleaded guilty to making off without paying his restaurant bill at Zizzi’s (pictured) in Widmore Road, Bromley, South East London on November 10, last year.

Jobless James Woodbridge, 23, pleaded guilty to stealing a pack of Marlboro’s containing five cigarettes from a 42 year-old Dutchman in nearby Queen’s Road after the prosecution dropped a robbery charge.

Croydon Crown Court heard three men ran up the bill in the popular Italian restaurant and Trendell rowed with staff after his bankcard was refused and fled with his two pals.

One of them was Woodbridge, who in a nearby street asked a passing man for a cigarette and shouted: “Bash him over the head,” before snatching the packet.

The court heard Trendell has a history of dishonesty and a previous conviction for bilking a taxi fare.

“Your offences are nuisance offences and they clog up the crown courts,” Judge Ruth Downing told the pair.

Both defendants were conditionally discharged for twelve months and Trendell ordered to pay £120 costs and Woodbridge £200.

Trendall was also ordered to pay £180 compensation to the restaurant.

“The people who run Zizzi’s are entitled not to have people run up huge bills for pizza and other food and then run off without paying,” the Judge told him.

Sunday 13 March 2011

Brixton Knife Murder: Man Charged As Local MP Issues Warning


A hotel worker has appeared in court charged with the murder of a father-of-two – stabbed to death in South London – resulting in the local MP calling for more details on how the government is tackling knife and gun crime.

Soloman Sarfo, 34, (pictured) suffered fatal stab wounds in Tilson Gardens, Brixton Hill on February 27 and hotel worker Jamie Rickerby, 25, of Balham High Road has been charged with his murder.

Police were called at 11:35pm to reports of a man stabbed near the junction with Forster Road and Mr. Sarfo was pronounced dead at the scene.

Streatham MP Chukka Umunna made the information request in the House of Commons after raising concerns about cuts to voluntary organisations working to prevent gun and knife crime.

The MP said: “Knife and gun crime continue to blight inner-city communities such as mine.

"The trial is ongoing of those accused of murdering fifteen year-old Zac Olumegbon in July last year, and now in my constituency, Solomon Sarfo was stabbed and murdered.

“Will the Home Secretary come to the House to give us an update on what the Government are doing to prevent that needless loss of life in our communities?

"I ask because I am particularly concerned that many of the third-sector organisations working to prevent such crimes are seeing their funding withdrawn.”

Sir George Young, Leader of the House, replied: “I very much regret the loss of life to which the hon. Gentleman refers, and I understand the deep feeling in his constituency.

“The coalition agreement makes it clear that we want to take a robust approach to those who carry knives, with appropriate penalties to deal with knife crime.”

Afterwards, Mr Umunna said: “Sadly, as the tragic murder of Solomon Sarfo demonstrates, knife crime continues to be a significant problem on our streets.

“I hope that the government adopts a strong, properly-funded strategy on knife crime.

"I believe it is only right that communities are updated on the action which central government is taking and that their MPs have the opportunity to debate this issue fully on their behalves.”

Saturday 12 March 2011

Justice Catches Up With Rapist 26 Years On


A balaclava-clad sex beast – who dodged justice for twenty-six years following a terrifying armed attack on a couple in their South London home – has finally been caged for sixteen years.

Robert Clarke, 43, (pictured) was a teenager when he broke into the Upper Norwood property and threatened the occupants with a knife and iron bar, raping the woman twice and indecently assaulting the man.

A telltale palm print left at the scene by Clarke underwent a new forensic review – identifying him as the mystery assailant.

He was convicted of two counts of rape and indecent assault, aggravated burglary, false imprisonment and incitement to commit indecent assault on August 20, 1984.

The victims were also tied up with cables, flexes and chain, before Clarke fled through a window, making off with jewellery, a watch and cash.

Detective Constable Claire Watts, pf the Metropolitan Police’s Cold Case Sapphire team said: “This was a terrifying ordeal for both victims and after all of this time, Clarke thought he got away with it.

Today's outcome shows victims of sexual assault that the Metropolitan Police Service will pursue their attackers and bring them to prosecution, no matter how much time has passed.”

Friday 11 March 2011

Businessman Denies Knowing Imported Pills Were Chinese Fakes


A businessman accused of a multi-million pound counterfeit-medicines plot - Europe's biggest ever - told a he did not know the drugs were Chinese-manufactured fakes.


Richard Kemp, 61, of School Lane, Y Waen, Flint Mountain, Clwyd, the ex-boss of Kemco Pharmaceutical Ltd. is accused with four others of being motivated by "pure greed" when selling three types of life-saving medicines.


Medicine watchdogs ordered a Class One recall of all suspected drugs - taken by heart and cancer patients and the mentally ill - resulting in shelves cleared in pharmacies all over the country.


Charges were brought following a two-year investigation by the Medicines and Health Care products Regulatory Agency, part of the Department of Health into Consolidated Medical Supplies Ltd. (CMS).


The company, of Unit 14, Sherrington Way, Lister Road, Industrial Estate, Basingstoke, had its Wholesale Dealers Licence revoked by the MHRA on January 8, 2008.


The other defendants are: Peter Gillespie, 64, of Carey Close, Windsor, Berkshire; Peter's brother Ian Gillespie, 58, of The Green, Marsh Baldon, Oxford; Ian Harding, 58, of Lower Westwood, Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire and James Quinn, 69, of Gillespie House, Holloway Drive, Virginia Water, Surrey.


Kemp pumped £186,000 into CMS, but when asked if he knew the company's supplies of drugs originated in Singapore he told the Croydon Crown Court jury: "Definitely not."


He also insisted he did not know the good name of his company was being used as the consignee for shipments of drugs, that Kemco's wholesale dealers licence was being used or that his name was being forged on documents.


Kemco was founded in 1982 and originally run from the defendant's home, which had a purpose-built concrete warehouse with steel doors to store the large amounts of prescription drugs he traded in.


He expanded into Ireland and imported medicines for the U.K. market, enjoying a £4-5m annual turnover and a £360,000-£450,000 a year salary.


A clearly emotional Kemp told the jury: "No business exists anymore. In two weeks in 2007 they closed them down in the U.K. and Ireland.


When asked if he was an honest businessman he insisted: "Definitely, yes."


CMS emerged from the ashes of Staines-based Discpharm, which went bust, leaving Peter Gillespie bankrupt and banned from running a business.


"I believed CMS was Peter trying to resurrect the French side of Discpharm," Kemp told the jury, giving evidence for the first time since the trial began three months ago.


"Peter wanted to talk to me about getting involved in CMS financially.


"The old French customers would not deal with him because the bank had put the poison in.


"I had always worked on my own, but Peter did a good selling job on me and I was persuaded to put some money in."


Kemp had meetings at the Basingstoke HQ where he claims he believed legal French prescription medicines would be imported and repackaged for the retail market.


"Peter was saying this business was successful before and it could be successful again and we had to get over the negativity of the French wholesalers."


The charges relate to 'Casodex', used to treat advanced prostate cancer, 'Plavix', a drug prescribed to prevent blood clots and prevent heart attacks for angina patients and 'Zyprexa' a anti-psychotic drug prescribed to schizophrenic and bipolar patients.


All five have pleaded not guilty that between January 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007, they conspired together and with others to defraud pharmaceutical wholesalers, pharmacists, the public and holders of Intellectual Property Rights in pharmaceuticals by dishonestly distributing for gain counterfeit medicines.


They also deny two counts each of selling or supplying the three drugs without authorisation and selling or supplying counterfeit goods, namely the three medicines, between January 1, 2006 and June 30, 2007.


Peter Gillespie alone denies one count of breaching a company director disqualification order between July, 2005 and June, 2007, following his bankruptcy.


The drugs were manufactured by the notorious Chinese pharmaceutical counterfeiter Lu Xu aka Kevin Xu, currently serving a prison sentence for a similar scam in the United States.


His bogus drugs were imported via Singapore and Belgium before being ferried and driven into the U.K and distributed by the five defendants, allege the prosecution.


Trial continues.................

Thursday 10 March 2011

Sports Entrepreneur Jailed For Olympic-Sized Lies



A notorious con man - who told a gold medalist Olympic-sized lies - was jailed for three years today for cashing in on the 2012 dreams of young athletes and their parents.

Fraudster Mark Cas, 47, signed-up sprinter Mark Lewis-Francis, 29, - who clinched gold in the 4x100m relay at the 2004 Athens games - with outlandish promises of sponsorship deals totalling £35m lined up.

Using the athlete's name, plus Heptathlete and TV Gladiator star Lucy Boggis, 20, who he also signed to Global sponsorship Group Ltd. Cas pocketed £13,000 in membership fees.

"You decided you needed big names to reel in smaller fish," Judge Nicholas Ainley told Cas (pictured) at Croydon Crown Court. "This was a very nasty fraud.

"You decided this business was not going to make enough money for your greedy purposes so you swindled people. You are addicted to swindling people, you have been doing it all your adult life."

Global Sponsorship Group Ltd. promised lucrative sponsorship deals with FTSE 100 companies including Audi, Virgin and Vodafone in return for a £500 membership fee.

In reality the company was penniless and set-up by Cas, who lived in a bail hostel in West Brook Road, Thornton Heath, shortly after his prison release for another fraud.

Lewis-Francis agreed a £144,000 three-year contract, but dumped Cas when his first two cheques bounced and Boggis agreed an eight-year deal worth over £456,000.

Nottingham-born Reigning European and Commonwealth 110m hurdles champion Andy Turner, 30, from Hucknall, agreed a £132,000 three-year contract; Sprinter Abi Oyepitan, 31, a Commonwealth bronze medalist, agreed a £86,000 three-year deal and former national long jump champion Gary Wilson, 25, penned a £72,000 three-year agreement.

Cas was convicted of falsely representing to Lewis-Francis and Boggis that Global Sponsorship Group Ltd. would pay those sponsorship contracts, cover medical bills and provide an Audi car.

He was cleared of a similar charge in relation to Turner, Oyepitan and Wilson.

"He was formulating a bogus scam whereby athletes would be conned into parting with their money," prosecutor Mr. Mark Paltenghi told the jurors. "The scam was brought about by him trying to climb on the London Olympics bandwagon.

"The defendant identified there was money to be made in the corporate world of sponsorship amongst British athletes because there was a lot of them that needed support.

"He devised a half-way house, in his own words, a match-making service for a fee," added Mr. Paltenghi.

"His business purported to provide a lifeline for athletes who needed funding and for a fee provide companies that were willing to provide it.

"It all looked very attractive, very profitable. The answer to the prayers of many athletes.

"This scheme was never intended to be genuine, it was utterly bogus and dishonest from the outset, dreamt up as a plausible enterprise.

"The defendant did not have a thirty-five million pound portfolio. There were no corporate sponsors. He did not have a single penny of funding available at all."

The court was told Cas used the five "Ambassador" athletes to woo younger promising athletes, with their parents often paying the membership fee to secure lucrative sponsorship.

He pleaded guilty to seven specimen fraud counts in relation to those victims.

Cas - who has a string of convictions under his old name Castley - has previously served five separate prison sentences for deception.

He was jailed for three years and eight months for duping the people of Tewkesbury and Stevenage in a "get-rich-quick" scam and used fake cheques to fund his lavish wedding at 500 year-old Thornbury Castle, Gloucestershire and finance helicopter rides to Ascot racecourse.

He previously received four-and-a-half years for a Hampshire scam, which netted him hundreds of thousands of pounds, after victims - including a top barrister - invested in a bogus surveillance equipment deal.

Cas even posed as a multi-millionaire on internet dating site sugardaddie.com, bedding film director Michael Winner's PA, the night before they viewed a £3.4m Essex mansion he was 'buying'.

Wednesday 9 March 2011

DNA Nails Sex Beast 15 Years On


DNA evidence has finally caught up with a sex offender – jailed for three years – for attacking a female hospital worker in a strore room fifteen years ago.

Homeless Daniel Dolen, 31, pleaded guilty at Southwark Crown Court to indecently assaulting the woman – then in her 40’s – at an unnamed South London hospital on January 30, 1996.

During her shift the woman was followed into the store room by the defendant, who closed the door behind him, put his hand over the victim’s mouth, ordering her to keep quiet, and indecently assaulted her.

Dolen was disturbed mid-attack by two suspicious doctors who banged on the door when they noticed a strange man entering the room and he calmly walked straight past them and escaped.

He was identified via DNA left at the scene – with a one in one billion match – and was arrested by the Metropolitan Police’s Sapphire Cold Case Investigation Team.

Detective Constable Claire Watts said: “The victim went through a terrifying ordeal at her place of work where she should have felt safe and at ease.



“This sexual attack happened fifteen years ago before modern advances in DNA.

“If it had not have been for the two doctors' quick thinking at the time of the attack, then we may not have been able to retain evidence at the scene and find a DNA match years later.



“The result today shows our determination not to give up and find justice for victims and their families.

“We hope today's conviction will bring some closure for the victim, after living with this terrifying ordeal for fifteen years.”

Tuesday 8 March 2011

Police Hunt For Jack White's Signed Guitar


Burglars snatched a White Stripes guitar – autographed by Jack and Meg – when they broke into an East London recording studio.

Police are hunting the rare instrument (pictured) and the culprits, who broke into the premises in Sara Lane Court, Hackney overnight between January 23 and 24.

The rock duo recorded hit album ‘Elephant’ in Hackney and the signed guitar is believed to be a gift from those sessions.

The raiders also snatched a 32” television, a computer, drills and projection equipment.

Detective Constable Suzanne Raftery of Hackney police's Burglary Unit, said: “I am appealing for anyone who may have witnessed this burglary.

“I am also appealing to members of the public to come forward if anybody has tried to sell them this rare autographed Jack White guitar.”



Anyone with any information is asked to call Hackney police's Burglary Unit on 020 7275 3253 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Monday 7 March 2011

Predator Receives Eleven Years For Raping Senile Pensioner


A rapist who preyed on a vulnerable 71 year-old pensioner with severe senile dementia – ripping off her clothes in a storage room and attacking her – has been caged for 11 years.

Michael Ramnel Williams, 55, of Quex Road, Kilburn, North-West London accosted the woman – who remembers nothing of the attack – after she went missing from her Willesden care home.

Williams (pictured) was convicted at Harrow Crown Court of rape and sexual activity with a person with a mental disorder, impeding choice and was also placed on the Sex Offenders Register for life.

Detective Constable Stuart Coutin, of the Metropolitan Police’s Sapphire unit, said: “I am very grateful that the court has recognised the guilt of the defendant. 



“This has been a particularly difficult case to investigate because the victim gets confused and has no memory of the incident.

“The forensic evidence in this investigation was crucial in identifying Williams, in confirming an offence had taken place and in confirming the location of the offence.”

The victim was reported missing at 9:am on August 11, last year and was next seen at 9:30pm half-naked in Willesden High Street.

She was very confused, with some of her clothing missing and had some bruising on her body.



She was taken to hospital and then to a Haven clinic where an intimate examination proved she had been the victim of rape.

DNA identified Williams as a suspect and he was arrested in the early morning of September 14.

Williams admitted meeting the victim and taking her to a small storage room in between the blocks in Angel Court, Willesden High Road.

When police searched the area they discovered the victim's missing items of clothing and her slippers.



DC Coutin added: “This has been a very distressing time for the family of the victim, and we cannot know how much it has impacted on the victim herself.



“It was thanks to the tenacious attitude of everyone involved we were able to prove a crime had been committed and to ensure Williams was brought before the courts.

“Sapphire officers are specially trained to deal with the victims of sexual offences and offer support to the victims, and in this case her family.

“We hope they are now able to enjoy their time with their mother knowing her attacker is behind bars.”