Tuesday 3 July 2012

"Caveman" Dentist Accused Of Busting Wife's Jaw


A physically abusive "caveman" dentist, who made his jealous new bride's life hell, broke her jaw as she tried to force the family car into the path of oncoming traffic, a court heard.


Dentist Khalid Faiz, 47, and 44 year-old Hina Yakub, a cargo executive with the Emirates airline, kept up the pretence of a happy marriage, despite the violence inside their suburban home.


"They were a high-flying couple and to the outside observer they were doing very well," prosecutor Mr. Roger Daniells-Smith told the Croydon Crown Court jury yesterday.


"They were prosperous and apparently happy, but behind closed doors it was a different scene.


"As soon as they got married things started to go badly and rapidly downhill and the marriage effectively lasted one year. The downfall was domestic violence."


Father-of-three Faiz, of South Eden Park Road, Beckenham, who has a dental surgery at Southborough Lane, Bromley claims his ex is "violent and emotionally unstable."


He has pleaded not guilty to two counts of causing actual bodily harm to Hina on March 13 and June 29, 2010 and causing her grievous bodily harm on July 23.


The court heard just six weeks after their marriage - the second for both of them - Faiz attacked his new wife in the matrimonial home.


"He lost his temper and started slapping and punching her in the face, knocking her to the floor," explained Mr. Daniells-Smith.


"He sat on her, continued punching her, and then placed his foot on her chest, injuring her breastbone, and making it difficult for her to breathe. He effectively stamped on her.


"They put a brave face on it that nothing was going on when visiting his family, but Hina was struggling to breathe and did not eat anything.


"Her in-laws thought she was aloof, but she was in terrible pain and then went to hospital and lied to the doctors, telling them a weight had fallen on her chest at the gym."


The second assault also took place at the family home. "The defendant lost his temper and struck her," said Mr. Daniells-Smith.


"He was also grabbing her by the arms, causing her bruising, and bent the fingers on her right hand back."


Again Hina failed to report her husband to the police. "She was concerned about the shame and humiliation it would bring on the family."


By July she was convinced her husband was having an affair.


"She decided to confront him and burst into the dental surgery unexpectedly," said the prosecutor. "She grabbed the phone Mr. Faiz was using and left.


"He chased her and put her into his car to drive her home and as they were driving she grabbed the wheel and turned it into the oncoming traffic.


"He struck her in the face, he broke her jaw. Blood was splattered all over the inside of the windscreen.


"When they got home he dragged her upstairs by the hair, smearing blood on the walls, and hit her again. It was caveman stuff.


"She grabbed all of the tablets she could in the house and took them, attempting suicide," said Mr. Daniells-Smith. "She rang all the members of her family, including her mother and twenty-two year-old daughter to say goodbye."


Police found Hina wandering the streets and she later reported the assaults.


When quizzed Faiz claimed she was prone to epileptic fits and had injured herself in falls.


"He said she he was driving she was trying to kill them both and he had no choice, but to strike her."


Trial continues………….

Monday 2 July 2012

Two Plotters In Boiling Water Torture Kidnap Plan Caged


Two members of a kidnap and ransom gang behind the abduction of a successful East London garage owner, who had boiling water poured on him during a three-day ordeal, have been caged.


Father-of-two Sukjinder Seyan - boss of 'Prestige Car Specialists', Balmoral Road, Forest Gate - needed skin grafts to his legs after his rescue by Scotland Yard's Kidnap Unit and is scarred for life.


Ashley Fields, 22, (pic.l.) of Crescent Road, Dagenham and 27 year-old Safeer Rahman (pic.r.) of Tumulus Way, Colchester, Essex denied involvement in the plot, but were convicted by a Croydon Crown Court jury.


Fields was sentenced to ten years imprisonment and Rahman eight years after they were both found guilty of conspiracy to kidnap, false imprisonment and blackmail on or before January 10, last year.


"To put it bluntly he was tortured," prosecutor Mr. Roger Smart told the jury at the start of the two-week trial. "The motive was one of sheer greed.


"They thought it would be easy money to take a local businessman and brutally harm the hostage until a substantial amount of money was exchanged for his release."


The court was told mobile phone records link both defendants with the rest of the gang and Rahman - who knew the victim - was the job's "inside man" providing information on Mr. Seyan.


"This group of people thought long and hard about what they were doing," explained Mr. Smart. "There was reconnaissance and one failed attempt before they regrouped on another day.


"They had a stronghold where they kept Mr. Seyan, they had equipment there, held him there and made him call people to get money and brutally assaulted him.


"Mr. Seyan was held for three days and was badly burned by boiling water being poured over him on a number of occasions.


"He has had to undergo surgery to graft skin over the burns and is permanently scarred as a result."


The victim was held at 29 Express Drive, Ilford by other members of the gang who have already been convicted and neither Fields or Rahman is accused of physically harming him.


Fields' role is alleged to be as a "look out" and general assistant to the plan and Rahman was with the victim minutes before he was abducted - allegedly feeding information to his co-conspirators.


Other gang members, armed with a fake police warrant card, approached Mr. Seyan on January 8, last year and bundled him into a vehicle while demanding £350,000 from his safe.


At the 'stronghold' he was pushed onto a mattress and a blanket was thrown over his head, before the gang boiled a kettle of water and poured it over Mr. Seyan's leg and ankle.


He was gagged and bound with tape before a second kettle of boiling water was poured over his left leg and the next day more boiling water was poured over his left arm.


On January 9 Mr. Seyan's wife received a £50,000 ransom demand and immediately called the police who tracked the victim's location via mobile phone signals.


The gang also phoned the victim's girlfriend, demanding the same sum, and frustrated by a lack of progress poured boiling water over his back.


Mr. Seyan was rescued by police, back-up by armed officers, as he sat in a car with his captors outside Arthur Wallis House.

Sunday 1 July 2012

Man Stabs Ex-Wife And Mum-In-Law To Death


A man who stabbed his ex-wife to death on an East London street and then travelled to her home, where he killed her mother and set the property ablaze, has been jailed for life.

Sergei Zolotovsky, 44, of Gareth Drive, Edmonton was convicted of murdering Svetlana Zolotovska, 40, and Antonia Belska, 70, and will be locked-up for a minimum of thirty years.

He plunged a knife into Svetlana’s neck, chest and abdomen in Stansfield Road, Canning Town at 7.30am on August 12, last year.

Zolotovsky then went to his ex’s home in Leamouth Road, East Ham, where he also fatally stabbed Antonia, who had been visiting her daughter from her native Latvia.

Detective Chief Inspector Andrew Kelly, of the Homicide and Serious Crime Command, said: “Zvetlana’s family have been devastated by Zolotovsky’s actions that night.

“They will never get over their loss but I hope that they can derive some comfort from seeing Zolotovsky being brought to account for his actions.”


After police responded to the stabbing of Svetlana they visited her home, where a fire was raging in an upstairs room, and found the injured defendant in the loft. 


A family member said: “Our family has suffered indescribable grief as a result of the cruellest murder of the closest and most loved members of our family.

“We have suffered extreme emotional stress. We are still grieving and remembering the loss of our loved ones every day.”

Saturday 30 June 2012

Croydon Armed Robbers Hunted


Flying Squad offices hunting gun-tooting robbers, who raided a Croydon store, have released these CCTV images of two of the suspects.

Three raiders entered JK Gold and Fashion House, London Road, at 1.00pm on January 10.

Two of them were armed with handguns and they threatened staff – robbing them of cash and a mobile phone.

Officers are asking anyone with information as to the identity of the two men to contact the Flying Squad in the strictest of confidence on 020 7232 6530 or to remain anonymous, call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Thursday 28 June 2012

Brother Of Footballer Jermaine Defoe Caught With Knife And Drugs


The brother of Tottenham and England striker Jermaine Defoe - caught with a knife and cannabis when strip-searched by police - was fined £225 today.


Shane Defoe, 25, (pictured) of Higham Hill Road, Walthamstow, claims he began smoking the drug again to relieve stress after his late father was diagnosed with cancer.


He pleaded guilty at City of London Magistrates' Court to possessing a knife blade or sharp pointed article, namely a lock knife, at Bishopsgate Police Station on April 22 and possessing cannabis on the same occasion.


His finances are a world away from the glamorous lifestyle of his striker brother, with the court ordering a £10 weekly deduction from his Employment and Support Allowance.


Prosecutor Miss Melanie Lee told the court: "It was in the early hours, 1.15am, when officers stopped a VW Golf in Bishopsgate, which contained four occupants and Mr. Defoe was a passenger.


"When the officers stopped the vehicle they conducted a search of the vehicle and its occupants and found a small bag of cannabis in the front footwell and the four gentlemen were detained.


"Nobody would say who the cannabis belonged to and they were all subjected to a strip-search in custody and a cannabis joint was found in his trouser pocket and a six inch lock knife was found in his shorts.


"During this search Mr. Defoe removed his jeans and underneath was wearing knee-length Nike shorts.


"At this point a lock knife made off metal fell to the floor and the officer immediately stepped on it and moved it towards the cell door.


"He was interviewed and made no comment to all questions regarding the circumstances of his arrest, the cannabis or the knife.


"He prepared a statement in which he said: 'I admit possession of the cannabis found on my person. I am sorry for this and know it is against the law'."


At Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court in January last year Defoe received a small fine for possessing cannabis.


"In relation to the lock knife there is nothing similar on his record," added Miss Lee.


Defoe's lawyer Ms Maha Sardar told the court: "Mr. Defoe has pleaded guilty to both offences at his first available opportunity on his first appearance.


"As you heard it was a small amount of cannabis on his person for his personal use.


"After his previous conviction he put a stop to using cannabis, but after his father became ill he did occasionally smoke cannabis to alleviate the stress.


"Moments before the car was stopped a passenger gave him the bladed article to hold. It was not used to threaten anyone or cause fear.


"Mr. Defoe has shown extreme remorse for his actions.


"Given the recent passing of Mr. Defoe's father on the seventh of June a community order, with an unpaid work requirement, would not be appropriate.


"He is not employed and doesn't have any savings," added Ms Sardar, explaining Defoe's benefits restart on July 7 after they were cancelled when he failed to sign-on.


Magistrate Mr Spyro Elias told Defoe: "The bladed article is very, very serious. There are guidelines that it is a custodial sentence, first time or not."


Defoe was also ordered to pay £85 costs and a £15 victim surcharge, but when asked for a contribution complained: "I literally have just come with my travel fare. I have ten pounds, but need five pounds to go home."


He was ordered to pay the £5 immediately and Mr. Elias added: "As and when your benefits do start you can inform the court to make the deduction.


"A collection order means if you do not pay your fine someone will knock on your door to recover the value of the fine. Don't ignore it."


The magistrate added: "We have read on the report that he has an extremely supportive family."

Wednesday 27 June 2012

Failed Asylum-Seeker Murdered Girlfriend Day After Visa Defeat


A failed Iranian asylum seeker – who battered his teenage girlfriend with a hammer before strangling her – failed in his final appeal to remain in the UK the day before.

Ako Khalid, 19, of High Street, Barkingside pleaded guilty to murdering student Cheryl Tariah, 17, (pictured) at his hostel on February 7.

He was sentenced at the Old Bailey to life imprisonment – with a recommendation he serve ten-and-a-half years.

Khalid claimed he lost his temper after Cheryl confessed to cheating on him with another man.

Police were called shortly before 4.00pm, following reports of a disturbance at a flat along the high street.

Officers attended and discovered the body of Cheryl, from Chelmsford, Essex. 



A post-mortem examination gave cause of death as compression of the neck. 



Khalid boasted to a pal he had repeatedly struck Cheryl with a hammer, before strangling her.

He was arrested three days later at Dover, trying to smuggle himself out of the country, clinging to the underside of a lorry.

Tuesday 26 June 2012

Balaclava Bandits Binned


Two prolific masked robbers who targeted betting-shops in East London – raiding one bookies four times - have each been jailed for eight years.

John Crick, 37, (pic.top) and Jason Chin, 40, (pic.bottom) only netted £2,000 from the robberies, during which they terrified staff by convincing them they were armed.

They were hunted down by Flying Squad officers, based at Barking, identifying Chin while he was serving a four-year robbery sentence, having been sentenced in 2000 to twelve years for a string of robberies.

Both Crick and Chin would enter the betting-shops wearing balaclavas.

One of them would go directly to the counter and either intimate a firearm or brandish a bag suggesting a weapon was concealed within, forcing staff to hand over cash.



The second male would wait and hold the door to the premises, securing an easy escape.



The offences were:
28 November 2010 - Corals, 97 Southgate Road, Islington.

10 December 2010 - William Hill, 51 Wilton Way, Hackney. 


31 December 2010 - William Hill, 355 Wick Road, Homerton. 


2 February 2011 – Ladbrokes, 81-83 Mare Street, Hackney. 


2 February 2011 - Corals, 97 Southgate Road, Islington. 


5 February 2011 - William Hill, 406 Hackney Road, Brthnal Green. 


8 June and 5 November 2011 - Corals, 97 Southgate Road, Islington. 


5 November 2011 - William Hill, 167 Mare Street, Hackney.



A search of an address linked to Chin led to the recovery of a distinctive black fur-lined hooded jacket worn by one suspect during the spate of robberies.


His accomplice, Crick carried on solo to commit further offences but was later identified by the Flying Squad and arrested.

A search of his home revealed several key items, including jackets worn throughout the series of offences and a distinctive pair of trainers and jeans worn during the robberies. 



Investigating officer Detective Constable Mike Baines said: “Despite the low gain, these men continued to rob bookmakers, causing staff a great deal of distress.

“Criminals intent on targeting commercial premises will continue to attract the scrutiny of the Flying Squad.”

Monday 25 June 2012

'Safe House' Gunman Jailed For Storing Rifles


A man caught in a police swoop on his North London home with two powerful assault rifles in the wardrobe of his spare room has been jailed for six years.

Mohammed Ismail, 29, of Plowmans Close, Upper Edmonton was arrested by the Metropolitan Police’s Central Task Force, who were supported by armed officers from CO19.

They recovered a Belgian Fabrique Nationale fully-automatic assault rifle and a semi-automatic L1A1 self-loading rifle (pictured) – capable of firing up to 460m - during the February 26 raid.

Ismail pleaded guilty at Kingston-upon-Thames Crown Court to possession of prohibited weapons.

Officers believe he may have been storing the weapons for other individuals, with his premises being used as a safe house.

Detective Chief Inspector Steve Wagstaff said: “My officers are constantly seeking to target the upper echelons of organised crime linked to the supply of firearms to gang members within London’s Boroughs.

“This is an excellent example of their expertise in supporting the efforts of borough and Trident teams in tackling gang violence.

“The self-loading rifle is an extremely devastating assault rifle and this seizure means that two more live weapons have been taken off the streets of London.”

Sunday 24 June 2012

Lowest Of The Low: Do You Recognise This Burglar?


Police have released this E-Fit of a suspect, who tricked his way into a lone woman’s home with an accomplice, and emptied her handbag after she was slapped around the face.

The duo visited the address in Chart Street, Islington on May 30, claiming they had to check water pipes and the washing machine – and produced a bogus id.

This E-Fit is of the second suspect, who searched the 37 year-old’s living room while suspect number one asked the occupier to clear pots and pans out from underneath the sink.

When she heard suspect number two in the living room she attempted to leave the kitchen to investigate, but was immediately grabbed by suspect one and slapped around the face.



He held the victim in the kitchen as his accomplice removed money and cards from the victim’s handbag.

Both suspects then left the address.



Suspect two is described as a white man, aged 30 - 40 years, six feet tall, of a stocky build.

He has grey hair and a scar or a scratch that ran from his nose down past his mouth, on the left side of his face.

He was wearing a check shirt and blue gloves, which had a ‘NIKE’, branded tick on the top.



Suspect one is described as a white man, aged 30 to 40 years, six feet one inch tall, with black hair.

He has a flat nose pushed to one side, as if it had been broken.

He was wearing a white T-shirt and blue Jeans.



Anyone with information is asked to contact DC Michelle Savage, from Hackney's Serious Acquisitive Crime Unit, on 020 7275 3232.

Alternatively contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or email hackneypolice@met.police.uk.

Saturday 23 June 2012

Cocaine Courier Caught Returning From Caribbean Family Holiday


A cocaine smuggler, caught with nearly £1m worth of the drug hidden inside two suitcases as he returned with his family from his Caribbean wedding anniversary trip, was jailed for six years yesterday.


Winston Williamson, 52, of Milership House, Shropshire Way, West Bromwich, West Midlands, claims violent loan sharks he owed money to pressured him into the illicit importation.


He was arrested and charged along with his wife Mernel McNaughton, 46, of Wallows Lane, Bescot, Walsall and his niece Nadine Burris, 35, of Sadler House, Newton Drive, Birmingham.


All three, accompanied by three young children, were stopped at Gatwick Airport on March 3 after a covert examination of one of their bags.


Williamson (pictured) pleaded guilty at Croydon Crown Court to importing cocaine and the same charge was dropped against the two women after he insisted they knew nothing about the smuggling operation.


“The mischief and misery that could have been caused by that amount of cocaine in incalculable,” the Recorder of Croydon Judge Warwick McKinnon told Williamson.


“This is a very large amount and you played a significant role.


“You were in this with your eyes open. You knew what you were getting into and did it for the money.”


Eight kilos of cocaine with a purity of 62-81% was found hidden in the bottom of two sports bags – one carried by Williamson and the other left uncollected.


Prosecutor Mr. Hamish Reid told the court the parties’ baggage was identified at the airport’s north terminal.


“One of the bags, in the name of McNaughton, was of interest and these three defendants and the three children with them were intercepted.


“When questioned Williamson said one of the bags was his and the other, which had been left, was Burris’s.


“Williamson’s bag was inspected and the base felt thick and was bulging,” explained Mr. Reid. “The bag was x-rayed, revealing packages in the base that contained white powder.”


A second bag, identified with Burris’s name tag, was also examined.


“It felt heavier than expected and the x-ray revealed something in the base and white powder was found that tested positive for cocaine.


“Williamson said he was experiencing financial difficulties and was under pressure to debtors to carry drugs back.


‘He said he was given two bags to carry back and gave one of them to Burris.


“He said his wife and cousin had no knowledge as to what was being carried in the suitcases.”


The prosecutor submitted the presence of the two women and three children were there to provide cover for the smuggling operation.


“He does not accept he used his wife and his niece as a decoy,” said Williamson’s lawyer Mr. Steve Akinsanya. “He had a change of mind having brought the drugs from Jamaica and left one of the cases behind.


“He had borrowed a sum of money that doubled in four weeks and he and his family were threatened. He agreed to go to Jamaica and bring back the drugs.”


The trip doubled as an anniversary celebration with his wife and an opportunity for Burris, who is engaged, to explore the possibility of getting married there, the court was told.

Friday 22 June 2012

Three Executives Jailed For Multi-Million Pound Sainsbury's Potato Scandal


A greedy Sainsbury's potato buyer, lavished with cash and luxury hospitality totalling £4.9m in return for corruptly granting a multi-million pound contract, was jailed for four years today along with two executives.


Buyer John Maylam, 45, (pic.top) ran up a £200,000 bill at London's Claridge's Hotel; enjoyed a luxury £350,000 twelve-day fortieth birthday holiday to the Monaco Grand Prix; a £93,000 "shiny, black" Aston Martin car and received cash payments totalling hundreds of thousands of pounds stuffed inside brown envelopes.


He guaranteed the lucrative contract with Greenvale AP, whose account manager David Baxter, 50, (pic.mid.) received two-and-a-half years and finance director Andrew Behagg, 60, (pic.bottom) three years.


Maylam, of Blakeney Close, Bearstead, Maidstone pleaded guilty to corruption between January 1, 2006 and January 1, 2008 by accepting gifts from the Greenvale AP directors and acquiring criminal property, namely £1,158m held in a Luxembourg bank account.


Baxter, of Holly House, Chester Road, Hinstock, Market Drayton pleaded guilty to corruptly giving Maylam gifts and consideration between the same dates and acquiring criminal property, namely goods, services and cash between June 1 and July 1, 2007.


Behagg, of London Road, Cambridge, denied, but was convicted of corruption, claiming he was the victim of "extortion" by Maylam.


"There will be many who find the details of this extravagance fascinating and some who may find it entertaining," Croydon Crown Court Judge Nicholas Ainley told the defendants. "Put simply this is bribery and corruption, also corruption involving theft on a huge scale.


"Greenvale wanted to keep the contract……worth forty million pounds and offered Maylam all the lavish entertainment he wanted, over one million pounds of it, in order to save the business.


"It was theft because it was not Greenvale paying the bribe, Sainsbury's were. Sainsbury's' corrupt employee Maylam was allowing himself to be bribed with his own employers money.


"All three of you knew it and all three of you approved it.


"As far as Maylam and Baxter were concerned it was a till to be rifled and Behagg signed-off ludicrous expenses claims, knowing his company would not be paying the money, but Sainsbury's would."


The judge told Maylam: "You abused that trust so you could lead the life of a rich man and what started off as a generous requirement of expenses ended up as utter abuse."


Baxter, who developed liver cirrhosis because he was drinking so much champagne and fine wine, was told: "You also took the opportunity to lead the life of a rich man as someone else's expense. You gave Maylam everything he asked for."


Judge Ainley told Behagg: "You knew Sainsbury's were the victims of theft on a vast scale, yet you signed-off all these invoices."


Maylam's lawyer Mr. Nicholas Walker told the court: "The public will view the spending and consumption out of touch and excessive to the point of vulgarity."


The on-time "uber-performer" claims family and friends have "dropped him like a brick" and Mr. Walker added: "He knows that he faces ruin. Financial ruin."


"What this case concerns is corruption on a massive scale through the payments of excessive gifts and hospitality," said prosecutor Mr. Paul Ozin. "As a result of the corruption Greenvale gained the benefit of keeping Sainsbury's' valuable business and overcharging Sainsbury's for potatoes."


The £40m contract was ratified by Maylam and Greenvale poured £8.7m of Sainsbury's money into an account nicknamed 'The Fund' - paying Maylam and his associates £4.9m and keeping the remainder for themselves.


"Mr. Maylam was corrupted with wholly excessive gifts and hospitality to show favour to Greenvale and work against the interests of his own employers," explained Mr. Ozin. "The hospitality ran into many hundreds of thousands of pounds.


"Firstly they reimbursed Mr. Maylam's own extravagant expenses after he entertained himself at luxury restaurants and hotels, paying his bills at luxury london hotel's, including Claridge's, which came to two hundred thousand pounds.


"Not only was he staying at the hotel, but he was using it as a bank and withdrawing thousands of pounds.


"There were further payments for luxury holidays abroad and very, very lavish corporate entertainment."


Maylam received £85,000 for an unnecessary consultancy report; money was funnelled into John Maylam Potato Consultants; he and Baxter consumed "dozens and dozens" of bottles of expensive vintage Dom Perignon champagne at Claridge's - often followed by a fine claret.


Baxter also enjoyed an all-expenses Antigua trip - financed by 'The Fund' - received an £85,000 BMW M5 from Maylam and spent a total of 77 nights at Claridge's.


Maylam's bill for a presidential suite during the GP was £48,000 alone and receipts proved a £200 bottle of Dom Perignon was bought for him at the five-star Mandarin Hotel, Knightsbridge shortly before an £843 sushi meal.


He was also entertained at the luxury Blue Palace Resort & Spa, Crete, where Greenvale ensured there was a bottle of chilled Veuve Clicquot champagne on his arrival, plus a bouquet of freshly-cut flowers and strawberries and cream.


Sainsbury's own code of conduct demands all hospitality gifts must be placed in a charity raffle and failure to do so may result in misconduct proceedings and dismissal.


"Further money was syphoned off by Mr. Maylam by using bogus businesses pretending to be something else and became another way of taking lot's of money," added the prosecutor.


"One and a half million pounds was paid to Mr. Maylam through third parties and a bank account in Luxembourg. The payments were made on the bogus basis they were for potato research or storage of potatoes in Spain.


"A peculiar feature of the corruption was that it was self-funding. Greenvale were not paying for it, Sainsbury's were paying for the corruption of their own buyer and this was achieved by overcharging Sainsbury's."


Baxter was based at offices in Tern Hill, Warrant Road, Stoke Heath and gave evidence against Behagg, who worked from Harvest House, Bridge Street, Chatteris. "Mr. Baxter paints a picture of corruption that goes to the very heart of Greenvale. To the senior management," said Mr. Ozin.


Baxter claims Maylam had an arrangement with the company's chief executive officer from June, 2005 to receive secret cash reimbursements for his expenses.


"Mr. Maylam sent his receipts in envelopes to Mr. Baxter's home address to avoid Greenvale scrutiny and he then took them to Mr. Behagg. Mr. Baxter would then deliver the cash in a brown envelope to Mr. Maylam.


"Mr Baxter says 'The Fund' was discussed in senior management meetings that were attended by Mr. Behagg, who explained to the others what went through the books.


"Mr. Maylam then made it clear he wanted more and was told the payment could be for a consultancy report, which was suggested by Mr. Behagg. This resulted in a payment of eighty-five thousand pounds."


Sainsbury's also ended up paying more for Greenvale's potatoes than agreed.


"What happened under Sainsbury's radar was that Mr. Maylam was agreeing to massive increases in the price of potatoes. The prices were much too high.


"One technique was to add on one pound to a crate and with the volume we are talking about it soon adds up," said Mr. Ozin. "They also supplied smaller packs for the same price and there were illogical prices for new packs."


A financial investigation into the defendants assets will follow.