Post by QPR Report on Mar 31, 2010 11:18:51 GMT
Who knew?
Telegraph
Heathrow robbers guilty: profiles of the four criminals
Here are profiles of the four men at the centre of the Heathrow robbery trial, the first serious criminal case to be held without a jury in England and Wales:
Published: 11:11AM BST 31 Mar 2010
:: JOHN TWOMEY, now 62, was the ringleader of the six-man Heathrow robbery gang, recruiting its members and masterminding the raid.
Twomey claimed to be an asthmatic with a dodgy ticker who had suffered the misfortune of being ''fitted up'' on various occasions by the Flying Squad.
Judge "devastated" that robbery case costing £22 million collapses for third time
Edmund Lawson, QCIn fact he was an experienced career criminal with a string of convictions dating back to the 1970s and extensive underworld connections.
But denying any role in the Menzies hold-up, he said: ''I never had one ha'penny and the money was laundered through a police-run bureau.''
He protested that he had done nothing to deserve a trial with no jury.
Born in Cork in 1948, Twomey moved to Paddington, west London, as a child, later living in Ruislip.
In 1971, he was jailed for five years after admitting to an armed robbery of a security guard, with four other men, at Westminster City Hall, stealing £27,000 which was never recovered.
Four years later he was sentenced to 12 months after he admitted attacking a taxi driver, and in 1976 he received a two-month term for an offensive weapons charge.
He would later describe at the Old Bailey how he was arrested again on robbery and firearms charges but the case was dropped.
Twomey said he gave evidence in the 1980s against members of the Met's Flying Squad as part of the Operation Countryman corruption investigation and that while they were acquitted of allegations they faced they were thrown off the force.
He said that after he gave evidence, he was arrested and tried over an earlier robbery and acquitted, before successfully suing the police for £25,000.
In the 1990s he was jailed for a year over a counterfeit money charge and was later banned from driving for three years after being caught over the limit.
The twice-married father of five is believed by police to have extensive connections in the criminal underworld.
But Twomey claimed his living came from a share in a pub in Ruislip as well as selling items such as DVDs, CDs and shoes.
By the time of the Heathrow robbery he was living in New Milton, Hampshire, where he set up a furniture shop. He was arrested shortly after the heist.
He claimed that he was an alcoholic who spectacularly fell off the wagon on the night of the heist and remembered little about his movements.
Twomey said: ''I'd had two heart attacks. I had asthma. Nobody would be likely to be going on a robbery with me in case I got caught.''
He claimed that bags stuffed with cash he was filmed carrying later on the night of the robbery in fact contained bottles of beer.
:: PETER BLAKE was the robber who fired on Menzies employee David Westwood after he bravely tried to flee and raise the alarm during the raid.
The bullet missed but during a struggle with Blake, Mr Westwood tore a black woollen hat from his head and parts of a latex mask from his face - on both of which the robber's DNA was found.
Blake, 57, threw the latest trial into turmoil when he disappeared from the Royal Courts of Justice.
He said that during his absence he had been driven to a hotel near Ascot by an unnamed friend.
When he returned the following week to give evidence he said he felt let down by the justice system and had never been involved in any jury tampering.
Explaining why he absconded he said: ''I know I am going to Belmarsh, I am going to get no phone calls, no visits. I needed some clothes.''
Like his co-defendants, he had been on bail but after his flit he was remanded into custody and proceedings were subsequently transferred to the Old Bailey.
Blake, who grew up in south-east London before moving to Notting Hill, admitted he had a ''long criminal history'' but told Mr Justice Treacy: ''This is way out of my league, this Menzies robbery.''
He claimed he had not met any of his co-defendants until after his arrest.
Blake had convictions for a building society robbery and the armed hold-up of a Bejam store in 1983.
He was jailed again after he and an accomplice were caught with firearms on London's Edgware Road waiting to rob a security guard, in 1992.
Blake was arrested over the Heathrow heist in 2005. He has denied any part in the raid and said he would have been on the way home from visiting his ailing mother at the time.
:: BARRY HIBBERD, 43, was well known to police in Shepherd's Bush as a football hooligan who followed Queens Park Rangers.
With several convictions for violence, including a stabbing, he provided muscle for Twomey's robbery gang.
Senior prosecutors said he, along with Blake, was recruited because of his ''knowledge of, or contact with, firearms''.
He also had ready access to firearms including pistols and a sub-machine gun, plus ammunition, discovered in a lock-up garage in Uxbridge.
Hibberd livened up the trial with a colourful account of the night of the robbery which he claimed he spent carousing with a woman called Caroline in Ruislip after going to the pub following a row with his pregnant partner.
He explained to Mr Justice Treacy how he had been drinking shorts that made him ''nutty'' and also ''had a dabble'' of cocaine.
Hibberd claimed he could remember little about the evening, telling the judge: ''If you can remember a night out then it must have been rubbish.''
He said he later asked a friend to look for Caroline in Ruislip while he was in custody but the description he offered was not much to go on.
In that area, he explained, there must be thousands of ''blonde birds with big...'' before being cut short by his barrister.
According to Hibberd's account, he later bumped into other members of the gang during the evening and Twomey later asked him to provide an alibi.
He said he did not want to get involved, telling him: ''Knowing my luck, I'll probably get nicked for it.''
''Look where I am now,'' he told the court. He was arrested in 2006.
During previous proceedings Hibberd, a former pub doorman, had told a jury he was a soul singer.
:: GLENN CAMERON, Twomey's brother-in-law, was on the run for three years after the robbery before being tracked down to a small cottage on a caravan park in Perranporth, Cornwall, in March 2007.
He had been using a false name and black bin bags covered the windows of the cottage, the court heard.
Cameron, 50, a roofer with no previous convictions, grew up in East Acton before moving to New Milton.
He said he worked delivering shoes and other goods for Twomey.
Cameron was involved with his brother-in-law in the planning of the raid.
The pair were captured along with Hibberd arriving at a nearby hotel just moments after the heist, along with a holdall and a large plastic bag apparently stuffed with stolen money.
Cameron claimed that he too was on a night out at the time of the raid.
:: Senior prosecutors said that two other suspected robbers ''have not been brought to justice''.
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7540802/Heathrow-robbers-guilty-profiles-of-the-four-criminals.html
Peter Blake (left) Barry Hibberd
Telegraph
Heathrow robbers guilty: profiles of the four criminals
Here are profiles of the four men at the centre of the Heathrow robbery trial, the first serious criminal case to be held without a jury in England and Wales:
Published: 11:11AM BST 31 Mar 2010
:: JOHN TWOMEY, now 62, was the ringleader of the six-man Heathrow robbery gang, recruiting its members and masterminding the raid.
Twomey claimed to be an asthmatic with a dodgy ticker who had suffered the misfortune of being ''fitted up'' on various occasions by the Flying Squad.
Judge "devastated" that robbery case costing £22 million collapses for third time
Edmund Lawson, QCIn fact he was an experienced career criminal with a string of convictions dating back to the 1970s and extensive underworld connections.
But denying any role in the Menzies hold-up, he said: ''I never had one ha'penny and the money was laundered through a police-run bureau.''
He protested that he had done nothing to deserve a trial with no jury.
Born in Cork in 1948, Twomey moved to Paddington, west London, as a child, later living in Ruislip.
In 1971, he was jailed for five years after admitting to an armed robbery of a security guard, with four other men, at Westminster City Hall, stealing £27,000 which was never recovered.
Four years later he was sentenced to 12 months after he admitted attacking a taxi driver, and in 1976 he received a two-month term for an offensive weapons charge.
He would later describe at the Old Bailey how he was arrested again on robbery and firearms charges but the case was dropped.
Twomey said he gave evidence in the 1980s against members of the Met's Flying Squad as part of the Operation Countryman corruption investigation and that while they were acquitted of allegations they faced they were thrown off the force.
He said that after he gave evidence, he was arrested and tried over an earlier robbery and acquitted, before successfully suing the police for £25,000.
In the 1990s he was jailed for a year over a counterfeit money charge and was later banned from driving for three years after being caught over the limit.
The twice-married father of five is believed by police to have extensive connections in the criminal underworld.
But Twomey claimed his living came from a share in a pub in Ruislip as well as selling items such as DVDs, CDs and shoes.
By the time of the Heathrow robbery he was living in New Milton, Hampshire, where he set up a furniture shop. He was arrested shortly after the heist.
He claimed that he was an alcoholic who spectacularly fell off the wagon on the night of the heist and remembered little about his movements.
Twomey said: ''I'd had two heart attacks. I had asthma. Nobody would be likely to be going on a robbery with me in case I got caught.''
He claimed that bags stuffed with cash he was filmed carrying later on the night of the robbery in fact contained bottles of beer.
:: PETER BLAKE was the robber who fired on Menzies employee David Westwood after he bravely tried to flee and raise the alarm during the raid.
The bullet missed but during a struggle with Blake, Mr Westwood tore a black woollen hat from his head and parts of a latex mask from his face - on both of which the robber's DNA was found.
Blake, 57, threw the latest trial into turmoil when he disappeared from the Royal Courts of Justice.
He said that during his absence he had been driven to a hotel near Ascot by an unnamed friend.
When he returned the following week to give evidence he said he felt let down by the justice system and had never been involved in any jury tampering.
Explaining why he absconded he said: ''I know I am going to Belmarsh, I am going to get no phone calls, no visits. I needed some clothes.''
Like his co-defendants, he had been on bail but after his flit he was remanded into custody and proceedings were subsequently transferred to the Old Bailey.
Blake, who grew up in south-east London before moving to Notting Hill, admitted he had a ''long criminal history'' but told Mr Justice Treacy: ''This is way out of my league, this Menzies robbery.''
He claimed he had not met any of his co-defendants until after his arrest.
Blake had convictions for a building society robbery and the armed hold-up of a Bejam store in 1983.
He was jailed again after he and an accomplice were caught with firearms on London's Edgware Road waiting to rob a security guard, in 1992.
Blake was arrested over the Heathrow heist in 2005. He has denied any part in the raid and said he would have been on the way home from visiting his ailing mother at the time.
:: BARRY HIBBERD, 43, was well known to police in Shepherd's Bush as a football hooligan who followed Queens Park Rangers.
With several convictions for violence, including a stabbing, he provided muscle for Twomey's robbery gang.
Senior prosecutors said he, along with Blake, was recruited because of his ''knowledge of, or contact with, firearms''.
He also had ready access to firearms including pistols and a sub-machine gun, plus ammunition, discovered in a lock-up garage in Uxbridge.
Hibberd livened up the trial with a colourful account of the night of the robbery which he claimed he spent carousing with a woman called Caroline in Ruislip after going to the pub following a row with his pregnant partner.
He explained to Mr Justice Treacy how he had been drinking shorts that made him ''nutty'' and also ''had a dabble'' of cocaine.
Hibberd claimed he could remember little about the evening, telling the judge: ''If you can remember a night out then it must have been rubbish.''
He said he later asked a friend to look for Caroline in Ruislip while he was in custody but the description he offered was not much to go on.
In that area, he explained, there must be thousands of ''blonde birds with big...'' before being cut short by his barrister.
According to Hibberd's account, he later bumped into other members of the gang during the evening and Twomey later asked him to provide an alibi.
He said he did not want to get involved, telling him: ''Knowing my luck, I'll probably get nicked for it.''
''Look where I am now,'' he told the court. He was arrested in 2006.
During previous proceedings Hibberd, a former pub doorman, had told a jury he was a soul singer.
:: GLENN CAMERON, Twomey's brother-in-law, was on the run for three years after the robbery before being tracked down to a small cottage on a caravan park in Perranporth, Cornwall, in March 2007.
He had been using a false name and black bin bags covered the windows of the cottage, the court heard.
Cameron, 50, a roofer with no previous convictions, grew up in East Acton before moving to New Milton.
He said he worked delivering shoes and other goods for Twomey.
Cameron was involved with his brother-in-law in the planning of the raid.
The pair were captured along with Hibberd arriving at a nearby hotel just moments after the heist, along with a holdall and a large plastic bag apparently stuffed with stolen money.
Cameron claimed that he too was on a night out at the time of the raid.
:: Senior prosecutors said that two other suspected robbers ''have not been brought to justice''.
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7540802/Heathrow-robbers-guilty-profiles-of-the-four-criminals.html
Peter Blake (left) Barry Hibberd