Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2003 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Tony Thompson, crime correspondent The Observer DEAD DRUG QUEEN 'VICTIM OF REVENGE' International trafficker found dead in London flat was suspect in gangland killing of Colombian dealer A British woman accused of taking part in a brutal and cold-blooded gangland killing has been found dead in her London home, prompting speculation that she may have been murdered by underworld enemies. Bournemouth-born Beverley Storr, 44, was believed to have been responsible for the death of Colombian drug dealer Arturo Miranda, whose body was pulled from a canal 50 miles north of Copenhagen in January 2001. Miranda, 54, had his hands tied behind his back and his throat was cut. He is believed to have been tortured for hours before he was shot through the back of the head at point-blank range. Storr, a leading figure in international drugs smuggling, vanished from her cottage in Denmark around the time of the murder. Neighbours saw her hurriedly cleaning the house soon before she disappeared. A forensics team found traces of blood, leading police to conclude that the killing took place there before the body was dumped. Witnesses said Miranda had been staying at the cottage. A few days later, Storr's red British-registered Volvo car was found abandoned at a railway station near the German border. She and her then lover, Reginald Blythin, 55, from Chester, were put on Interpol's list of most wanted fugitives. Storr spent years arranging for large quantities of drugs worth millions of pounds to be smuggled from Spain to Britain until she was caught in Malaga with 1.5 tons of cannabis worth UKP3 million. She was jailed for four years in 1997, and freed in January 2001. She returned briefly to Britain before heading back to Spain and on to Denmark, where she set up home in the village of Hou. After the murder she is believed to have used her international underworld contacts to keep ahead of police. However, she was arrested in in July 2002 after being surrounded by armed police acting on a tip-off as she tried to board a flight at Schiphol airport, Amsterdam, using a fake Spanish passport. Blythin is still on the run. Storr was detained until last month, when she was released. She returned to London and moved into a flat in Newington Green Road, Islington, with a new boyfriend. It was he who returned home late on Sunday 3 November and found her dead in the living room. Police officers called to the scene told the coroner her death was not suspicious, but they were not then aware of Storr's background. The coroner has promised to expedite his investigation in response to numerous requests for information from the Danish press. Henrik Madsen, a journalist on Arhus Stiftstidende, the newspaper that covers the village where Miranda's body was found, told The Observer that Storr had to be freed, even though she was charged with murder. The Danish police wanted to try Storr and Blythin together, but he had disappeared, said Madsen. 'You can't keep people in custody for ever, and time went on and on. The Danish legal system says the police must give a judge good reasons to keep holding someone. They simply ran out of arguments.' Instead of waiting for the court to order her release, the Danish police made a special request for her to be allowed to go on the grounds that they had obtained all the information they needed from her. Many Danes believe this was a ploy aimed at getting Storr to lead them to Blythin. A leading Danish paper, Ekstra Bladet said the officer in charge of the murder inquiry, who contacted police in London to check the circumstances surrounding the death, had refused to say whether Storr had been under surveillance. Storr was being treated for depression, and a bottle of pills was found near her body. It is not yet clear how many - if any - she had taken. The Danish authorities believe Storr's medication may have been tampered with, or she could have been forced to take an overdose to stop her from talking. Although Blythin is a potential suspect, Storr's criminal record and high-level connections with organised crime mean many other people could have been just as keen to silence her. The results of toxicology tests carried out on her body will not be available until the new year at the earliest. When The Observer called at the flat she shared with her last boyfriend there was no answer. Storr was also suspected of involvement in the murder of a Briton, John McCormick, 47, who was shot at his flat in Copenhagen on New Year's Eve. His terrified girlfriend saw the shooting. McCormick, a convicted drugs smuggler from Liverpool, is believed to have fled to Scandinavia after he 'ripped off' British drug dealers based in Spain. Fellow tenants say his flat had a lot of visitors, and police believe he was dealing drugs. He entered Denmark from Spain the previous summer on a false passport in the name of Ronald Carey. One flatmate told the police that McCormick had become increasingly ill at ease before his death. He is believed to have had regular contact with Storr and Blythin. Blythin has served time in Britain for drugs and robbery offences and has underworld contacts in Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, France and Spain. He may be attempting to contact his family in the UK. He is on Scotland Yard's wanted list, but is believed to have visited this country several times since going on the run. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake