Pubdate: Thu 11 Nov 2004 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2004 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114 Author: John Steele, Home Affairs Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) CUSTOMS DRUGS CASES SETBACK More than 20 convictions, most for drug trafficking, could be overturned because of suspected malpractice and possible criminal offences by Customs investigators. Evidence has been unearthed by secretive police inquiries, the Telegraph has learned. Convictions secured in operations with Customs could be at risk The Criminal Cases Review Commission, which decides whether suspected miscarriages of justice should be sent to appeal, has already sent two drugs cases to the Court of Appeal. It is considering whether to refer 15 others, which are believed to relate to heroin imported from Pakistan. They involve the "controlled delivery" of drugs, in which Customs investigators allow hard drugs to "run" into the country to catch those behind the trade. Four further Customs-led convictions - for alleged evasion of duty on alcohol centering on a bonded warehouse company called London City Bond - have also been sent to appeal and one has been quashed. This is the latest setback for the Customs agency. It has already been criticised for an allegedly cavalier attitude to the rules of evidence and disclosure of material in some cases in the 1990s. Many observers believe there may be further suspected miscarriages from old Customs cases. Seventeen of the cases have been re-examined as a result of intelligence from a lengthy West Midlands police inquiry. The Metropolitan Police, which has been investigating the warehouse case, is also examining Customs investigations into money exchange bureaux. The Government is anxiously trying to protect recent Customs work under a new broom approach headed by Paul Evans, a former MI6 officer, as well as the many investigators who have complied with the rules. Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General, has removed the Customs agency's long-held control over its own prosecutions and is establishing an independent Customs and Inland Revenue prosecuting office similar to the Crown Prosecution Service. Yesterday he appointed David Green, QC, a Crown Court recorder, to restore trust. Mr Green said: "My priority will be the establishment of a genuinely independent prosecuting authority that is fair, impartial and accountable and that produces high quality casework. I am determined to restore confidence in the department so that we can punch our weight in the criminal justice system." He will soon become involved in what is said to be "a real headache" arising from some of the controversial older cases: how much detail about the police inquiries to disclose to defendants in recent trials who are asking whether there was malpractice in their cases. As a result of the West Midlands inquiry, three Customs investigators, one serving and two retired, are to appear in court charged with misconduct in public office. Terry Byrne, the overall head of law enforcement at Customs, and its head lawyer, David Pickup, have been suspended as a result of the Scotland Yard inquiry. That has intensified the interest of current defendants in finding out about the police inquiries. There is concern in wider police circles, particularly at the National Crime Squad, about the possibility that joint operations and convictions secured with Customs in the past might unravel if Customs is found to have failed to disclose material or has bent the rules. However, it is understood that the National Crime Squad in particular has insisted in recent years on handling any informants in joint inquiries by its own rules and in consultation with the CPS. Some detectives have commented wryly that Customs, which never missed an opportunity to point out police corruption in the past, is now being criticised for the kind of practices, particularly involving informants, that the police were forced to root out many years ago. - ---