Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2006
Source: Scotsman (UK)
Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2006
Contact:  http://www.scotsman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406
Author: Alan Mcewen

OPEN WARFARE AS GANGS CLASH IN CITY

A DEADLY arsenal including petrol bombs, knives, crossbows and 
sawn-off shotguns was used as rival gangs in a drugs war that raged 
across the north of Edinburgh fought for dominance.

As the violence escalated, police feared innocent people would be 
killed in the crossfire.

Now, with the three men at the centre of the bloodshed jailed for a 
total of 28 years, police have finally revealed the grim details 
behind a year-long running battle.

Last week, convicted drug dealer Peter Simpson, 46, was sentenced to 
six years at the High Court in Edinburgh for a brutal knife attack on 
gang member James Tant, 22, onboard a Lothian bus.

His ex-wife Susan Coleman, 43, and their 23-year-old daughter Astro 
Coleman had been cleared of involvement in the assault during the trial.

Simpson's jailing followed that of Tant and 20-year-old Marc Webley 
who received 11 years each in November for shooting Simpson in the 
back during an ambush near his Granton home.

However, a senior police officer today warned that gang members from 
both sides remain at large and urged the community to help prevent a 
repeat of the violent events.

Superintendent Terry Powell, who led the police operation against the 
ringleaders, said: "Some of these people are in prison but some are 
still outside. We will be keeping an eye on them. They will not 
disappear and they may want to establish themselves in the same way."

The trouble flared when a new generation of criminals came up against 
the old guard in the Granton, Royston, Pilton, Wardieburn and Drylaw 
areas of the city.

On one side were the members of the "Young Mental Royston" gang who 
had begun to terrorise the neighbourhood and prided themselves on 
their ability to inspire fear.

The YMR were fronted by Webley - a thug with more than 60 convictions 
- - who harboured ambitions to establish himself as the crime kingpin 
of the area.

Among his cohorts was Tant - a convicted rapist at 16 - who followed 
his friend and leader with blind devotion. The gang was soon 
embroiled in open warfare over control of the local trade in Class A 
drugs and cannabis.

The fighting which engulfed much of the north of the Capital for 
nearly a year was mostly fuelled by their personal clash with Simpson.

Simpson portrayed himself as a "Robin Hood-figure", according to 
police, and took on the role of protector for the community.

But detectives believe the 46-year-old was also eager to see off the 
young pretenders who threatened to take over his "patch".

Supt Powell said: "We suspected Simpson was involved with drugs. 
Webley was very much the up-and-coming criminal who wanted people to 
think that he ran the area and should be respected. As an older 
criminal, Simpson started to clash with him in what I would class as 
a turf war between around 20 people.

"There were more individuals on Webley's side and the majority of 
stuff was instigated by him. There was a serious violent feud going 
on between them. A lot of that seemed to be because they were 
competing over criminal activities in the area.

"We certainly suspected Simpson of being involved in crimes. The feud 
with Webley and Tant would seem to support that."

In 1993, Simpson had been jailed for six years after being caught 
with Scotland's largest-ever haul of LSD, worth UKP 31,810. A leading 
player in the city's underground dog-fighting circles, he told the 
court he was forced to deal in drugs following the loss of a valuable dog.

Tensions erupted in May 2004 when a series of petrol bombs were 
hurled at his flat in Granton Crescent.

The assault was quickly followed by the shooting of a 35-year-old 
associate of Simpson's. The gunman had fired off a volley of bullets 
through Simpson's flat window from the street below, seriously 
injuring the victim.

In what was believed to be a retaliatory strike, gunmen targeted a 
house in Royston connected to the YMR two months later. And that 
September one of its members was stabbed outside Simpson's incident-prone home.

Police even sent Simpson a letter warning him of Webley's imminent 
release from a sentence at Polmont Young Offender's Institution in 
November 2004 in a bid to stem the trouble.

But as the conflict intensified with a series of eye-for-an-eye 
strikes, it was Simpson who landed in hospital with a gunshot wound 
to the back. Five bullets were sprayed at him from an automatic 
pistol by a gunman wearing a balaclava, although only one round hit him.

The High Court heard that on the morning of January 24 last year, two 
men wearing balaclavas were seen to ride off on a Kawasaki motorbike 
from near Webley's Wardieburn home.

The hooded riders followed Simpson after he got off a bus near his 
home and chased him into nearby Granton Terrace.

Tant threatened him with a sawn-off shotgun which had been concealed 
under his tracksuit top before Webley aimed and fired with a .25 
calibre semi-automatic handgun.

Simpson was chased into the common stair of his flat where he was 
struck by a single round and the assassins made their escape.

The shooting prompted worried police to apply for a court order 
banning the suspected gangland figure from returning to the property 
under antisocial behaviour legislation.

The powers forced Simpson to abandon his stronghold for a new 
address, believed to be in Dalkeith, but only weeks later he launched 
a revenge attack.

Simpson was travelling with his ex-wife and daughter on a number 14 
Lothian bus at Boswall Parkway on March 22 last year when James Tant 
stepped onboard with his 18-year-old girlfriend, Nicola Meikle.

The older man took the opportunity of their chance meeting to launch 
a savage knife attack on Tant. His trial heard that Simpson spat out 
a piece of his victim's ear, as well as inflicting two stabs wounds 
to his chest.

The jury cleared him of attempted murder but found him guilty of 
assault to danger of life. Judge Lord McEwan handed him a six-year sentence.

Tant had been called to give evidence during the case but declined to 
testify, fearful of being branded a "grass" on his return to prison.

Simpson had claimed he was defending his family after his daughter, 
Astro, had received death threats from the YMR. An artist and singer, 
she had even taken to wearing a bulletproof vest, the court heard.

Supt Terry Powell said: "He portrayed himself as a sort of Robin 
Hood-figure who was protecting the community from Webley and his associates.

"His ex-wife and daughter would attempt to portray him that way, as 
the protector of the community from this gang, someone who helps people out.

"Some people in the area might even say there was some truth in that. 
But that simply wasn't the case.

"He's a very violent person as his latest convictions shows. He 
stabbed a man on a bus and bit part of his ear off. He would claim to 
be helping his neighbours, but carry a knife and try to kill someone with it.

"Simpson knew that Webley had been targeting him and knew he was one 
of those responsible for the shooting. That's why he launched the 
revenge attack on Tant - who was really one of Webley's hangers-on - 
while he was on the bus."

Supt Powell said that the force had derived "a great deal of 
satisfaction" from the three convictions, but asked local residents 
to continue to co-operate with police.

He added: "Three violent criminals have been put away and the 
positive impact on the community has been significant. We can't 
always know what's going on so we need residents to help us. Now 
they've seen the results from that kind of cooperation."
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