Source: Independent on Sunday Contact: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Pubdate: Sun, 19 Apr 1998 Author: Steve Boggan ONE STING TOO FAR Last week record seizures of heroin were announced. That only confirms it as the drug of choice for the Nineties - and not only in Britain. IN THE world of drugs, the double-cross is a crime that often results in death for the perpetrator. For Her Majesty's Customs and Excise, the penalty is not execution, but it may spell the death of secret smuggling operations aimed at catching dealers. Hussain Shah, a 45-year-old entrepreneur, is the man claiming he was double-crossed. He says that British Drugs Liaison Officers - known as DLOs - - working in Islamabad in Pakistan forced him to entrap potential drug dealers. The quid pro quo was the dropping of a previous heroin-smuggling charge. But Hussain Shah was jailed, and now he wants revenge. His claim would sound far-fetched, except that it has already caused the collapse of at least two cases brought by Customs and Excise against alleged drug smugglers and it may result in appeals against more than a dozen other convictions. Shah's claims form part of an organised campaign by defence solicitors to discredit "controlled deliveries" - a method by which informants work with Customs officers abroad in order to fly heroin into the UK with the specific object of catching the dealer who buys drugs to sell on the street. Shah's allegations, along with apparent similarities in the way convictions were secured in other cases, have resulted in a top-level inquiry into the operations of Customs' Drugs Liaison Officers operating in Pakistan - probably the world's most important location for heroin-traffic and its prevention. Drugs Liaison Officers, who are attached to the British High Commission in Islamabad, are there to identify drugs bound for the UK before they depart. They do this either through shared intelligence or when informants walk in off the street. Informants who agree to go through with drug deals under the control of DLOs get rewards of up to #1,000 for every kilo of heroin seized at the British end of the operation - a substantial bounty in Pakistan. This is a tried and trusted method with a 20-year history. Now lawyers are arguing that people are being set up in deals that would never have taken place without the encouragement of Customs and Excise, and that they sometimes involve drugs provided by Customs officials themselves. HUSSAIN Shah says it all started in 1995 when he bought 3kg of heroin in an operation he describes as a Customs and Excise set-up. Before he could be arrested for his part in the deal, he fled to Pakistan where he grew homesick for his family of eight children and his grocery businesses in Bradford and Leeds. His solicitor, Mohammed Rafique, says: "After a while, he was approached by Customs officials who said they could help him to return to England if he helped set up a few 'jobs'. They said that each job would be taken into account if he went home to face the music. But they let him down." Shah's story is that he helped by identifying potential buyers in the UK - drug dealers who were either already involved, or, so say their lawyers, those stupid enough to be lured in. It is understood that Shah claims he initiated a number of operations from Pakistan. But when he returned to Britain, he was arrested and jailed for the offence from which he fled in 1995. Shah's handlers - assuming they exist - might have thought that was the last they would hear of him. They were not so lucky. In the past six months, two cases involving 55kg of heroin with a street value of #5.5m have collapsed because Shah offered to give evidence for the five defendants involved. He is appealing against his own conviction, and there are rumours that charges against alleged drug smugglers in Scotland may be dropped because Customs officials fear what Shah might say. Appeals may also be launched in a raft of other cases in which purchasers of "controlled deliveries" were convicted. MOHAMMED Rashid, 37, from Bradford is among those who claim they were entrapped. Along with two associates named Waheed Rehman and Fiaz Khan, Rashid was charged in connection with the importation of 35kg of heroin which had actually been brought into the country by Customs officers last year. Rashid and his associates were the victim of a tip-off by an informant known as Abid. Under the control of Customs, Abid posed as the courier of the drugs and, according to Rashid, also offered advice on how to finance their purchase. Rashid says now: "I shouldn't have become involved but the deal seemed too good to be true. I had been in trouble for supplying a small amount of heroin in 1992. I was an addict then but I had been clean ever since. A friend told me about this chance to buy 35kg of heroin for #10,000 a kilo, and the price is normally #20,000. It would be worth #3.5m on the streets. "My father had just died, I have seven children and no job. I know it was wrong, but I was tempted. That is what they do; they put temptation in your way. We were all on the dole and we couldn't even afford it. Abid said his people in Pakistan wanted #40,000 up front. When we told him we couldn't raise that much, he gave us a 2kg 'sample' to sell so we could raise the deposit." The sample was never recovered. According to defence lawyers, Abid was paid a #28,000 fee by Customs but charges against Rashid, Waheed Rehman and Fiaz Khan were dropped when Shah offered to claim in court that the men had been set up. Philip Sweeney, Mr Waheed's solicitor, says: "The evidence against the three looked pretty overwhelming the way it was presented. Under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act you can apply for evidence gained by entrapment to be ruled inadmissible, but it usually isn't. The men were looking at 15 to 20 years. Shah's involvement was a godsend." THIS CASE shows how Customs and Excise can manipulate drug import and seizure figures to help make the argument for more funds for the fight against drugs. Even though Mr Rashid and partners were arrested in Leeds, their case was transferred to Newcastle, where it provoked local headlines about record seizures in the North-east - despite the fact that the drugs had been imported courtesy of Customs and the Pakistani Anti-Narcotics Force. In a similar case in Glasgow, DLOs and their Pakistani counterparts organised a controlled delivery of 18kg of heroin. When the drugs were seized from the dealer who bought them, a Customs spokesman said: "This was a huge amount of heroin and a tremendous result for our investigators." In fact, one of their officers had accompanied the delivery on a scheduled passenger flight. Senior Customs sources say enquiries so far have found no impropriety. And they argue that legitimate work could be undermined by lawyers latching on to Shah's willingness to give evidence. None the less, defence lawyers in two other cases have begun working together after uncovering another, potentially serious, anomaly relating to four Asian men convicted of drugs offences in 1994 and 1995. They have found that the drugs their clients bought in separate cases from couriers controlled by Customs have a curious provenance. DLO statements relating to each case detail meticulously how the drugs were given to their informant by would-be suppliers in Pakistan. They were handed over to drugs officers in Islamabad, who then brought them over to the UK in a controlled delivery. But lawyers have discovered that the drugs in both cases were given the same Customs serial number - consignment 3998 - even though they were supposed to have been received from different informants in different locations on different days. Two of the men supposed to have received them were jailed for 14 years, the other two for nine years. Customs sources say their enquiries suggest there may be a simple explanation for the anomaly. One senior official seriously hopes so. "Our men out there do very dangerous and very useful work in catching the smugglers in this country," he said. "Our methods have been very successful for the past 20 years but all that work could be undermined if the criminals bring down the system of controlled deliveries. As far as they're concerned, it's getting in the way of business." In the East End it's #2 a score CUSTOMS and Excise boast about last year's record hauls of 1.7 tonnes of heroin (an increase of nearly 150 per cent on 1996), writes Hilary Clarke, but they cannot prevent the use of it reaching epidemic proportions on the run-down council estates in Tower Hamlets in the East End of London. And as the price of heroin falls so that, for the price of a pint of lager, four schoolchildren can get high, so does the age of users. "In Tower Hamlets, heroin is becoming the first drug children try," said one emergency drugs helpline worker, who couldn't be named for professional reasons. "It used to be cannabis, now it's smack. Kids are dying. Leah Betts and other isolated cases of dodgy ecstasy tablets get all the publicity but in most inner-London boroughs we have a crazy epidemic of one of the most addictive drugs known to mankind." Charlie, 16, from Bethnal Green, is undergoing a treatment programme that he hopes will end his two-year addiction to heroin. "Everyone is taking it, blacks, whites, Asians. I know kids as young as 10 or 11 already addicted to smack," he says. While the statistical evidence is slim, the physical evidence is there for anyone who cares to look. Stepney's Ocean Estate is notorious as a centre for the sale and use of heroin in the East End, and the stairwells of any one of its blocks are littered with tin-foil stained with black. A few years ago, heroin was injected or sniffed. Now the preferred method is to smoke the fumes produced by burning the drug through rolls of tin foil. This has become more popular as the purity of the drug sold on the streets has improved. Parents in these communities complain the police are not doing enough to arrest dealers, many of whom sell their drugs from cars parked outside estates and schools. But the police struggle to catch just a few of the big fish. Charlie claims he knows people that have been found by the police to be in possession of heroin, but are allowed to go free in exchange for dealers' numbers. According to Judith Cooper, Tower Hamlets council's substance misuse and drugs action co-ordinator, "Tower Hamlets has a reputation as the cheapest place to buy heroin in London. It demonstrates market forces because economically it is bottom of the scale as well."