Pubdate: Sun, 26 Apr 1998 Source: Scotland on Sunday Contact: James Murray Home Affairs Editor JUSTICE GROUP IN DRUG CASH ROW Man working to free cannabis smuggler from Scottish jail admits receiving payments from his family Exclusive A justice organisation attempting to free a convicted drug-runner from jail in Scotland has accepted cash payments from his family. The case led to the death of the Customs officer Alastair Soutar, who was crushed between the hulls of two boats during the operation to recover £10m worth of cannabis. Justice for All, run by James Stevenson, has denied that the payments have come from the proceeds of drugs and claimed that the money has been used for expenses to finance the group's fight to prove that Lieuwe Hoekstra, from the Netherlands, and three of his relatives were wrongfully convicted. The men, who are in Shotts prison, will represent themselves, with the support of Justice for All, at an appeal hearing at the High Court in Edinburgh next month. Stevenson, 75, claimed that he has found flaws in transcripts of the trial and has prepared documents which have been approved by a London barrister and lodged with the court. The Scottish solicitors who originally represented the men have withdrawn. Stevenson and his colleagues, Peter Wright, 75, a retired lecturer, are not lawyers, but they claim to have 14 years of experience in bringing appeals against 'wrongful' convictions and are working on more than 100 cases across Britain. "We are a bone fide justice group and we have every right to take up appeals on behalf prisoners," said Stevenson. "We have no doubt that the Scottish courts will recognise us." Justice for All took up Hoekstra's case following an approach from his sister Greta. Stevenson admitted he has received £400, but added: "They [Scottish Customs] said I was being paid with drug money. In one way I am pleased because it shows we have rattled their cages. They can come and arrest us if they like. We are quite open about our finances, but it's none of their business." Stevenson said that he set up Justice for All because he was appalled with injustices in the judicial system. "We are here to get the truth and to get at justice. We have a track record of getting people out of prison and getting their sentences reduced." Hoekstra, 58, was captured in Operation Balvenie when Customs officers swooped on the gang off the coast of Caithness in July 1996. It was claimed that they had transferred several tonnes of Moroccan cannabis from their boat, the Isolda, to the Ocean Jubilee. When Customs officers tried to board the Jubilee, its illegal cargo was set on fire and Soutar was killed. Roddy McLean, from Edinburgh, was revealed as the Mr Big behind the smuggling operation and jailed for 28 years. Last week, in a court action aimed at seizing his assets, a judge was told that he had earned more than £2m from the drugs trade. Hoekstra and Jan Van Rijs, 53, were each jailed for 14 years. The two other Dutchmen, Van Rijs's son Ronny, 30, and another relative, Hendrick Van Rijs, 25, were jailed for 10 years. Stevenson insisted that there were no drugs on the Isolda and that the Dutch crew were on holiday when they were arrested off the Scottish coast. "We are convinced these Dutch guys are innocent," he said. "They were kidnapped on the high seas. They are not drug smugglers." Greta Hoekstra, a mother of three married to a bank manager in Leeuwarden, northern Holland, is furious with the allegations made by Scottish Customs. "I think it is terrible for them to say we are paying him money. When he makes expenses to see my brother we have to pay him, but we don't pay him a salary. He is doing it for nothing, just to help us. The family has no connection with the drugs trade. This has come as a big shock to me. My brother is a kind, gentle man. He should not be in prison. The evidence is flawed. They didn't get a fair trial." Scottish Customs officials insisted that the Dutch gang is a major player in international drug smuggling and that the appeal will fail.