Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jul 1998 Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: JOHN McCANN STRATHCLYDE DRUG SQUAD 'DISBANDED' AFTER INQUIRY Officer Suspended Amid Allegations Of Drug Possession And Gross Misconduct A DRUGS squad detective has been suspended and the rest of the team is reported to have been disbanded after an internal investigation was triggered by an officer who tried to save himself the price of a first class stamp. Strathclyde police refused yesterday to confirm or deny reports that other officers in the squad have been returned to uniform duties after allegations of drug possession and gross misconduct by officers. Evidence has emerged that at least one officer may have used his desk to store drugs taken from dealers. The allegations prompted a call yesterday for an external investigation of the force. The internal investigation began when postal workers spotted a forged 26 pence stamp on a business envelope and reported it to police, who discovered a tax return sent by a detective from the crime action team in Glasgow. Officers mounted a covert surveillance operation and uncovered counterfeit stamps and quantities of Class A drugs, including heroin, which were allegedly found hidden in desks. At least one officer may face criminal charges after a report is sent to the procurator-fiscal in Glasgow. Yesterday police refused to confirm or deny the allegations. But a police source told the Sunday Mail: "More than 20 officers, including two detective constables, have been put back in uniform and sent out on the beat. The entire crime action team has been closed down as a result of what was found during the course of the investigation." The action is the latest in a series of humiliations for Strathclyde's drugs squad, whose officers were already under investigation by the procurator-fiscal over perjury allegations. In January, seven officers, including three inspectors, were suspended after a judge said that they lied to conceal violence against a convicted drugs offender in Glasgow. Lord Marnoch awarded Gerald Rae, 39, of Cartside Street, Glasgow, UKP 33,000 when he sued Strathclyde police over claims that officers assaulted him and planted drugs during a raid at his home in 1990. In March of this year, Peter Cross, 62, a former member of a children's panel, told The Scotsman that he believed officers removed drugs from a bag he saw thrown from a flat during a 1990 raid on a convicted dealer, William Dennison. At Mr Rae's trial, his defence claimed that drugs squad officers then planted the same drugs at his client's home. A third man, also charged with possessing drugs after a 1990 raid by many of the same officers, was cleared in 1991 when his eight-year-old daughter said she saw the drugs being planted by officers. John Paul Muir was cleared in 1991 after Natalie, then aged eight, said that an officer removed something from a bag and put it under floorboards. At the time of this trial, Detective Inspector John Pollock, who led several raids in 1990, was transferred to uniform duties without explanation. The Crown Office later refused to open an inquiry into officers' behaviour. Roseanna Cunningham, Scottish National Party spokeswoman on home affairs, called yesterday for an external investigation of the force, Scotland's biggest. She said: "This brings up the whole issue of who polices the police. There is a danger that in a force the size of Strathclyde there are little petty kingdoms formed which are immune to scrutiny." Ms Cunningham said she would have expected the allegations to be investigated outwith the force. David McLetchie, a lawyer and a senior Tory spokesman, said that offending officers should be rooted out to safeguard the force's reputation and to restore public confidence. The office of Henry McLeish, the Scottish home affairs minister, refused to comment on the allegations, describing them as an operational matter for Strathclyde police. The news overshadowed an announcement that the force, under the auspices of the Spotlight anti-crime initiative, arrested 35 people for drugs offences during a weapons crack down on Friday night. It is believed that a Spotlight team is being formed to replace the squad but it will not be operational until September. Strathclyde police confirmed that an officer had been suspended after an investigation into alleged theft. - ---