Pubdate: Thu, 23 September 1999 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 1999 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Author: Tim Reid THE 10th Earl of Hardwicke and a former business partner escaped jail yesterday, in spite of being convicted of dealing cocaine, after the jury condemned the undercover journalism used to entrap them. The two men were given suspended sentences after the jury took the highly unusual step of issuing a statement that spoke of the "extreme provocation" they suffered. The six-day trial at Blackfriars Crown Court, London, was told that Hardwicke, 28, the youngest hereditary peer to take a seat in the House of Lords, allegedly inhaled "lines" of cocaine in front of a secret camera set up by undercover journalists at The Savoy. The next day the earl, who first sat on the Tory benches six years ago, handed a "wrap" of cocaine to Mahzer Mahmood, investigations editor of the News Of The World, who was posing as a wealthy Arab businessman. Hardwicke was found guilty of being concerned in the supply of 2.44g of cocaine to Mr Mahmood on September 2 last year and of supplying 1.49g of the class A drug to the journalist the following day. Stefan Thwaites, 29, who used to help Hardwicke to run a South London scooter franchise, was found guilty of supplying 2.44g. The jurors then declared that had the law been different, they would have cleared the two defendants. Their note, read out by Judge Timothy Pontius, stated: "The jury would like to say the circumstances surrounding this case have made it very difficult for us to reach a decision. "Had we been allowed to take the extreme provocation into account we would undoubtedly have reached a different verdict." The judge made it clear that while prison sentences would appear inevitable, he felt justified in suspending them. "In all the circumstances and given . . . the terms of the jury's carefully considered note, which I read as a plea to me to exercise particular mercy in this case, I have concluded with some degree of hesitation that the circumstances are, by virtue of the jury's clearly stated views, so exceptional that I am justified in suspending the operation of the prison sentences." As a result, Hardwicke was given two years suspended for two years, and Thwaites 15 months suspended for a similar time. The judge said that if it had not been for the jury's plea and the manner in which the men were entrapped, they would have been facing up to four years in jail. Hardwicke was also ordered to pay pounds 2,000 towards prosecution costs, as well as pounds 320 to meet a confiscation order. Similar orders of pounds 1,400 and pounds 200 were made against Thwaites. Earlier in his sentencing remarks the judge told the pair: "I am more used, when sentencing defendants who have been convicted of the supply of illegal drugs, of seeing in the dock men and women of deprived backgrounds and disadvantaged circumstances. "They are often irretrievably addicted themselves, and who have involved themselves in the peddling of drugs in order to finance their own habit. In contrast, however, both of you were living affluent lives, enjoying the advantages and trappings of comparative wealth, business success and social standing, and in your case Lord Hardwicke, the privilege of membership of the legislature. Neither of you were driven in any way by need, poverty or deprivation." The judge said that it was right he should take into account the fact that Hardwicke, of Barons Court, West London, had been previously cautioned for possessing small amounts of heroin and crack cocaine. It was equally important he take on board as a mitigating factor how the men ended up in court. "Were it not for that elaborate sting you would not, I accept, have committed these particular offences of supplying these particular people on these particular days." Last night, a spokesman for the News of the World said that the paper had "no hesitation in investigating and exposing ruthless and habitual drug peddlers who break the law with arrogant impunity, threaten society and bring misery and death to their victims". - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D