Pubdate: 3 December 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent POLICE MUST PAY POUNDS 18,000 AFTER DRUG RAID TERROR A police chief was ordered to pay pounds 18,000 damages yesterday to a nine-year-old boy and his uncle after drug squad officers ambushed their car and smashed the windows in the mistaken belief that they were drug dealers. A sheriff awarded pounds 8,000 to Robert Cowan, who was five at the time of the incident, and pounds 10,000 to Ian Fielding, 37. He described the evidence given by two Strathclyde Police detectives as "inherently improbable" and said they had acted maliciously during the raid. Mr Fielding was returning from a visit to Shotts Prison in September, 1994, with the boy and his father, Robert Snr, and Stuart McKenna, a family friend. They had been visiting Mr McKenna's brother, an inmate at the jail. The driver said he feared that they were going to be murdered when six "strangers" in three unmarked police cars stopped them in a country road. He drove away from the scene with the police vehicles in pursuit. The chase ended in a hotel car park on the edge of the M8 near Glasgow, where officers armed with long-handled batons surrounded Mr Fielding's Astra. Hamilton Sheriff Court was told during the civil action that the schoolboy was showered with glass. He was said to be traumatised by the incident and suffered flashbacks. The officers claimed that they were acting on information that the occupants of the car were involved in drug dealing and were likely to be armed with machetes. However, they found no weapons or drugs and no charges were brought. In a written judgment, Sheriff Vincent Canavan said the evidence given by the occupants of the car was credible and viable. Mr Fielding, of Milton, Glasgow, sued John Orr, the Chief Constable of Strathclyde Police for pounds 10,000. The boy's mother, Janet Cowan, of Springburn, Glasgow, sued for pounds 8,000 on behalf of her son. Strathclyde Police said the judgment would be "fully considered". - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart