Pubdate: Tue, 02 Aug 2005
Source: Daily Telegraph (UK)
Copyright: 2005 Telegraph Group Limited
Contact:  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114
Author: Hugh Davies
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

DRUG POLICE TRIED TO FRAME ME, SAID JAGGER

The senior Scotland Yard officer who investigated a complaint by Mick 
Jagger in 1969 that he had been framed by the drug squad referred to the 
Rolling Stone's main witnesses as "the dregs of society".

Two years before other drugs squad officers were found guilty of crimes of 
extortion, Cdr Robert Huntley dismissed evidence against the head of the 
unit's Chelsea branch because it was the word of a policeman against Jagger 
and his then girlfriend, Marianne Faithfull, whom he called "drug users or 
traffickers in them".

A sworn statement by Jagger - now Sir Mick - saying that Det Sgt Robin 
Constable tried to "frame" him on a heroin possession charge in 1969 is 
part of a file of documents on the case released by the National Archives 
yesterday.

The Rolling Stones singer said that during a raid on his home in Cheyne 
Walk, Chelsea, Det Sgt Constable suddenly found "some white powder" in a 
white Cartier box and, out of earshot of his colleagues, asked Jagger for 
#1,000 to drop a possession charge.

Jagger said he was instructed to persuade Faithfull, then 23, who was 
downstairs, to admit it was hers.

Det Sgt Constable allegedly said: "You plead not guilty and she pleads guilty."

The policeman allegedly warned Jagger that if he were convicted "it would 
be difficult for [you] to go to America".

The US authorities considered heroin possession to be grounds for refusal 
of a work permit - which was vital for the band's lucrative American tours.

Jagger was eventually fined #200 with 50 guineas costs on a lesser charge 
of possession of cannabis, even though, as he claimed later, it, too, had 
been "planted".

Mr Huntley, in exonerating the officer, wrote: "The private persons 
interviewed during the course of this investigation represent extreme ends 
of the scale.

"At one end are public figures while at the other are the dregs of society. 
It is interesting to note that those who purport to give first hand 
evidence in support of the allegation are at the lower end of the scale, 
being drug users or traffickers in them."

The claim of police corruption came after the infamous "Redlands raid" two 
years earlier, when Jagger and his band mate, Keith Richards, were jailed 
for possession of cannabis and amphetamines. Amid uproar that the 
punishment was too harsh, the singer was released on probation, while the 
guitarist's conviction was overturned.

The Scotland Yard investigation into the second drug search came after 
Faithfull entered a Sydney hospital for a barbiturates overdose. She was 
subsequently treated in hospital for heroin addiction.

Police officers reported that she had told them she "hated coppers" after 
the Chelsea drugs raid. Jagger told investigators that Det Sgt Constable 
arrived at his home with "a number of other police officers" as he was 
about to leave for a recording session.

He said the detective walked across to a small round table and picked up a 
white box. The singer alleged: "He was holding it in his hand. He quickly 
pulled out a folded piece of white paper." The officer then allegedly said: 
"Aha, we won't have to look much further."

Jagger said: "As I got to him, he showed me the paper and I saw it 
contained some white powder. I said, 'You bastard, you planted me with 
heroin'. He made no comment."

Then, out in the garden, he allegedly started talking about a bribe, 
saying: "Don't worry about it, Mick. We can sort it out." Jagger told 
investigators: "He said that Faithfull had to be persuaded to admit guilt. 
. . He twice asked me how much it was worth. He then said, 'A thousand', 
but I never replied."

Det Sgt Constable told his superiors that Jagger was telling "gross lies". 
Scotland Yard said the singer was "an intelligent young man and doubtless 
is on the fringe, if not embroiled in, the world of users of dangerous drugs".

Faithfull was described in a report as "a most unreliable person" and Det 
Sgt Constable as a "hard working and competent police officer".

A few years later, senior detectives of Scotland Yard's drug squad were put 
on trial for corrupt practices that mirrored Jagger's allegation.
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