Pubdate: Sat, 20 March 1999
Source: Independent, The (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Author: Jason Bennetto, Crime Correspondent

MET OFFICERS BRIBED TO ROB DRUG DEALER

A RETIRED Scotland Yard detective who used corrupt police officers to help
his criminal contacts commit offences including stealing and selling 40,000
ecstasy tablets was jailed for eight years yesterday.

Duncan Hanrahan, 41, left the Metropolitan Police in 1991 after 14 years and
turned informer in 1997 as part of the Met's anti-corruption drive.

Hanrahan had recruited at least four officers to work for cash bribes from
criminals.

In one case, two serving officers, a former detective, Hanrahan, and violent
criminals planned to use electric stun guns to rob a courier at Heathrow
airport of more than UKP1m.

Despite Hanrahan's confessions and the involvement of at least four
allegedly corrupt officers named in court, none of the detectives has been
prosecuted because of lack of evidence. Only one officer is still serving
and he is off work due to ill health.

Hanrahan, a detective constable who retired on healthgrounds, turned to
crime after setting up a business as a private eye. But he and his partner,
another corrupt former detective, Martin King, acted as links between
criminals and corrupt officers. King, 51, is serving six years for
corruption.

Hanrahan also arranged for a raid on a furniture shop in Chiswick, west
London, in 1995, where a drug dealer had told him ecstasy was being stored
for collection.

The raid was staged by DCChristopher Carter and DS Len Guerard, the court
was told. The officers took the tablets valued at UKP600,000, but told their
bosses they had found nothing.

Two criminals sold the drugs in Scotland and Hanrahan was paid UKP6,000.
Carter retired on medical grounds two years ago and Guerard has resigned.

In 1994, Hanrahan and King recruited a criminal gang from Grove Park,
south-east London, to rob the courier at Heathrow airport. Carter and
Guerard are believed to have given Hanrahan the idea after they investigated
the genuine robbery of UKP1m from a Lebanese courier. The officers even
introduced the courier company to Hanrahan, who was described as a security
consultant, the court heard.

The plan, which involved knocking the courier out with a stun gun, failed
after the courier twice failed to arrive, then the gang quarrelled with the
officers.

After Hanrahan turned "supergrass" he failed to tell his handlers of either
case, claiming he was afraid of betraying dangerous criminals. The Met's
anti-corruption unit, CIB3, had at first believed Hanrahan was a vital
witness who could help prosecute other "bent" officers. But they found him a
liar who was an unreliable witness.

His downfall came after he boasted about his full exploits to a fellow
informer while being held at Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight. The
informer told his police handlers, who confronted Hanrahan, and further
charges were brought.

Hanrahan was originally trapped after he and King offered bribes to a Det Ch
Insp Elcock. But the inspector was working with anti-corruption officers and
secretly recordedtheir meetings.

Hanrahan, from Tonbridge, Kent, admitted 11 charges of corruption and
conspiracies to pervert justice, steal, supply drugs and rob.

Hanrahan is bankrupt and his second marriage, to a police constable, has
broken up.

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