Drug club duo convictions are sound, say judges

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Friday, December 12, 2008
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This is Cornwall

THE owner and DJ manager of the Dance Academy will remain behind bars after being told that evidence given against them anonymously by undercover police officers did not breach their human rights.

Manoucehr Bahmanzadeh, aged 52, and Tom Costelloe, aged 37, were jailed for nine years and five years respectively in July after being found guilty of allowing ecstasy to be dealt in the Union Street nightclub.

During the trial at Plymouth Crown Court, 24 undercover police officers gave evidence anonymously and behind screens, visible only to the judge, the jury and counsel.

The officers impersonated drug-buyers inside the club during Operation Jonamac, which ran between December 2005 and May 2006.

At one stage the trial was halted to allow legal discussion of the use of anonymous undercover officers, following a decision by the House of Lords over an ongoing but unconnected trial.

It was argued by Costelloe’s barrister Alan Newman QC that each officer needed to be re-examined without the benefit of a screen. He claimed Costelloe needed to see if any of the people who had offered him drugs at the club were officers acting as ‘agent provocateurs’. He also insisted they needed to see Costelloe to determine whether any of them ever bought drugs in his presence.

Presiding trial Judge Francis Gilbert rejected the application and, after the jury found the pair guilty, he told the defendants they had allowed the ‘rampant, overt and blatant’ sale of ecstasy at the former theatre.

In late October lawyers for Bahmanzadeh and Costelloe took the case to the Court of Appeal in London, arguing that the use of anonymous police witnesses breached their human rights.

However, following the appeal hearing, which sat before a rarely-convened five-judge court, headed by the Lord Chief Justice, they have been told they will remain in jail.

Dismissing their appeals, the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge, said the identities of the anonymous police witnesses were irrelevant to the issues the jury had to decide.

Their evidence, he said, had been extensively tested by defence lawyers, but their individual credibility had never been challenged.

Keeping their identities a secret, the judge added, had been ‘necessary to prevent real harm to the public interest’.

In addition, he said there was ‘ample evidence from witnesses other than the undercover officers from which the jury could infer that the offence was proved against these appellants’.

Lord Judge went on to explain that Bahmanzadeh and Costelloe – described by their own barristers as ordinary individuals with no connections to the criminal fraternity – did not pose a risk to the officers, but were more likely to be targeted by criminals who wanted to know the identities of undercover police officers.

“It would not have been sensible to have depended on the understanding of these appellants of the principles of confidentiality to secure the safety of the officers,” he said.

He added that the trials of Bahmanzadeh, Costelloe and of supervisor Justin Hayward, who was acquitted, were not ‘prejudiced by the fact that a number of these witnesses gave evidence anonymously, and behind screens, shielded from the sight of the appellants’.

He said the two jailed men ‘were enabled properly and fully to test the evidence of the anonymous witnesses to strengthen their own cases or to undermine the case for the prosecution.’

He called Judge Gilbert’s order ‘sound and realistic’ and deemed the convictions safe before dismissing the appeal.

Lead investigator Det Insp Dave Huggett said he was happy with the outcome of the appeal.

“I would like to reiterate that this is not about the fact that they did all they could [to prevent dealing in the club], because the fact is they did nothing”, he said.

“Nothing changed from when we went in at the beginning of the undercover operation to the day we executed the warrant. They didn’t update their staff; they didn’t put in place our recommendations to tackle the problem.

“They were complicit in what went on there. They didn’t want it to stop because it was about getting people in through the doors. They may not have been dealing themselves, but their gain was the people coming in.”

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45 Comments

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by john nelson, crownhill plymouth

    Tuesday, December 16 2008, 5:48PM

    “an outrage all because the councill want the building and Manoucehr wouldnt sell it to them granted he sould of put some of that 2million back into sorting the building out but this was not the way to punish him for not selling.what it comes down is yet again the the old palace thearter is standing empty and getting worse now than it has ever been before, this building survied the war had chalie chaplin perform in it and just has loads of history to it so come on plymouth city council get of you asses and sort the building out or soon there is going to be no building left to save or is that wot you want to happen,i dont no if this is true or not but there is a rumour going around that ther is a tree growing inside the building now that cant be good. I may sound like a sentamentalist and i did go to the acadamy alot and yes it was the best club in the southwest but i think we have to face up to reallity that there will proberly b never a nightclub in there again and the building will end up looking like the rest of the lower union street builings( i e grand theater pub) boarded up eyesores that time forgot,time to clean up and sort out SAVE THE PALACE THEATRE SOON”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Brendon, Plympton

    Monday, December 15 2008, 4:58PM

    “It depends who was doing it Pete.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Snivelling Pete, Ford park

    Monday, December 15 2008, 4:56PM

    “A strip search achieves nothing except to corrupt the mind and loins of the searcher. As the police hospitals prisons etc well know the only effective way of preventing the passage of large or small quantities of drugs into premises or vehicles is to conduct n unhurried intimate search of bodily orifices with probes latex gloves and maybe portable x-ray equipment. Who would submit to that for the sake of a night out at the price of entry and booze in Plymouth's unimpressive club scene.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Stuart, Exeter

    Monday, December 15 2008, 2:38PM

    “Only a strip search more or less guarantees no drugs are present.
    You cannot strip search incoming customers.
    You cannot even pat down everyone.
    Raid every other establishment in Plymouth city centre, and see how many places have drugs in them.
    Compare the number of times police get called to violent incidents in every other establishment on Union Street, compared with Dance Academy.
    The sentences given to these two men are ridiculous.
    But, of course, this has absolutely nothing to do with a certain multi-million pound redevelopement scheme.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Jolyon, Millfields

    Sunday, December 14 2008, 7:43PM

    “If they had managed to cast any doubt on the rest of the evidence and the toppling point had been the police evidence then there would have been a tight issue for the full Court of Appeal. As it was, very senior and a majority of liberal minded judges found that there was ample evidence that went unchallenged, thus Judge Gilbert's order protecting these officers was fair and proportionate and put the defendants at no disadvantage. What can they complain about? Permitting rampant and obvious drug use in an environment used by ordinary innocent kids is an outrage and although I fear that prison is barbaric and does nothing to deter or prevent crime, these guys have to be punished and they had it coming to them. Its a pity as ever that the Herald did not devote a little more space to the judgement but it certainly appears here that these men had the best defence lawyers available and that cash could buy and also that they had a complete and fair considered hearing at the highest level. justice has been seen to be done and at the highest level. Incidentally years ago there was a rule that those who took a case on appeal when it was later apparent that their appeal had no merit could have their sentence increased by an order that the time in custody awaiting the outcome of the appeal should not count as part of the sentence. do we know whether that mechanism was considered or applied here?”

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