Three men who ran a bespoke global passport service for top criminals on the run have been jailed after investigators smashed their 20-year operation.
The documents were genuine, but fraudulently obtained from lookalike individuals who resembled Most Wanted murderers, gun smugglers and drug traffickers.
The gang simply removed the true passport holder’s photograph and replaced it with a picture of the fugitive.
Anthony Beard, 61, supplied 108 UK passports by targeting vulnerable individuals with drug and alcohol problems he had met at rehab centres and homeless shelters during his own struggles with addiction.
He chose people whose passports were running out because unlike fresh applications, renewals do not require an in-person interview. He was jailed for six years and eight months.
Image: From left: Anthony Beard, Christopher Zietek and Alan Thompson. Pic: NCA
Investigators from the UK’s National Crime Agency secretly filmed Beard meeting passport holders and persuading them to co-operate in the scam.
They also recorded him calling the Passport Office, chasing up applications in a number of voices and aliases.
Christopher Zietek, 67, was a go-between who collected the passports from Beard and supplied them to the notorious Adams family, a North London crime group, who then sold them to the desperate fugitives. He was jailed for eight years.
Image: UK passport issued to Jordan Owens in the name of Lee Bowler
Stephen Lawrence suspect among customers
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The gang’s customers, who paid up to £15,000 for a passport, included cannabis supplier Jamie Acourt. He was one of the original Stephen Lawrence murder suspects and spent two years on the run in Spain.
Acourt, 47, was arrested after Mr Lawrence’s death in Eltham, south east London, in 1993, but has always denied being involved.
Beard was seen meeting an accomplice of Acourt, who investigators followed and led them to discover him hiding in Spain under a false name.
Acourt, from southeast London, was arrested on a European arrest warrant outside a gym in Barcelona in 2018. He was extradited to the UK and jailed for nine years for masterminding a two-year conspiracy to sell cannabis resin.
Among the other customers were Glasgow murderers Jordan Owen and Christopher Hughes, Liverpool drug trafficker Michael Moogan, Manchester fugitive David Walley and suspected Scottish drug trafficker Barrie Gillespie.
Even when Hughes and accused gangland leader Gillespie were arrested after a bar fight in Portugal their real identities did not come to light.
Image: Latvian passport in the name of Aleksejs Rustanovs issued to Christopher Hughes
Alan Thompson, 72, was Zietek’s gofer, driving him to meetings with villains and transporting the passports. He was locked up for three years.
The NCA swooped on the gang, arresting a total of 24 suspects in raids in London, Kent, Essex and Merseyside, two years ago.
They were held on a variety of crimes including making and receiving false passports, counter-signing false passports and perverting the course of justice.
Beard pleaded guilty, while Zietek and Thompson denied the charges, but were found guilty by the jury at Reading Crown Court. Some 74 other offences relating to fraudulent passports were taken into consideration by the judge.
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NCA on ‘closing loophole’ in passport scam
Turned to crime because they were bored
Defending the trio, their lawyers said they had been driven to crime by boredom and old age.
Craig Rush, for Thompson, said he had been forced to retire on medical grounds in 1999, and by 2017 was so bored that he turned to crime.
Describing Thompson meeting Zietek, he said: “These days from 1999 to 2017 or 18 watching Homes Under The Hammer, daytime TV, totally bogged down in a world of ennui and boredom, were lightened by a man who could spin an interesting story.”
Thompson had become a gofer for Zietek “not for money but because it gave him something to do”, Mr Rush told the court.
Sentencing the three men, deputy circuit judge Nicholas Ainley said the scheme “enabled very wicked, sophisticated, violent criminals to escape justice”.
“Of course these passports are going to work because they’re genuine,” he added.
“They will pass any security test that any border official tends to throw their way. Thus it can be seen that this particular type of fraud subverts the whole system of passport issuing.”
A Home Office spokesperson said the NCA worked with the passport office to secure the convictions, but did not comment on how the defendants were able to exploit the system.
“This sentence demonstrates the government’s commitment to tackle and dismantle these despicable criminal gangs who seek to exploit and threaten public safety for profit,” they said.
NCA deputy director Craig Turner added: “The investigation demonstrates the NCA’s unique role in tackling the most serious and complex crime threats facing the UK.
“We have identified a chronic, under the radar conspiracy that enabled drug and firearm traffickers, murderers and fugitives to evade justice, and we have worked across borders to dismantle it and the bring the masterminds to account.”
Addressing the City Academy Voices choir directly, the bishop of Fulham said: “I write to apologise for the distress and offence I caused in bringing the concert to a premature end.
“This should not have happened … I also apologise for remarks which were made in haste, and which have understandably caused hurt and distress.”
Image: The bishop, in his dressing gown, gave the choir a dressing down
Mr Baker had demanded for the performance to stop because it was 10pm – and says he didn’t realise the choir had booked the church until 11pm.
In the statement obtained by Sky News, he added: “I have lived here on site at St Andrew’s for 10 years, for much of which City Academy has rehearsed and performed here.
“You have been, and continue to be, welcome – and I hope that you will be able to continue the relationship with us.
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“I can give you every assurance that the events of Friday evening will not recur, and I apologise again to performers (especially those unable to perform at the end of the evening) and the audience alike.”
Image: The choir performed their last song
The choir was performing to a 300-strong audience in Holborn when the lights were suddenly turned off, with Mr Baker declaring the concert was “over”.
A church employee then asked the crowd to leave quietly and for the musicians to step down from the stage, attracting boos from the audience.
The choir went on to perform one last song, an A cappella version of ABBA’s Dancing Queen, before bringing their show to a close.
One member of the audience, who was attending with his 10-year-old daughter, told Sky News he initially thought the interruption was a staged joke.
Benedict Collins had told Sky News: “This work deserves respect, not to be disparaged as a ‘terrible racket’. The people here had put their heart and soul into it.
“The bishop cut them off in midstream, preventing soloists who had worked their hardest from singing – and preventing the audience, which included people of all ages, from enjoying it to the end.”
The choir told Sky News it was “upsetting” that they were unable to finish their show as planned, but “hold no hard feelings and wish the bishop well”.
A spokesperson added: “If anyone is thinking of joining one of our choirs, the City Academy Voices rehearse on Mondays in central London. Dressing gowns optional.”
The Online Safety Act is putting free speech at risk and needs significant adjustments, Elon Musk’s social network X has warned.
New rules that came into force last week require platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and X – as well as sites hosting pornography – to bring in measures to prove that someone using them is over the age of 18.
The Online Safety Act requires sites to protect children and to remove illegal content, but critics have said that the rules have been implemented too broadly, resulting in the censorship of legal content.
X has warned the act’s laudable intentions were “at risk of being overshadowed by the breadth of its regulatory reach”.
It said: “When lawmakers approved these measures, they made a conscientious decision to increase censorship in the name of ‘online safety’.
“It is fair to ask if UK citizens were equally aware of the trade-off being made.”
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X claims the timetable for platforms to meet mandatory measures had been unnecessarily tight – and despite complying, sites still faced threats of enforcement and fines, “encouraging over-censorship”.
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“A balanced approach is the only way to protect individual liberties, encourage innovation and safeguard children. It’s safe to say that significant changes must take place to achieve these objectives in the UK,” it said.
A UK government spokesperson said it is “demonstrably false” that the Online Safety Act compromises free speech.
“As well as legal duties to keep children safe, the very same law places clear and unequivocal duties on platforms to protect freedom of expression,” they added.
Users have complained about age checks that require personal data to be uploaded to access sites that show pornography, and 468,000 people have already signed a petition asking for the new law to be repealed.
In response to the petition, the government said it had “no plans” to reverse the Online Safety Act.
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Why do people want to repeal the Online Safety Act?
Reform UK’s leader Nigel Farage likened the new rules to “state suppression of genuine free speech” and said his party would ditch the regulations.
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said on Tuesday that those who wanted to overturn the act were “on the side of predators” – to which Mr Farage demanded an apology, calling Mr Kyle’s comments “absolutely disgusting”.
Regulator Ofcom said on Thursday it had launched an investigation into how four companies – that collectively run 34 pornography sites – are complying with new age-check requirements.
These companies – 8579 LLC, AVS Group Ltd, Kick Online Entertainment S.A. and Trendio Ltd – run dozens of sites, and collectively have more than nine million unique monthly UK visitors, the internet watchdog said.
The regulator said it prioritised the companies based on the risk of harm posed by the services they operated and their user numbers.
It adds to the 11 investigations already in progress into 4chan, as well as an unnamed online suicide forum, seven file-sharing services, and two adult websites.
Ofcom said it expects to make further enforcement announcements in the coming months.
Two siblings who drowned while on holiday in Spain have been named – with a fundraiser for their family reaching £40,000.
Ameiya and Ricardo Junior Parris, aged 13 and 11, died on Tuesday evening after getting into difficulty off Llarga beach in Salou, Catalonia.
Their father Ricardo tried to rescue them, but he also got into difficulty and was unconscious when he was pulled from the water. He was later released from hospital with a concussion.
Ricardo Senior and his partner, Shanice Del-Brocco, 31, were staying at the Hotel Best Negresco right by the beach with their six children when tragedy struck.
Image: Ameiya and Ricardo Junior have been described as “hilarious, sensitive and loving”. Pic: Kayla Del-Brocco/PA Wire
The construction worker from Birmingham had taken their two oldest children for one final swim while Shanice had taken the younger ones back to the hotel.
“They’d gone out. They were being sensible. They’re very good swimmers,” the children’s aunt, Kayla Del-Brocco, said.
“They knew it was late. However, they’d been doing this every day on holiday, so that day was no different. They didn’t go out far, but the current was just too strong and pulled them.”
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A hotel worker saw the siblings struggling in the water and called for help. When Shanice returned to the beach, emergency services were already at the scene, with Junior, nicknamed Joby, taken away in a helicopter.
“It’s breaking (Ricardo), if I’m honest, because he was in the water, and I know he said things to my sister like: ‘I had him, I had Joby in my arms, and we got smacked up the rocks, and that’s the last thing I remember,'” Shanice’s sister said.
Ricardo Senior suffered a “nasty concussion and some bumps and batters”, Ms Del-Brocco said, adding that he was the first to be rescued.
Image: Little Ameiya and her oldest brother Ricardo Junior. Pic: Kayla Del-Brocco/PA Wire
The couple were unable to see their children’s bodies until Thursday at the mortuary and are now waiting for them to be repatriated to the UK, which they were told “could be anything from seven to 15 days”, Ms Del-Rocco said.
“They are just numb. They’re holding each other up and keeping it together for the little ones at the minute; going through the motions and desperately waiting to come home now.”
The GoFundMe page to help cover the cost of repatriating the bodies of Ameiya and Ricardo Junior, which was set up by her cousin, has already raised around £40,000, which Ms Del-Rocco described as “phenomenally overwhelming”.
“Maya was intelligent, thoughtful, and growing into a strong young woman. Ricardo Junior was playful, kind, and always smiling. They brought so much love, laughter, and energy into the lives of everyone around them,” the fundraising page reads.
“Their absence has left an unbearable silence not just for their parents, but for their whole family, who were incredibly close and shared an unbreakable bond.”
Image: Ameiya and Ricardo Junior were doting older siblings. Pic: Kayla Del-Brocco/PA Wire
Ms Del-Brocco said that Ameiya and Junior, who were in Years 7 and 8 at North Birmingham Academy, were doting older siblings, with their mother describing them as “hilarious, sensitive and loving – the best big brother and sister anyone could want”.
Their aunt said that Ameiya, a talented runner with ambitions of going to the Olympics, was “unapologetically just herself” and “driven by being unique”.
Ricardo Junior was a “very, very special one-of-a-kind character” who wanted to become a famous YouTuber.
A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of two British children who have died in Spain and are in contact with the local authorities.”