Three men have been found guilty of plotting to murder a member of the Securitas heist gang that stole £54m in Britain’s biggest-ever cash robbery.
Paul Allen, 46, was left paralysed from the chest down after he was shot twice as he stood in the kitchen of his home in Woodford, east London, on 11 July 2019.
The former cage fighter lived in the large detached rented house with his partner and three young children after being released from an 18-year prison sentence over the 2006 raid of a cash depot in Tonbridge, Kent.
Image: Staff held at gunpoint. Pic: PA
Much of the £54m loaded into a 7.5-tonne lorry – after the gang kidnapped the Securitas manager and his family and tied up staff at gunpoint – has never been recovered.
After the robbery, Allen fled to Morocco with his friend and heist mastermind Lee Murray, a former cage fighter, before being extradited back to the UK.
Image: Stewart Ahearne, Louis Ahearne, Daniel Kelly. Pics: Met Police/Kent Police/PA
Attack likened Hollywood blockbuster
Louis Ahearne, 36, his brother Stewart Ahearne, 46, and Daniel Kelly, 46, denied conspiring to murder him between 26 June and 12 July 2019 but were found guilty after an Old Bailey trial.
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Prosecutors said the background to the shooting was that Allen – who did not give evidence in the trial – was a “sophisticated” career criminal, but did not suggest a motive for the murder plot.
Metropolitan Police detective superintendent Matt Webb described the Ahearnes and Kelly as “hardened organised criminals”, who “acted together in a well-planned and orchestrated manner to shoot their victim”.
“This attack may look like the plot to a Hollywood blockbuster but the reality is something quite different,” he said.
“This was horrific criminality. The court heard how this was a clear and defined attempt to take a man’s life with those responsible making significant efforts to ensure this was successful.”
Image: Paul Allen was in the kitchen when he was shot. Pic: Met Police
Swiss museum heist
The month before the shooting, the Ahearne brothers and Kelly carried out a heist of the Museum of Far Eastern Arts in Geneva, where they stole more than $3.5m (£2.78m) worth of Ming dynasty antiques, the court heard.
They flew to Hong Kong, where they sold a porcelain bowl at an auction house before the Ming vase was recovered by an undercover officer posing as a buyer at a central London hotel.
The Ahearne brothers were jailed in Switzerland over the raid, while three men, including ex-West Ham academy footballer Kaine Wright were jailed in the UK over their roles in the plot to sell the £2m antique.
Image: Gang stole Chinese Ming Dynasty vase. Pic: Met Police/PA
Image: A cup stolen from a Geneva museum. Pic: Met Police/PA
Wright and Kelly are also wanted in Japan over the robbery of a Tokyo jewellery store in 2015 in which a security guard was punched in the face.
They and another man are alleged to have posed as customers before smashing the glass showcases and stealing jewellery valued at 106,272,000 yen – about £630,000, according to details revealed in a lengthy extradition battle.
The day before Mr Allen’s shooting, Kelly and Louis Ahearne used a Renault Captur rented by Stewart Ahearne in a burglary on a gated community in Kent, the court heard.
The pair, along with another man, posed as police officers, even fixing a blue flashing light to the car, to gain access to the grounds, then broke into an apartment to steal money, handbags and designer trainers.
They were each sentenced to five years in jail for the crime in 2020.
The same rented vehicle used was used as the “mission car” as the Ahearne brothers and Kelly travelled from their home turf in Woolwich, southeast London, prosecutors said.
The court heard they had fitted a tracking device to Allen’s family Mercedes to follow his movements.
Image: Paul Allen rented a home in east London. Pic: PA
Image: A bullet casing found in the back garden. Pic: Met Police
‘He’s been shot’
He was stood in the kitchen just after 11pm as at least six bullets were fired from a Glock handgun from the fence line of his back garden, two of which hit him in the hand and throat.
His partner Jade Bovingdon, was heard screaming, “He’s been shot, he’s been shot.”
A private security guard provided first aid and armed police took over before paramedics arrived.
Allen was taken to hospital for emergency treatment and underwent an operation to remove a bullet lodged in his spinal cord. He now uses a wheelchair.
Five shell casings were recovered close to a summer house, while DNA on swabs taken from a nearby fence panel was matched to Kelly and Louis Ahearne, jurors were told.
The Ahearne brothers made no comment when they were arrested but Kelly said in a prepared statement he had only heard about the shooting of Allen three days later.
“Upon release, I would even like to see how he is,” he said. “I have got no issues with him; I’ve known him for 25 years, and we have been friends the whole time.”
A major incident has been declared in Birmingham over an ongoing bin strike, which has left around 17,000 tonnes of waste on the streets of the city.
Birmingham City Council said the “regrettable” step was taken in response to public health concerns, with picket lines blocking depots and preventing waste vehicles from collecting rubbish.
Members of Unite have been on all-out strike since 11 March in a row over pay, which the union claims will leave some members of staff £8,000 worse off. A series of walkouts have also impacted refuse collections since January.
By declaring a major incident, the council will be able to increase the availability of street cleansing and fly-tip removal with an additional 35 vehicles and crews around the city.
This action will also allow the council to explore what further support is available from neighbouring authorities and the government to assist in the management of the situation.
Council leader John Cotton said it was a “regrettable” step, but the situation was “causing harm and distress” to local people.
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Birmingham suffers bin crisis
“I respect the right to strike and protest, however actions on the picket line must be lawful and sadly the behaviour of some now means we are seeing a significant impact on residents and the city’s environment,” he said.
Jim McMahon, the minister for local government, said the all-out strike by Unite members is causing “misery and disruption” to residents, as well as posing a “public health risk to the city’s most vulnerable and deprived”.
He said the government “stands ready” to respond to any request for extra resources, but insisted that any deal to end the bin strike must “maintain value for money”.
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‘They can’t hold the city to ransom’
Mr McMahon told the Commons: “This is causing a public health risk to the city’s most vulnerable and deprived residents. As a result, I am aware that Birmingham has today declared a major incident to give them the mechanisms to better manage the impact on local residents.
“I support that decision, and I will back local leaders.”
The minister added that the government will “not hesitate to give support in any way that Birmingham leaders need”.
He said: “If local leaders on the ground in Birmingham feel that tackling these issues goes beyond the resources available to them and they request national support, then of course we stand ready to respond to any such request.”
Members of the Unite union met with Birmingham City Council last Thursday, but talks have so far failed.
Unite says the dispute will not end unless the “hugely damaging” cuts to bin collectors’ wages are reversed.
But Birmingham City Council says the aim of the restructuring is to create a “modern, sustainable and consistently reliable waste collection service”.
An “extensive search” is under way to find an 11-year-old girl after she fell into the River Thames in east London.
The Metropolitan Police said it was called at around 1.15pm on Monday to reports the girl had entered the river near Barge House Causeway, near London City Airport.
All emergency services are forming a “large-scale response” to the incident.
The girl’s next of kin have been made aware and are being supported by officers.
The London Ambulance Service was also called at a similar time, after receiving a report of a person in the water at Lowestoft Mews, which is close to the airport.
“We sent resources to the scene, including an ambulance crew, an advanced paramedic, an incident response officer and members of our hazardous area response team,” a spokesperson said.
“Our crews assisted our emergency services partners at the scene but were later stood down.”
London Fire Brigade Deputy Assistant Commissioner Joseph Kenny added that “firefighters responded to reports of a person in the River Thames near Lowestoft Mews, Newham”.
He said crews from East Ham, Barking, Ilford and Bexley fire stations were sent to the scene alongside other emergency services.
“The brigade also deployed its drone team and fire boat as part of its response, with crews carrying out a systematic search of the area,” he added.
“The brigade was first called about the incident at 1.23pm. Search operations for firefighters were concluded at 3.49pm when responsibility for the incident was left with the police.”
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.
Controversial sentencing guidelines that were due to come into force on Tuesday have been delayed after a political backlash.
The Sentencing Council, the independent body that sets out sentencing guidance to courts in England and Wales, was due to bring in new rules around how judges should determine punishment for people from ethnic minority backgrounds.
The new guidance states that a pre-sentence report – the results of which are taken into account when considering a criminal’s sentence – will “usually be necessary” before handing out punishment for someone from an ethnic, cultural or faith minority, alongside other groups such as young adults aged 18 to 25, women and pregnant women.
Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, had said the proposed guidance was “unacceptable” and amounted to “differential treatment before the law” as she urged the council to reverse it.
When the Sentencing Council initially refused her request, Ms Mahmood threatened to legislate to overturn the guidance if necessary.
She confirmed this evening that she would introduce legislation on Tuesday to block these guidelines coming into effect.
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Robert Jenrick has hit out at what he says is
The Sentencing Council has now delayed the “in force date of the guideline pending such legislation taking effect”.
It said in a statement that the council “remains of the view that its guideline, imposition of community and custodial sentences, as drafted is necessary and appropriate”.
However, in a meeting between the chairman Lord Justice Davis and Ms Mahmood on Monday, the minister “indicated her intention to introduce legislation imminently that would have the effect of rendering the section on ‘cohorts’ in the guideline unlawful”.
The council said it is unable to introduce a guideline when there is a draft bill due for introduction that would make it unlawful.
Ms Mahmood said: “This differential treatment is unacceptable – equality before the law is the backbone of public confidence in our justice system. I will change the law to ensure fairness for all in our courts.”
The Sentencing Council also attracted criticism from shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick, who said its updated guidance was an example of “two-tier justice” that would lead to “blatant bias” against Christians and straight white men.
He also argued that it would make “a custodial sentence less likely for those from an ethnic minority, cultural minority, and/or faith minority community” – something the council denied.
The council previously rejected calls from the government to abandon the guidelines, which ask judges to consider offenders’ racial, cultural and religious background when deciding a sentence.
Lord Davis denied that pre-sentence reports reduced the prospect of a jail sentence.
However, he said the council would provide “some clarification of the language” to avoid confusion.