source - SUSSEX POLICE
telephone - 101
Four sentenced for conspiracy to rob security guards across the South
Police Press Release 28 February 2014
ref- PR44872 /2014
Four men have been sentenced to a total of 23 years imprisonment for their roles in a conspiracy to rob security staff outside banks across the South of England.
Two of the men had been members of a gang who went to prison after attacking guards at exactly the same locations just five years earlier. During the last of those attacks, at Chandlers Ford in September 2007, another two of the robbers had been shot dead by police.
Caston Francis, 52, of Neil Wates Crescent, Tulse Hill, South London; Leon Hall, 36, of Oxtoby Way, Streatham, South London, Leon McKenzie, 33, of Rookery Gardens, Orpington, Kent Clifford Griffiths, 36, of Aragon Road, Wandsworth, South London,
were sentenced at Winchester Crown Court today, Friday 28 February 2014, having been convicted of conspiracy to rob G4S guards in relation to;
- Robbery at Barclays Bank, Hucclecote, Gloucester, on 14 June, 2011.
- Attempted robbery at Barclays Bank, Tilehurst, Berkshire, on 23 August, 2011.
- Robbery at Barclays Bank, Hucclecote, Gloucester, on 20 September 2011.
- Robbery at HSBC, Chandlers Ford, Hampshire, on 24 November, 2011.
- Robbery at Lloyds TSB, Bath, Somerset, on 25 January, 2012.
- Attempted robbery at Barclays Bank, Hucclecote, Gloucester on 3 April, 2012.
A total of £100,000 cash was stolen and no money has so far been recovered.
Hall was sentenced to six and a half years, McKenzie was sentenced to six years, Griffiths to five and a half years, and Francis to five years. The sentences took into account time they had already spent on remand in custody awaiting trial and sentencing. Hall and McKenzie, who had been amongst the gang sentenced in 2008, were also served with Serious Crime Prevention Orders which restrict their access to phones, computers and other communications devices, and vehicles, and require notification to police of their whereabouts once released.
Francis had been convicted at Winchester Crown Court on 20 December. The other three had pleaded guilty at earlier hearings.
Jacqueline Smith, 35, of Mitcham, South London, was found not guilty of the same offence after the trial ending at the same Court on 20 December.
The charges, authorised by the Crown Prosecution Service, followed a protracted investigation led by the South East Regional Organised Crime Unit. SEROCU, which is based in Sussex, comprises police officers and staff from the forces of Kent, Sussex, Surrey, Hampshire, and Thames Valley and works in conjunction with UK Border Agency, HM Revenue and Customs, and the National Crime Agency to combat cross-border organised crime.
SEROCU officers, with extensive and armed support from NCA officers, worked closely with forces in the areas involved to investigate the attacks and after intensive enquiries over several months caught Hall, Griffiths and McKenzie as they lay in wait for a security van in Gloucester in April 2012. Francis, who was by then serving a prison sentence for a serious assault in London, was charged separately.
Detective Superintendent Steve Black said: "Working with the Metropolitan Police Flying Squad and police forces across the region we identified the pattern of these robberies, and it became clear that the same locations were being targeted. However the ones involved this time were only six amongst 18 across the whole of the south of England which had been attacked in 2006/7. Our operation therefore also had to spread across Suffolk, London, Wiltshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex and Leicestershire, and involved many long days of patient intelligence gathering and assessment to ensure public safety.
In the previous series the robbers had used firearms so we had to be prepared for that eventuality too, and the NCA firearms teams were a vital part of the operation. This time round the robbers did not carry weapons but that was not clear until they were arrested.
But they were also ruthless in their assaults on the guards, putting them and bystanders in great fear. One elderly man who bravely intervened with his walking stick in the Bath incident was viciously pushed to the ground by one of the attackers, thankfully sustaining only minor head injuries.
However thanks to the co-operation of G4S, forces in Avon & Somerset, Hampshire, Gloucestershire and Thames Valley and elsewhere, and the NCA, we were able to bring the series to an abrupt halt without any other injury. This was an excellent example of police cross-border co-operation in very testing circumstances and we are grateful to all involved for their support.
I would also like to give credit to the work of the Senior Investigating Officer and team for bringing these offenders to justice."
return to previous page
If you have comments about this newsletter you can contact us
related or associated :-
Police index
Fire service index
THIS PAGE IS ARCHIVED AND MAY NO LONGER BE SERVICED
return to previous page - - Previous report - - next report
|