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Ian McAteer

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Ian McAteer
Born
Ian Douglas McAteer

November 1961 (age 62–63)
Other names
  • Mad Jock
  • Little Hands
Occupation(s)Drug dealer, car salesman
Conviction(s)Murder, illegal drug trade, perverting the course of justice

Ian Douglas McAteer[1] (born November 1961)[2] is a Scottish former gangster who was a prominent figure in the Glasgow and Liverpool criminal underworlds during the later 20th century. McAteer accumulated various convictions, and in 2001 was sentenced to life for the 1999 murder of a gangland associate: he had been acquitted of a previous murder charge in 1998. McAteer was a suspect in other crimes, including the 1999 murder of television presenter Jill Dando.

Background

McAteer grew up in poverty within the Glasgow suburb of Easterhouse. By age 11, he was robbing purses and handbags to feed himself and his four siblings, all of whom had fractured childhoods and spent time in foster care.[3]

From 1979, McAteer established links with Glasgow's main drug barons. He attained preferred status as a distributor in Scotland, and had an even more profitable relationship with the Liverpool Mafia. Journalist Graham Johnson reported that, aside from drug dealing, McAteer's work encompassed contract killings, gun running, debt collection and protection. He had a successful used car business, which was used to wash money obtained from illegal ventures.[4]

McAteer was described in the Liverpool Echo as "one of Scotland's most feared gangsters",[5] while a senior Liverpool detective labelled him "extremely dangerous".[6] He was known within Merseyside as "Mad Jock";[7][8] "Little Hands" has been reported as an alternate nickname.[9][10]

McAteer had a nomadic lifestyle:[2] as well as Easterhouse, his home bases included Drumchapel,[11] Dalmuir[1] and Leicester.[11] He has two children.[2]

Criminal history

Drug conviction and Bennett trial

McAteer was jailed in late 1993 for drug-related offences.[2] While incarcerated at HMP Glenochil in Tullibody,[12] he had conflict with Glaswegian criminal John "Jack" Bennett, a former associate. The family of Bennett attributed the rift to his rejecting McAteer's sexual advances.[7]

On 28 February 1998, Bennett was killed in a daylight attack on Glasgow's Royston Road,[13] incurring 57 stab wounds:[7] McAteer and two other men stood trial for the murder.[13] The prosecution posited that McAteer had put out a contract while in jail, offering "2 oz of tobacco and 50 temazepam tablets" to any inmate who killed Bennett.[7] On 10 August a jury at Glasgow's High Court returned a not proven verdict.[13]

Shooting arrest and further scrutiny

Later in 1998, McAteer was arrested in Merseyside on suspicion of shooting a man at a set of traffic lights in Glasgow: the incident had occurred mere yards from the site of the Bennett murder. He avoided charges when the victim refused to make a formal complaint.[7] McAteer also became a suspect in the 1999 murder of television presenter Jill Dando.[3]

Selkirk murder and additional convictions

While in prison, McAteer met Liverpudlian Warren Selkirk, and later enlisted him as a drug courier. In 1999, however, McAteer feared that his colleague was becoming a liability (with particular concerns over his mounting gambling debts[14]): on October 30, Selkirk was shot five times at Crosby Marina in north Merseyside, while his children waited for him in a nearby car.[6][15] A plastic bag filled with dog excrement – a sign of contempt – was found in his right hand.[15] Police traced McAteer travelling from Glasgow to Liverpool by tracking his mobile phone activity, which led to his arrest.[16] McAteer maintained his innocence,[17] and later blamed Liverpool associate Paul Bennett for setting him up.[18]

Tony Thompson in The Observer reported that McAteer "threatened to shoot a number of police officers as well as anyone who stood as a witness against him": at least two criminals were given new identities under the witness protection program in return for their testimony.[15] On 5 April 2001 at Liverpool Crown Court, McAteer was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life. He was given a concurrent five-year term for attempting to pervert the course of justice, with sentencing delayed on a further conviction of plotting to supply ecstasy and heroin.[6] Six months later, the drug offences – for which McAteer was originally remanded in custody by Liverpool magistrates in February 2000[19] – met with a 16-year sentence.[10] As of September 2002, McAteer was incarcerated at HMP Long Lartin in Worcestershire.[17]

In December 2003, McAteer was refused permission to appeal his murder conviction.[1] Following a 2006 review of the case at London's Royal Courts of Justice, Mr Justice Grigson ruled that McAteer must serve a minimum of 22-and-a-half years before being considered for parole.[20]

Paul Ferris

Former Glasgow gangster Paul Ferris has known McAteer since childhood. In his 2005 book, Vendetta, Ferris protested McAteer's innocence in relation to the murder of Selkirk, suggesting that police pinned the murder to McAteer in order to assuage grief among the city of Liverpool. He argued that McAteer's "jealous" henchman, George Bell Smith – whose ex-girlfriend was now in a relationship with McAteer – provided false testimony of his boss indicating guilt (including the brandishing of a gun) in return for having a child sexual abuse charge dropped.[9] McAteer's appeal would have indeed asserted that a key witness had charges against them dismissed after agreeing to give evidence.[17]

Ferris found it implausible that McAteer, whom he described as being "so cautious as to be almost paranoid", would implicate himself in such a way, and concluded that Selkirk was killed by Irish criminals due to unpaid debts.[9] In a 2005 interview he said: "It is common knowledge that [McAteer] did not do it. Even the dogs in the street know it... he is being kept inside because of politics and nothing else."[21]

Later life

In 2011, McAteer, alongside another former Glasgow gangster, Jamie Stevenson, raised £3,776 for Glasgow's Royal Hospital for Sick Children by running a marathon on a treadmill at HMP Shotts in North Lanarkshire.[8] The effort was branded a "con" by the sister of Jack Bennett: she maintained McAteer's culpability for the murder of her brother.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Killer loses appeal". Liverpool Echo. 9 December 2003. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d McElhone, Xander (17 August 1998). "Good Eggs of Glesga". The Big Issue (297).
  3. ^ a b The Cartel (Johnson), Chapter 1: The Big Bang
  4. ^ The Cartel (Johnson), Chapter 40: Warren Selkirk
  5. ^ "Drugs Empire". Liverpool Echo. 23 January 2002. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  6. ^ a b c "Drug baron gets life for killing father of three". The Telegraph. 6 April 2001. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e The Cartel (Johnson), Chapter 23: Repeat
  8. ^ a b Alexander, Derek (6 March 2011). "Fundraising mobster Jamie 'Iceman' Stevenson does marathon in prison gym". Daily Record. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  9. ^ a b c Ferris; McKay, Chapter 59: The Nephew
  10. ^ a b Elias, Richard (27 October 2001). "Downfall of gambler from roulette wheel who upped the stakes to smuggling drugs". Liverpool Daily Post. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Three walk free after court is told of motiveless killing". The Herald. 11 August 1998. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b Alexander, Derek (13 March 2011). "Fury over killer's charity 'con trick'". Sunday Mail. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  13. ^ a b c Sharp, Ian; Tait, Robert (11 August 1998). "Three cleared of stabbing man in front of shoppers". The Scotsman. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  14. ^ "Drug dealer jailed for life over execution of partner". The Herald. 6 April 2001. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  15. ^ a b c Thompson, Tony (8 April 2001). "Drug gangs' spate of turf war killings". The Observer. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  16. ^ "Missing Mobile Could Hold Key to Finding Murderer". Daily Record. 4 October 2006. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  17. ^ a b c "Marina drugs row killer set to appeal". Liverpool Daily Post. 23 September 2002. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  18. ^ Druglord (Johnson), Chapter 22: Ontop to Death – Haase's Second Crime Spree
  19. ^ "$15m drug haul". Daily Record. 1 March 2000. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  20. ^ "Gangster must serve 22½ years for killing". Liverpool Daily Post. 16 June 2006. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  21. ^ "I lift the lid on city's violent gangland". Liverpool Echo. 19 October 2005. Retrieved 12 July 2018.

Works cited

Murderbook (1900-1999) at TotalCrime.co.uk