Guest post by Meg Howarth
On 13 February, Brent council confirmed that ‘we have passed
the police all the information they have requested in connection with Kensal
Rise Library and that we continue to co-operate fully with their enquiries’.
The police had previously stated that ‘[we]have been informed that there
is further evidence to support the allegation of fraud and are awaiting receipt
thereof. A decision whether to progress the allegation will be made
after all the evidence has been scrutinised’ (Police
may look again at email fraud evidence in Kensal Rise development, Wembley
Matters 6 February).
So a
police investigation in to the apparent fraudulent use of local, and
other, residents’ addresses in support of a change-of-use planning application
for the Mark Twain library is finally underway - five months after
the Friends of Kensal Rise Library and others first reported the matter to the
council. The Kensington and Chelsea force is handling the affair -
developer Andrew Gillick’s head-office for his Platinum Revolver/Kensal
Properties firms is in the royal borough.
There is currently no indication of when the police will decide whether
or not a prosecution will follow.
Mr
Gillick’s original planning application for one of Brent’s few remaining
historic buildings was unanimously rejected by the council’s planning
committee last September but it’s understood he has a revised application in the
offing. That is why a speedy resolution to this tawdry affair is required.
Despite the council’s official line that it,
has a responsibility and obligation to consider any valid planning application that is put forward from any individual(s)...consider[ing] each on its merits in accordance with its statutory obligations’ (Christine Gilbert, acting chief executive)
most people will find it
incomprehensible if the planning committee is asked to determine a further
application before the outcome of an active police inquiry is known. Speed does not,
of course, mean cutting corners.
Meantime,
some niggling questions remain:
Why
wasn’t all the information and evidence the council had amassed handed to the
police in the first instance, instead of what appears to have been a summary of
its findings?
Would
an investigation have been launched sooner if the police had received a
complete dossier earlier?
Why
did it take 10 days before council leader Muhammed Butt’s late-night tweet on
31 January stating that the police weren’t pursuing the investigation - the
first (and last) anyone’s heard of the City Police’s NFIB (National Fraud and
Investigation Bureau) initial decision to take no further action? The head
of Brent’s Audit and Investigation department was informed of this on 21
January but was taking ‘advice’ on what he was ‘able to disclose’. In the
event, he never disclosed anything. Did the council want to ensure vacant
possession of the site by landlord All Souls College, Oxford)? It knew the
completion of the sale of the building to Andrew Gillick was conditional on
vacant possession and that the final date
for this was 31 January - its
lawyers are the only third party to have seen the Binding Agreement to sell the
building to this developer. Vacant possession was, of course, achieved by
All Souls sending in its heavies at 6am to demolish the pop-up.
Back
at the beginning of October, Brent’s legal boss, Fiona Ledden wrote about
Brent’s own inquiry into the fraudulent emails that: The [council’s] investigation
is continuing and there have been some complications in relation to the work
undertaken. It would not be usual to publish
findings of any investigation, there may however be some conclusions that we
will be able to share’.
At
that stage, it seems the council didn’t anticipate police involvement.
So what changed, and when? Was it the information the
council received early in November that a property owned by Andrew Gillick in
St Mary’s Terrace, Paddington was sub-let at the time an online-comment using
that address appeared in support of the council’s own planning application for
the Barham Library Complex? Mr Gillick, the only supporter of that proposed
development, was slated to speak at the planning hearing but failed to attend.
It was this same address that was previously used twice to support his own
change-of-use application for Kensal Rise Library. Any developer
is entitled to support her/his own application but if the comments
using the developer’s W2 address were submitted in his name when someone else
was living there, that surely could give rise to allegations of fraud?
Information about this, like the theft of Kensal Rise
businesswoman Kirsty Slattery’s address which was used to support the developer’s
change-of-use application for the 110-year old library building, appears to
have been sent to the police only this month.
Why?
3 comments:
Apologies for error in para 8 above - Muhammed Butt's 31 January tweet was not 'the last' that was heard about the NFIB's initial decision not to investigate the fraudulent email business. On 5 February, Brent's head of law, Fiona Ledden, issued a copy of the reasons the NFIB gave for this decision, as below:
“The Police Service has finite resources and it is only right that these resources are directed towards crimes that are solvable with a proportionate level of investigation.
As a Police Service we also need to channel our efforts towards preventing and detecting certain crime types that the people of London and Central Government have identified as being policing priorities.
I have examined your allegation and considered a wide range of factors when deciding if this matter should be further investigated by police. Included in my consideration is the likelihood of detecting and bring an offender to justice”.
As in the penultimate para above, the same question applies: what led the police change-of-mind?
'There is currently no indication of when the police will decide whether or not a prosecution will follow'.
Applying Davies's Law of Copland, I would say this will depend on the timings and dates of the relevant forthcoming lodge meetings.
Davies? Police? Lodges?
What are you implying?
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