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‘Common' for hostile states to use criminals to carry out offences on UK soil

‘Common' for hostile states to use criminals to carry out offences on UK soil

It, along with countries such as China and Iran, uses proxies to carry out crimes in Britain, as the operating environment has become more difficult for spies.
Metropolitan Police counter-terrorism Commander Dominic Murphy said: 'More than 20% of our work now in counter-terrorism policing comes from a threat from states, and Russia is one of those states now that, as we've seen on a few occasions, have really gone over and above to project a threat into the United Kingdom.
'But in this case, as a result of some of the hard work of us and our intelligence agencies, the hostile operating environment for Russia means, of course, they've recruited young criminals to undertake their work on their behalf.'
He said it is common for states to recruit criminals like Dylan Earl to carry out offences on UK soil.
'We are seeing it quite a bit within our case work.
'It says something about the fact that we have made it very difficult for some of these states to operate in a historical way with their own agents and officers here in the United Kingdom.
'One of the things we need to do is make sure that we are continuing to work with our intelligence partners as effectively as possible to identify where they are tasking, often young criminals, to undertake their work on their behalf, so that we can intervene and disrupt their activities.'
The case is the first conviction under the National Security Act, and one of the first cases involving the Wagner Group in the UK, he said.
'It's important to remember as well that two individuals, Earl and (Jake) Reeves, have both pleaded guilty to national security act offences.
'So this is the first time that we've seen the National Security Act used from arrest right through to conviction, and that's a very significant use of legislation, and should serve as a really important message to anyone who might want to get involved in this type of activity on behalf of a foreign government.'
Earl and Reeves also plotted to set fire to the Hide Restaurant and Hedonism Wines in Mayfair, west London, and plotted to kidnap owner Evgeny Chichvarkin on behalf of the Wagner Group.
Mr Murphy said: 'Earl and Reeves were planning other activity involved in attacking other premises, potentially here in Mayfair, and they'd also discussed the potential kidnap for the individual that owned those premises.
'What this action has done is allow us to disrupt that ongoing activity, and as we can see from the seriousness and the scale of the warehouse fire, clearly, these individuals did pose a threat, and this activity has managed to disrupt that.'
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How a part-time drug dealer living with his parents orchestrated the first Wagner Group attack on British soil
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How a part-time drug dealer living with his parents orchestrated the first Wagner Group attack on British soil

He boasted, 'I can be the best spy you have ever seen.' But Russia 's Wagner group soon discovered that Dylan Earl was no James Bond. Now after the hapless arsonists he recruited were convicted yesterday, the extraordinary story can be told of how a part-time drug dealer living at home with his parents managed to orchestrate the first Wagner Group attack on British soil. From his bedroom in Elmesthorpein Leicestershire, the Putin fan who could barely speak 30 words of Russian, managed to assemble a motley crew of Britons to torch a London warehouse causing £1million of damage, destroying generators and vital Starlink satellite equipment destined for Ukraine. The 20-year-old builder and cocaine dealer was given the codename of 'SAS' and billed as Wagner's 'dagger in Europe' after Earl told the terror group of his grand plans to do 'something big' for the Kremlin, boasting he could build a 'link' between the Wagner Group, IRA and notorious Kinahan crime cartel. But the bungling arsonists Earl recruited, who ranged from criminals to a cleaner, did such a bad job on March 20 last year that the Russians refused to pay them, saying the arson attack was not up to Wagner's 'standards'. His henchmen, Nii Kojo Mensah, 23, Jakeem Barrington Rose, 23, and Ugnius Asmena, 20, forgot to film themselves burning the warehouse in Leyton, East London after fleeing in a Kia Picanto which had to be 'bump started' with a set of pliers to turn the ignition key. They were forced to return to the scene just to livestream it for the Russians, which resulted in the gang being captured on CCTV and Rose also dropped a knife with his DNA on it before fire crews arrived to bring the blaze under control. But in a chilling illustration of Russia's appetite for inflicting chaos in the UK, despite the attack not matching Earl's lofty promises, Wagner operatives were prepared to send him on an even bigger mission to kidnap billionaire Russian dissident Evgeny Chichvarkin. When police swooped last April, Earl was preparing to firebomb his Mayfair restaurant and wine shop worth £30million. Yesterday Commander Dominic Murphy, the head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command said the astonishing case showed how Russia was prepared to buy criminal proxies to carry out their dirty work in the UK. Earl was the first person to be convicted under the new National Security Act last year after police uncovered messages revealing how the drug dealer, who kept a Russian flag in his room, contacted a Telegram channel known as a mouthpiece for Wagner. 'I been wanting to come Russia. I need a fresh start bro,' Earl said. 'Do I need to be able to speak Russian though because that's not the best? Literally know 30 words, if that.' Gang members Jakeem Barrington Rose, 23 (left) and Nii Kojo Mensah, 23, have both been convicted A Wagner automated chatbot responded: 'Hello friend. How are you? We would like you to help us in Europe. What can you do in Europe, what actions? We need those who are our kindred spirit.' Earl was instructed to watch a Cold War drama about KGB spies as a 'manual', with the The Americans TV series about KGB agents undercover in the US suggested as an aid to help him organise 'partisan cells' in the UK. Earl, whose Signal handle was John Wick's nickname, Baba Yaga, from the hit movies starring Keanu Reeves, bragged: 'If you need connections with IRA, I can sort it. 'You want criminal connections with murderers, kidnappers, soldiers, drug dealers, fraudsters, car thieves- I can sort it all.' He promised, 'I know I can be the best spy you have ever seen', saying he had 'hundreds of people who respect me and do everything I ask of them'. Excitedly, he told the Russians: 'I can bring you great power and connections…I can get integrated with political connections and criminal figures of the highest level in Europe and South America…I am offering you everything: ways to make tens of millions of pounds, doing any country, all fires etc, spy operations in my country against individuals, business, government… I can provide you with hundreds of soldiers and access to big criminal organisations. Everything you want.' But the gang Earl recruited with the promise of a mere £1,000 were hardly soldiers. Jake Reeves, 23, from Croydon, was working as a Gatwick aircraft cleaner and volunteering for criminal jobs on a Telegram group after failing his GCSEs and becoming obsessed with the gangster lifestyle portrayed on the game Grand Theft Auto. Reeves brought in his former college friends, Rose, who already had criminal convictions and Mensah. Asmena, a Lithuanian living with his drug-addicted mother in a squat in Roehampton, South London also volunteered. Yesterday Rose, Mensah and Asmena were convicted of aggravated arson after an Old Bailey trial. Reeves pleaded guilty at a previous hearing to the same offence and agreeing to accept money from a foreign intelligence service Ashton Evans, 20, an IT student and part-time drug dealer from Newport, Gwent, was found guilty of failing to disclose information about terrorist acts after Earl attempted to recruit him for the Mayfair attack. Commander Murphy said: 'This case is clear example of an organisation linked to the Russian state using 'proxies' - in this case British men - to carry out very serious criminal activity in this country on their behalf. 'The ringleaders - Earl and Reeves - willingly acted as hostile agents on behalf of the Russian state. 'The warehouse arson put members of the public at great risk, and it was only by good fortune nobody was seriously injured or worse. 'Those involved showed little or no regard for the potential impact of their actions on the UK's wider security. Seemingly motivated by the promise of money, they were prepared to commit criminal acts on behalf of Russia. 'I hope these convictions send a strong warning of the very serious consequences of committing offences on behalf of a foreign country.'

Three men found guilty of Wagner-linked arson attack in London
Three men found guilty of Wagner-linked arson attack in London

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Three men found guilty of Wagner-linked arson attack in London

During the trial, the court heard that Earl had told a contact in the Wagner Group he met on Telegram that he was keen to carry out a series of "missions", of which the warehouse fire was only the first. More plots were discovered, involving further arson attacks on a restaurant and wine shop in Mayfair, west London and to kidnap its owner, a multi-millionaire and Russian dissident Evgeny Chichvarkin. Messages recovered from Earl's phone showed that reconnaissance had been carried out and discussions were ongoing about using explosives in the planned attacks. Mr Chichvarkin was described in court as a "high-profile Russian dissident and refugee" who has been vocal in his criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine. His two Mayfair businesses collectively employed 200 people and were valued at more than £30m. Earl, of Elmesthorpe in Leicester, is the first person to be convicted of offences under the National Security Act, passed by Parliament in 2023, to deal with the increased risk of hostile state activity. A fifth man, Ashton Evans, of Newport, was found guilty of one count of failing to disclose information about terrorist acts, but cleared of failing to tell authorities about the warehouse arson. A sixth man, Dmitrijus Paulauskas, of Croydon, was found not guilty of two counts of failing to disclose information about terrorist acts. "This case is a clear example of an organisation linked to the Russian state using 'proxies', in this case British men, to carry out very serious criminal activity in this country on their behalf," head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, Commander Dominic Murphy, said. "I hope these convictions send a strong warning of the very serious consequences of committing offences on behalf of a foreign country."

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