Whistleblower
warned business department in 2008 about Jim McCormick's fake detectors, saying
lives were being put at risk
Read the whistleblower's emails
Read the whistleblower's emails
James McCormick leaving the Old Bailey after being convicted of selling bogus bomb-detection kits based on novelty golf gadgets. Photograph: Gavin Rodgers/Pixel |
A
businessman who was found guilty of selling fake bomb detectors was given
advice by British government officials on how to market his products to United
Nations agencies, it has emerged.
Jim
McCormick, 57, who was convicted at the Old Bailey on Tuesday of three counts
of fraud, was trained at a "how to sell to the UN" seminar organised
by UK Trade and Industry in March 2008. He also held meetings with officials at
UK Trade & Investment, the export-promotion arm of the Department for
Business.
McCormick faces up to 10 years in jail for a crime that detectives said "showed a
complete disregard for the safety of those that used and relied upon the device
for their own security and protection".
The devices
were compared to dowsing rods and magic wands by people who used them, although their sales in Iraq and other war zones helped make McCormick a £55m fortune,
and allowed him to buy a £3.5m mansion in Bath formerly owned by the actor
Nicolas Cage.
There is no
evidence that the business department knew the devices were useless. But it
also emerged that the same department ignored a warning in 2008 about the
dangers of the fake detectors from a whistleblower, who said they put lives at
risk.
Ian
Pearson, the Labour minister who oversaw export controls at the time, was
emailed a detailed dossier about McCormick entitled "Dowsing rods endanger
lives" in November of that year but his ministerial office did not reply.
The
document concluded that McCormick's fake detectors could have potentially
lethal consequences: "Somebody is going to be seriously hurt or killed
using or relying on these devices to detect explosives, if they haven't
already".
It took
over a year for the business department to place limited export bans to
Afghanistan and Iraq in January 2010 on the trade after officials were warned
by the whistleblower that the detectors, which sold for as much as £10,000 but
were based on a £15 device, were not capable of detecting anything.
The
whistleblower also wrote to the chairman of the Commons defence select
committee, James Arbuthnot, in January 2009 that "these devices put lives
at serious risk since they cannot detect explosives". Arbuthnot passed on
the complaint to Quentin Davies, the then minister for defence equipment.
Patrick
Mercer MP, a former army officer, said: "It seems extraordinary that once
the government knew about the nonsense of these devices that a blanket export
ban was not put on the products rather than these specific ones to Iraq and
Afghanistan. The government seems to have been tardy about the whole
thing."
Police
warned that the bogus devices were still being used in Iraq and elsewhere.
Following conviction at the end of McCormick's six-week trial, Detective
Inspector Ed Heath, of Avon and Somerset police said: "Both civilians and
armed forces personnel were put at significant risk in relying upon this
equipment. That device has been used and is still being used on checkpoints.
People using that device believe it works. It does not."
It is also
alleged by an Iraqi whistleblower that McCormick paid millions of pounds in
bribes to senior Iraqis to secure the deals. General Jihad al-Jabiri, who ran
the Baghdad bomb squad, is in prison on corruption charges relating to the
contracts. Some Iraqis still believe the detectors work, while others are angry
they have cost lives. Inspector general Aqil al-Turehi, of the Iraqi interior
ministry, told a BBC Newsnight investigation: "This gang of Jim McCormick
and the Iraqis working with him killed my people in cold blood."
A former
colleague of McCormick told the BBC that he saw him set up accounts in false
names for 15 Iraqi officials. He said they "don't care if people live or
die"; the only thing they care about is "how much am I going to get
back – cashback".
McCormick
claimed the gadgets could detect explosives at long range, deep underground,
through lead-lined rooms and multiple buildings. In fact, their antennae, which
appeared to be like car radio aerials, were not connected to any electronics
and had no power source. McCormick's ADE-101, was in fact a rebadged golf ball
finder that was described by its US maker as "a great novelty item that
you should have fun with". The antenna was "no more a radio antenna
than a nine-inch nail", according to one scientist.
A
spokeswoman for the Department for Business said on Tuesday that no controls
were placed on the export of the fake devices until 2010 because there was
"no concrete evidence about the effectiveness or otherwise of these
devices. The concerns raised in the letters did not provide a sufficient basis
to impose controls."
However,
the Old Bailey jury heard that by 2009 British and American soldiers in Basra
and Baghdad were already expressing "real concern" about the devices
after x-raying them and finding no working parts inside. "I was extremely
surprised by the lack of government action at the time and apparent lack of
investigation," the whistleblower told the Guardian on Tuesday.
"Clearly people were dying as a result of the use of this product."
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