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Flying Squad

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(Redirected from Flying squad) Specialist branch of the Metropolitan Police that investigates armed and organised crime This article is about the British police unit. For the Italian police unit, see Reparto volanti. For the documentary television series broadcast, see Flying Squad (TV series). For other uses, see The Flying Squad (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Metropolitan Police Air Support Unit.

The Flying Squad is a branch of the Serious and Organised Crime Command within London's Metropolitan Police Service. It is also known as the Robbery Squad, Specialist Crime Directorate 7, SC&O7 and SO7. It is nicknamed The Sweeney, an abbreviation of the Cockney rhyming slang "Sweeney Todd" (rhyming "squad" with "todd").

The squad's purpose is to investigate robberies.

Formation and history

The squad was originally formed on an experimental basis by Detective Chief Inspector Frederick Wensley. In October 1919, Wensley summoned 12 detectives to Scotland Yard to form the squad. The group was initially named the Mobile Patrol Experiment and its original orders were to perform surveillance and gather intelligence on known robbers and pickpockets, using a horse-drawn carriage with covert holes cut into the canvas.

In 1920, it was officially reorganised under the authority of then Commissioner Nevil Macready. Headed by Detective Inspector Walter Hambrook, the squad was composed of 12 detective officers, including Irish-born Jeremiah Lynch (1888–1953), who had earned a fearsome reputation for tracking wartime German spies and for building up the case against confidence trickster Horatio Bottomley. The Mobile Patrol Experiment was given authorisation to carry out duties anywhere in the Metropolitan Police District, meaning that its officers did not have to observe Divisions, giving rise to the name of the Flying Squad because the unit operated across London without adhering to divisional policing boundaries.

Crossley 20/25 Tender (1919)

An alternative explanation for the "Flying Squad" name is that the first vehicles used were refurbished Crossley Motors 20/25 type tenders previously used by the Royal Flying Corps, which were supplied to the Metropolitan Police in 1920.

Throughout the 1920s, the squad was standardised and expanded, and the establishment was expanded to 40 officers, under the command of Detective Chief Inspector Fred "Nutty" Sharpe until his retirement in July 1937. In 1948, the squad was given the designation of C.O.(C.8) for Commissioner's Office Crime 8 and was augmented. By 1956 it made one thousand arrests per year for the first time.

From 1978 to 1981 the name was changed to the Central Robbery Squad, but still known as the Flying Squad. It is often referred to by the nicknames the "Heavy Mob" or "the Sweeney" (rhyming slang for Flying Squad, from Sweeney Todd).

This was the era in which the squad's close ties with the criminal fraternity, which had always been a necessary part of its strategy, were being exposed to public criticism. A number of scandals involving bribery and corruption were revealed, and on 7 July 1977, the squad's commander, Detective Chief Superintendent Kenneth Drury, was convicted on five counts of corruption and imprisoned for eight years. Twelve other officers were also convicted and many more resigned. These and other scandals led to a massive internal investigation by the Dorset Constabulary into the Metropolitan Police Service and the City of London Police, codenamed Operation Countryman.

Notable investigations

  • In July 1948, the Squad learned of a plan to steal £750,000 (almost £25 million in 2019) of bullion, jewellery and other valuables from the BOAC (British Overseas Airways Corporation) secure warehouse at Heathrow Airport by drugging the guards. Squad officers replaced the guards and pretended to be drugged, with other officers stationed around the warehouse. When the thieves removed the keys to the safe from Detective Sergeant Charles Hewett, the Squad announced its presence and a violent struggle ensued with many on both sides suffering serious injuries. The nine offenders received a total of 71 years' imprisonment for what became known as the Battle of London Airport.
  • In the 1960s, the squad undertook the role of capturing and gathering evidence against the Kray twins, with many officers giving evidence in court.
  • The squad took up investigating the Great Train Robbery, which had no firearms involved, but did not catch all of the robbers.
  • Some of the most dangerous work undertaken by the Flying Squad is the "pavement ambush", where police ambush armed robbers during an offence. During Operation Char in 1987, and Operation Yamoto in November 1990, this approach led to three armed robbers being shot dead by police.
  • On 26 November 1983, £26 million worth of gold bullion, diamonds, and cash was stolen from the Brink's-Mat depot, on a trading estate near Heathrow Airport in West London. Flying Squad officers were involved extensively in the investigations which followed to attempt to trace, arrest and convict the gang members involved and their associates.
  • In August 1993, an armed robbery occurred at a Barclays Bank in Blackfen in south-east London. This made the headlines as being the first time police were fired upon by a machine gun in mainland Britain; one officer was struck in the head by a ricochet and received the George Medal. The two robbers were later arrested and sentenced at the Old Bailey.
  • In November 2000, five men set out to rob the Millennium Dome of the flawless 203.04-carat (40.608 g) Millennium Star, valued at over £200 million. Originally, police were unsure of the intended location of the robbery, but after months of surveillance, it was realised that the target was the Millennium Dome. On 7 November, the robbers armed with smoke bombs, ammonia and a nail gun, crashed into the dome with a stolen JCB excavator and smashed through to the vault. The robbers planned to escape on the River Thames by using a speedboat. The police operation to catch the robbers was codenamed Operation Magician, and involved 200 officers, including 40 specialist firearms officers (SFOs) from SCO19. Some of the officers were positioned behind a dummy wall, and others were dressed as cleaners with their firearms hidden in black bin bags or in rubbish bins, along with officers in Dome staff uniforms. A further 60 armed Flying Squad officers were stationed around the Thames, and 20 on the river itself, to hamper any escape attempts. The five men were caught and sentenced on various robbery charges. Detective Superintendent Jon Shatford was in command of the operation.
  • On 17 May 2004, a robbery at the Heathrow Airport Swissport warehouse was foiled by officers from the Flying Squad and the Metropolitan Police, as the robbers attempted to steal gold and cash potentially worth £80m. The eight gang members later received between 6 and 13 years each in jail.
  • On 13 September 2007, the Flying Squad was involved in an incident outside a bank in the village of Chandler's Ford, near Southampton. Two suspected armed robbers were shot dead by members of SCO19, in support of a Flying Squad operation, who had been lying in wait after receiving a tip off that an armed robbery was imminent. The thieves were attempting armed robbery on a G4S security van outside the HSBC branch when they were killed by the SCO19 SFOs.

In fiction

The Flying Squad's work was dramatised in the 1970s British television series The Sweeney, and two theatrically released feature film spin-offs, Sweeney! and Sweeney 2, starring John Thaw and Dennis Waterman. A further film adaptation, The Sweeney (starring Ray Winstone), was released in 2012.

The Monty Python sketch "Argument Clinic" featured "Inspector Fox of the Light Entertainment Police, Comedy Division, Special Flying Squad", and "Inspector Thompson's Gazelle of the Programme Planning Police, Light Entertainment Division, Special Flying Squad."

In an episode of the Thin Blue Line, Inspector Fowler expresses displeasure at the idea of the Flying Squad using his station for an investigation on the grounds that their members urinate inaccurately.

See also

  • Bent Coppers, 2003 book detailing police corruption within the Flying Squad
  • Thief Takers, 1990s television drama about the Flying Squad

Further reading

References

  1. ^ "History of the Metropolitan Police Service". Metropolitan Police Service. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  2. "Flying Squad: The Sweeney's changing face". BBC News. 10 November 2000. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  3. Commercial Vehicles by Crossley Motors
  4. Kirby, Dick (23 February 2011). The Guv'nors: Ten of Scotland Yard's Greatest Detectives. Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1-84884-972-3.
  5. Harding, ed. (1977). Guinness book of car facts and feats. London: Guinness Superlatives. ISBN 0-900424-54-0.
  6. "Metropolitan Police History – timeline 1950–69". Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  7. "Cheers to you, Ludovic Kennedy: Simon Heffer on a genial study of the late broadcaster's work to expose police corruption and miscarriages of justice". Daily Telegraph. London. 25 February 2017. p. 28.
  8. Andrew Walker. The Sweeney's proud history, BBC, 17 May 2004
  9. Fish, Donald. Air-Line Detective. The Sunday Times, 18 September 1960, pages 21/22 Magazine Section
  10. Kirby, Dick. The Sweeney. Barnsley, Pen & Sword Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84884-390-5
  11. ^ "Metropolitan Police Service – Specialist Crime Directorate". Met.police.uk. Archived from the original on 10 January 2009. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  12. "Flying Squad: The Sweeney's changing face". BBC News. 10 November 2000. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  13. Kirby, Terry (18 August 1993). "Detective shot during chase after van robbery: Automatic weapon fired at surveillance team". The Independent. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  14. ^ "Armed robbers get 18 years for machinegun attack on police". The Independent. 3 June 1994. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  15. "The £80m sting: How police foiled the Heathrow bullion heist". The Independent. 18 May 2004.
  16. "Heathrow bullion robbers jailed". BBC News website. 16 September 2005.
  17. Batty, David (13 September 2007). "Two robbers shot dead in failed bank raid". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  18. Adams, Mark; critic2012-06-29T08:00:00+01:00, chief film. "The Sweeney". Screen.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  19. "Inspector Flying Fox of the Yard".
  20. Crime waits for no man | The Thin Blue Line, 21 February 2014, retrieved 3 August 2021
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