David Hunt Criminal best pic

Dozens of Met Cases tainted by “Time Lord”

David Hunt Criminal best pic

The so-called crime lord David Hunt has subverted and tainted over twenty seven investigations into his illegal activities.   Relationships between the Hunt organised crime network and serving Met Officers has been uncovered by “whistleblowers”  including Darren Guntrip a serving Detective Constable and David McKelvey – a former Detective Chief Inspector.

The police enquiries cover a 25 year timespan. The “symbiosis” of police and the crime lord include the collapse of a trial involving one of Hunt’s associates. The two police officers previously named in this article spent years on their  investigation and  are suing Scotland Yard over the outcome of this fiasco including misfeasance in a public office, malicious trespass and false imprisonment. A corrupt officer led an investigation into them which apparently “left them destroyed”. He allegedly targeted them in an investigation which was “without foundation” naming them as a “thorn in the side” of the Hunt network.

Murder allegations are included in the unsolved dispute and allegations saga. Both Mckelvey and Guntrip provided evidence during an unsuccessful libel action against The Sunday Times in 2013.  The judge, Mr Justice Simon, ruled that Hunt, who was trying to give the impression he was a legitimate entrepreneur, was the boss of a crime syndicate involved in money laundering, extreme violence, prostitution and fraud.  McKelvey told the court that he had tried to alert his bosses to these theories and had been told “Hunt is too dangerous to take on”. Surely the truth will come out one day.  Is this man a criminal with a huge network and if so, why are the police fighting over his position regarding this in a modern respectable functional society?  If there is a man like this on the run from the authorities, are there more whom we don’t know about or is this man innocent?  What exactly is preventing the police from working cohesively together on the nature of arresting criminals and preventing crime?  Send letters to the Editor with your opinions.