Top Line

Saturday 23 March 2013

See the face of a British businessman who 419 who governments

Accused: Jim McCormick, at the Old Bailey

The Ade 651British businessman 'sold golf ball finders as bogus bomb detectors'

He allegedly charged up to £27,000 for the fake devices, which he flogged to governments, police and military services
Accused: Jim McCormick, at the Old Bailey
Central News
A British businessman conned governments around the world by selling them useless bomb detectors that were little more than golf ball finders, a jury heard yesterday.
Jim McCormick allegedly charged up to £27,000 for the fake devices, which he also flogged to police and military services for a “handsome but unwarranted profit”.
Brochures – featuring men in military-type outfits – promised the detection of substances from planes, beyond walls and even beneath the ground, said prosecutor Richard Whittam, QC.
But all three models – the ADE650, 651 and 101 – were a sham and did not work, he added.
In fact the 101’s forerunner, the 100, was just a £13 golf ball finder.
The gadgets were allegedly touted as suitable for use at military bases, Customs checkpoints and nuclear sites.
They were said to be capable of finding traces of drugs, ivory, bodies and contraband in quantities smaller than a human hair.
The Old Bailey jury heard that McCormick, 56, had claimed the detector could “bypass all concealment methods” and find targets through walls, underwater and up to 30ft underground.
But Mr Whittam said the machines lacked “any grounding in science” and offered no advantage over “random chance”.
Device: The ADE651
SWNS
McCormick allegedly offered three different devices for sale through his Broadcast and Telecom Ltd and ATSC firms between 2007 and 2012.
They were marketed as the ADE – Advanced Detection Equipment – models 101, 650 and 651 and were based on an earlier version called the ADE100.
Mr Whittam told the jury: “You may not be surprised that rather than being designed and made as a result of an extensive research and development programme, the ADE100 was actually a golf ball finder that could be purchased in the USA for less than $20.
“The devices did not work and he knew they didn’t. He had them manufactured so they could be sold – and despite the fact they did not work, people bought them for a handsome but unwarranted profit.
“He made them knowing that they were going to be sold as something that it was claimed was simply fantastic.
"You may think those claims are incredible.”
The court heard that McCormick imported 300 Golfinder novelty golf ball locating machines from the USA between 2005 and 2006 before modifying them to sell as bomb detectors.
He sold his bogus devices to the Iraqi police and had clients in Niger, Georgia, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon, the jury heard.
The prosecution said experts who examined the 651 detector found: “It lacks any grounding in science, nor does it work in accordance with the known laws of physics.
"The ADE651 is completely ineffectual as a piece of detection equipment.”
The Ade 651
Hand-held: The gadget demo
SWNS
At least one buyer raised concerns about the devices, which were labelled with stickers from the Essex Chamber of Commerce and the International Association of Bomb Technicians.
McCormick began developing the larger ADE650 model in 2005 and enlisted design consultancy Blue MT to make it look more professional, the jury heard.
The Surrey firm’s director William Powell said McCormick claimed it worked by static electricity.
“We were curious to know what he meant by saying it detected things,” said Mr Powell.
“He gave a demonstration of it detecting water in the building and pipes buried in walls while we were having a meeting.
“Part of the device had been in his pocket. He took it out and was rubbing it on his leg vigorously.
"He explained that was to charge it statically to make it operate.
"But he didn’t really want to tell us about the plastic card that went in. He called it the secret bit that had the magic in it.”
It was alleged that when Mr Powell later opened the unit, he found a single circuit board unconnected to anything and with no components soldered on.
Jonathan Laidlaw, QC, defending, said McCormick could not recall such a demonstration.
The jury, who were shown pictures of a device and brochure, heard that police raided a property belonging to McCormick at Bath, Somerset, in 2010 and also searched his home in Langport.
McCormick pleads not guilty to three charges of fraud. The trial continues today