Putting 29 people in jail for 250 years: The most prolific tainted witness has spent his life hiding from the chase

A British “Supergrass” witness, believed to be the “most prolific”, has testified in six trials over the past five years, providing key testimony that has required 29 convicts to serve a total of more than 250 years in prison, but has also become The “target” must remain anonymous for the rest of his life.

Schematic diagram, non-news parties.

SKY News and The Sun reported that the tainted witness, known as “MrX” (MrX), was a cocaine dealer who had a debt dispute with an accomplice. When two drug gangs went to war over territory, “Mr. X” was kidnapped, threatened and physically tortured, but escaped and decided to help the police.

As “Mr. X” has relations with various groups, he has mastered many criminals and key information of serious crimes, and has become a “secret human intelligence source (CovertHuman Intelligence Source)” for the criminal police, who are investigating organized crime. The police soon became concerned that his identity would be revealed and decided to put him into the witness protection program instead.

The police allegedly spent eight months listening to “Mr. X’s” full debriefing, conducting 115 recorded interviews and producing 10,000 pages of critical information that led to the disintegration of several gangs associated with the Balkans, Spain, France and Brazil. The prosecution noted that his help reached “a whole unprecedented and extraordinary level. He has had a “huge impact on international organized crime,” said one criminal police officer.

Mr. X” reportedly spent 41 days in the witness box, under close protection. The prosecution did not dare to announce how much help “Mr. X” had provided until after the dust had settled in the final trial.

“Mr. X” admitted to all the crimes he had committed in the past, in exchange for a lighter sentence from the judge and a new life, and his identity was protected by a court order. It is believed that “Mr. X” has left the United Kingdom, but the prisoners he helped to imprison are aware of his old identity, leaving “Mr. X” to face the specter of gangs hiring professional killers for the rest of his life, and even appointed lawyers who cannot be named to avoid relentless retaliation from gangs. The trial judge in one of the trials was not able to name a lawyer.

The trial judge at one of the trials told “Mr. X”, “If your life hadn’t been in danger before, I’m absolutely sure it would be now.