Glasgow Times

BRUTAL CITY SHOOTING

GLASGOW CRIME STORIES Sniper took aim from tower block to murder his target

- BY NORMAN SILVESTER

THE sniper had taken up his position on the top floor of the eight- storey tower block shortly before 9pm. He tried to make himself as comfortabl­e as possible while waiting patiently for his target to appear in view though the telescopic sight.

The concealed spot where he was positioned was normally used by residents to hang out their washing.

But today the concrete drying green had a far more sinister purpose.

A few minutes later father- of- five Frank McPhie was lying dead outside the ground floor tenement flat where he lived in Guthrie Street, Maryhill, shot once through the head with pinpoint accuracy.

His terrified 11- year- old son had been playing nearby and saw his dad fall to the ground.

The killer walked off leaving behind the deadly weapon that had just delivered the fatal bullet – a Czech- made ACZ Brno rifle.

The victim was one of the city’s biggest underworld figures with an involvemen­t in serious and organised crime going back to the 1970s.

McPhie’s death, shortly after 9pm on May 10, 2000, shocked the local community where he lived, but not one of the police officers tasked to investigat­e his murder.

Six weeks earlier Detective Sergeant Gerry Gallagher had stood in McPhie’s flat which was only a short drive from Maryhill Police Office.

He’d been sent to deliver a threat to life warning, also known as an Osman Warning.

They are issued to criminals where police have credible intelligen­ce that violence is being planned against them.

Gerry says McPhie was unconcerne­d about the threat to his life and also made it clear his visitor was not welcome.

He recalled: “I knew McPhie like most officers in the city by reputation and as a violent individual.

“But it was my first involvemen­t with him personally.

“Though he was not tall he was powerfully and stockily built.

“During our short meeting he bristled with aggression but it was his eyes that told you everything.

“They held humour.

“I told him that I was there to give him a warning that his life was in danger and he should take precaution­s regarding his movements.

“But he was not interested hearing this.

“He said: ‘ you’ve goodbye.’”

Gerry then became of the murder investigat­ion team and five months later was involved in identifyin­g a prime suspect.

The tower block from where the gunman opened fire was in Carrbridge Drive directly across from the victim’s home.

Gerry added: “The sniper just bided his time until McPhie came home.

“After he has fired the shot he just disappeare­d into thin air.

“There was no sign of a man running off or cars being driven away at high speed.

“It’s possible he had a bolt hole in the same tower block where he could hide until things quietened down.

“He may even have just slipped sway and joined the crowds in the street.

“We later discovered that our main suspect was a local man who lived nearby so he would not have stood out or attracted any suspicion at the time.”

McPhie, a close associate of the late crime boss Arthur Thompson, had served time for armed robbery in 1978 and 1986 and received eight neither warmth given a it, now key nor in part years in 1992 over a £ 200,000 drug seizure. He also had a keen interest in dog fighting.

In a chequered criminal career McPhie was also famously cleared on two separate murder charges.

One involved the murder of a fellow inmate William Toye at Perth Prison in 1996 for which he was cleared in 1997.

However it was for the second murder in 1997 – three months after he came out of prison – that McPhie first came to public attention.

The victim Christophe­r McGrory, 25, was not only a close friend but McPhie had been an usher at his wedding in Dublin two weeks earlier.

McGrory was found strangled in the back of his own van at the side of Dougalston Golf Club, at Milngavie.

Frank was arrested along with 29- year- old Colin McKay – Christophe­r McGrory’s best man.

Both were cleared at the High Court in Glasgow in 1998 and cheered by a jubilant crowd of 50 as they left the building.

It was thought that McGrory, who owned three horses, had been murdered over a drugs deal gone wrong.

The second acquittal McPhie’s reputation as player.

He now had no need to fear or be wary of offending other criminals – or so he thought.

McPhie was shot after parking his van on nearby Kelvindale Road to walk the 20 yards to his flat.

Was this assassinat­ion revenge for the murder of Chris McGrory three years earlier or did the answer lie closer to home?

McPhie had also been involved in a road rage incident on Balmore Road, in nearby Lambill, with a cemented a major young member of the Daniels crime family.

He is said to have arranged to have him ambushed and stabbed outside a local Chinese takeaway.

McPhie was also said to have pulled pull up his mask to let his victim know who was responsibl­e.

He even turned up at a Daniels’ scrapyard in Maryhill, to show that he did not fear any reprisals.

It was this series of events relayed to police that had led to Gerry issuing the threat to life weeks earlier.

Although no evidence has ever been found to link the Daniels family to the murder. notorious

Gerry said: “I wondered whether his two murder acquittals had given McPhie a mistaken sense of his power or invincibil­ity.

“My father once told me that no matter how cute, hard or dirty a football player you thought you were, there was always someone cuter, harder and dirtier.”

Police hit a wall of silence during their investigat­ion into McPhie’s murder.

They had little or no evidence and there was also a lack of witnesses.

Given the various factions that were known to be involved it was not surprising.

DNA was later discovered on the weapon but it belonged to one of the police forensic scientists.

A photofit of a possible seen in the area at the the murder also brought response.

Five months into the inquiry Gerry and a colleague working the case got the breakthrou­gh they were looking for.

They discovered that the murder weapon had previously been used as target practice on a telegraph pole in a farmer’s field near Kilmarnock in Ayrshire.

A witness gave them a name and a 37- year- old man from Maryhill was arrested for the murder.

The man appeared at Glasgow Sheriff Court on October 6, 2000, but the charges were later dropped through lack of evidence and the 37- year- old was never prosecuted.

Gerry added: “It was slog for the police because of who the victim was and the family said to be behind the murder.

“There were not many tears being shed for Frank McPhie.

“In these types of inquiry the general public understand­ably do not want to get involved.

“The problem was that we did not have any eye- witnesses.

“All we had was the evidence from the farm but that was not enough to go to trial.”

In 2014, leading criminolog­ist Prof David Wilson theorised that the murder had been carried out by a master hitman.

The Scot examined 27 murders carried out by 35 hired assassins included the unsolved murder of Frank McPhie.

Wilson, who lectures in criminolog­y at Birmingham City Univerrevi­ews suspect time of a poor sity, said at the time:

“Hitmen are familiar figures in films and video games, carrying out hits in underworld bars or from the roof tops with expensive sniper rifles.

“With the exception of McPhie, the reality could not be more different.”

Wilson identified four types of British hitmen

– the novice, the dilettante, the journeyman and the master.

He added: “It’s quite clear that McPhie’s killing was carried out by a master hitman.

“Like most master hitmen, McPhee’s murderer was never brought to justice.”

More than 20 years later his assassinat­ion is now a cold case investigat­ion subject to occasional

‘ There were not many tears being shed for Frank McPhie’

by Police Scotland.

Gerry added: “Whoever did it knew what they were doing. It was well planned and executed.

“People may not have mourned Frank McPhie’s passing but every murder victim deserves justice regardless of reputation.”

ACROSS

3. Injures with a knife ( 5)

8. Trite or banal, slang ( 5)

10. Try to equal or surpass ( 5)

11. Pair of performers ( 3)

12. Body cavity ( 5)

13. In combinatio­n, together ( 7)

15. Long- snouted mammal ( 5)

18. Mr Aykroyd, actor ( 3)

19. Overnight travelling case ( 6)

21. Warm and friendly ( 7)

22. Big cat ( 4)

ACROSS:

23. Greek letter ( 4)

24. Deliberate insult ( 7)

26. Swallow up ( 6)

29. Append ( 3)

31. Type of marsupial ( 5)

32. Patella ( 7)

34. Characteri­stic ( 5)

35. Seedcase ( 3)

36. Tempest ( 5)

37. Circular coral reef ( 5)

38. So far ( 2,3)

DOWN

1. Augurs ( 5)

2. Welsh mountain ( 7)

4. Skinny ( 4)

5. Cruel, vicious or savage ( 6)

6. Fibre used for making rope ( 5)

7. Foundation ( 5)

9. Groove ( 3)

12. Dismiss from play ( 4,3)

14. Spike of wheat ( 3)

16. Fulcrum ( 5)

17. Of the kidneys ( 5)

19. A tramp ( 7)

20. Smooth and shiny ( 5)

21. Type of dance ( 5)

23. Carefully worked out, detailed, etc. ( 2- 5)

24. Alerts ( 6)

25. Lyric poem ( 3)

27. Compass point ( 5)

28. Extreme ( 5)

30. Soup server ( 5)

32. Bird of prey ( 4)

33. Pigeon's call ( 3)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Police at the scene in 1997, main picture, while left, flowers at the scene, and far left, murder victim Christophe­r McGrory, and bottom left, police at the cordon in 2000 in Maryhill
Police at the scene in 1997, main picture, while left, flowers at the scene, and far left, murder victim Christophe­r McGrory, and bottom left, police at the cordon in 2000 in Maryhill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom