Kentish Express Ashford & District

‘Hostage’ hoaxers found sipping tea

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- By Paul Hooper

Armed police swooped on a house in Willesboro­ugh... after several frantic phone calls saying a man was being snatched from the street and being held hostage.

The strike team had tracked down the source of the threatenin­g calls and began preparing for a possible armed siege.

But what they found was the “victim” and the “kidnapper” sitting in the garden drinking tea.

Now a judge has told both men that it had been a “spectacula­rly stupid offence” and the potential consequenc­es “hardly bear thinking about”.

She added: “Police were diverted from what they should have been doing in order to respond to what was in effect a hoax borne out of greed and borne out of a drugs habit.”

Canterbury Crown Court heard how Sam Kennett, 25, owed £1,800 to drug dealers – so he and pal, dad-of-three David Collins, 38, dreamed up the “blackmail” scam as a “bit of a lark”.

Kennett, of Speldhurst Close, Ashford, was jailed for nine months and Collins, of Bentley Road, Willesboro­ugh, received a nine-month sentence suspended for 18 months. Both had admitted a fraud charge.

Prosecutor Allastair Walker said Kennett’s family received a call claiming he had been kidnapped and would be assaulted unless £1,800 was handed over.

Several more calls were made to family members in which Collins could be heard in the background making threats, and police were alerted.

A specialist team – armed with guns – surrounded the house in Bentley Road in July, only to find both men enjoying a cup of tea.

James Warren, for Collins, said he had been trying to help a friend pay off the drug debt and was now petrified of going to prison.

The jobless tree surgeon collapsed weeping in the dock after being told he would keep his freedom and staggered out of the courtroom, saying: “My legs have gone.”

Guy Wyatt, for Kennett, said it had been “a fairly unambitiou­s, unsophisti­cated scam” borne out of his problems with drink and drugs.

He said he regarded the incident as “a bit of a lark”.

But Judge Heather Norton told him: “You were taken so seriously that an armed police response team was deployed in order to rescue you, Kennett.

“Fortunatel­y the threats were not real and fortunatel­y no one was injured when the police team was deployed and fortunatel­y your family, at least, had some suspicions that all may not be as it appeared.

“Neverthele­ss the fear that must have passed through their minds would have been substantia­l.”

Collins, who was also given a six-month home curfew order, told the judge: “You won’t see me back here again.”

 ??  ?? Armed police surrounded a house after bogus calls
Armed police surrounded a house after bogus calls

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