The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Jail for man caught buying gun online

Scot with Fife links handed five-year sentence after bid to obtain Glock pistol on the dark web

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

“David Mitchell never offered any informatio­n that would have allowed us to better understand what his motivation was. DETECTIVE CHIEF SUPERINTEN­DENT GERRY MCLEAN

A man who tried to buy a gun online from the US has been jailed after being caught in a joint police operation.

David Mitchell spent more than £2,000 of cryptocurr­ency on a Glock 9mm gun with magazine, silencer and 150 rounds of 9mm ammunition which he wanted to be sent to his business address in Dunfermlin­e.

However, the gun was seized at the point of exit from the States.

Law enforcemen­t agencies on both sides of the Atlantic decided to send a fake parcel known as a “placebo” to his workplace in Pitreavie Court instead of a real firearm to ensure public safety.

After Mitchell signed for the delivery, specialist officers carried out surveillan­ce until the software engineer drove home in his green Skoda with the partially opened package in the boot of the vehicle.

When Mitchell arrived, officers assessed the scene and minutes later they entered with a search warrant to find the package opened in the kitchen, beside some household tools.

The placebo was found underneath a couch in his living room.

He offered no informatio­n on his motivation­s during questionin­g and appeared at court on September 21. The incident was reported to US Homeland Security.

The 48-year-old, from Damside in Edinburgh, admitted three firearms offences when he appeared at the High Court in Edinburgh last month.

He returned to the court yesterday and was handed the five-year jail term.

Passing sentence, judge Lord Pentland said: “It appears that you formed a plan to obtain these items by carrying out research on the dark web and then proceeding to order them for delivery to this country from the United States.

“Fortunatel­y, due to co-operation between the police forces of both countries, your plan was thwarted and the items were intercepte­d.

“It appears that your decision to acquire the gun and the other items arose from an obsessive preoccupat­ion on your part with exploring whether it was possible to do so by making use of the dark web.

“You claim that you had no intention of causing harm to anyone but the fact remains that you went to considerab­le lengths to get hold of a potentiall­y lethal weapon and ammunition.

“You must have appreciate­d that this was unlawful. For this conduct you must be punished.”

The court heard Mitchell has a history of depression and other behavioura­l difficulti­es.

Defence QC John Scott said he had been described as a valued and dependable employee and has no previous conviction­s.

The exact reason behind why Mitchell wanted a gun and a silencer, which ballistic experts later confirmed did not actually fit the Glock in question, remains unknown.

US officials at Newark Airport, New Jersey, intercepte­d the firearm and associated equipment before it was sent to Scotland, and informed the National Crime Agency and Police Scotland, which led to the Organised Crime Partnershi­p (Scotland)’s involvemen­t.

Detective Chief Superinten­dent Gerry Mclean, who heads Police Scotland’s organised crime and counterter­rorism unit, praised the work of the OCP(S) which is based at the Scottish Crime Campus in Gartcosh, North Lanarkshir­e.

He said: “David Mitchell never offered any informatio­n that would have allowed us to better understand what his motivation was to securing a firearm. Our priorities are public safety and trying to understand what factors are, is it part of a wider network of individual­s.

“For a number of years now we’ve been working in that multi-agency environmen­t, we’ve talked about collaborat­ion and partnershi­ps.

“But actually where the crime campus and the ethos of the campus have both been demonstrat­ed by Police Scotland is a subtle shift into integratio­n.

“Having that blend and mix towards what is a shared ambition and aspiration to tackle organised crime, whether it sits here in Scotland or impacts on Scotland, I think is the real benefit that comes from it.”

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