The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Former ‘Gladiator’ jailed for drug plot

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N

Abodybuild­er famous for his starring role in 1990s television programme Gladiators has been jailed for his part in a blackmail plot over a drugs debt.

Michael Jefferson King, known to millions as Shadow from the ITV game show, was one of four people who kept a man detained in a flat in Acton, west London, during a torturous attack lasting around eight hours.

King was described as a “lieutenant” to the plot, which ended in Aaron Ali being beaten and filmed for “highly distressin­g” videos which were sent to his family to elicit a payment of up to £1,000 to let him go.

At one stage, King was alleged to have ordered a co-defendant to “fetch a hammer to break his legs” after Mr Ali tried to flee.

King, 60, a long-time user of crack cocaine and heroin, was handed a sentence of six years and three months after admitting blackmail at Isleworth Crown Court.

Three other defendants, so-called ringleader Simon Batson, Donna Harman, and Otis Noel, were also sentenced for their role in the plot.

King showed no emotion as the sentence was passed.

The court heard Mr Ali originally turned up at Batson and Harman’s flat at about 9am on Sunday March 22 2020 for a drugs binge.

However, the atmosphere was said to have changed around lunchtime when the supplies ran out.

Prosecutor Keith Hadrill said: “Things turned to the worse for Mr Ali when Mr Noel and Mr King attended.

“There seemed to be some disagreeme­nt in regards to a debt reported to be owed. Threats were made and matters descended.

“Demands were made of him (Mr Ali) and threats that money should be paid for a drug debt to a third party. He was punched and threatened. It was decided, as he had no money to pay the required debt, demands would be made of his estranged wife.”

The court heard Batson phoned Mr Ali’s estranged wife, during which Mr Ali could be heard “whimpering in the background”. The prosecutor said King threatened to break Mr Ali’s knees and asked Noel to fetch a metal bar. Noel refused.

Mr Ali was further kept captive before being taken to a nearby Sainsbury’s at 9pm, when the money – up to £1,000 – was handed over for his release by a family friend.

Mitigating, King’s defence counsel, Stella Harris, said her client had once had a promising career as an athlete but that time spent living in New York in the 1980s exposed him to class A drugs, which became a feature of his life.

She said: “He was a profession­al bodybuilde­r, all the while having these periods of abstinence and success, but there were relapses, he lost work, a relationsh­ip went wrong, and he turned to drugs.”

King, of Birkbeck Grove in Acton, has 20 previous conviction­s for 39 offences, largely drug-related.

His co-defendant Batson, 39, of Burlington Gardens in Acton, west London, received a jail term of six years and nine months for two counts of blackmail.

He complained about the length of his sentence as he was taken from the dock. It was later reduced by a month after the judge said she made an error calculatin­g his discount for early guilty pleas.

Noel, 45, of Wendover Court in Ealing, west London, was jailed for seven-and-a-half years for two counts of blackmail and one count of false imprisonme­nt.

Harman, 41, who was said to be “controlled and abused” by Batson, was handed a jail term of four years for two counts of blackmail and one of false imprisonme­nt on account of her “lesser role” in the crime.

 ??  ?? Michael Jefferson King.
Michael Jefferson King.

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