Court told ex-boxer paid for lifestyle with heroin profits

A Dublin man, Mr Thomas Mullen (26), a former boxer, on trial in London on drugs charges used profits from his heroin deals to…

A Dublin man, Mr Thomas Mullen (26), a former boxer, on trial in London on drugs charges used profits from his heroin deals to finance a luxury lifestyle in London, a court was told yesterday.

The man, nicknamed "The Boxer", became so rich he had to pass himself off as a building contractor to his bank, it was claimed.

By early 1997 Mr Mullen acted as guarantor for his girlfriend's mortgage application on a new £138,000 house in Finchley, north London, Snaresbrook Crown Court heard.

Mr Mullen denies one count of conspiracy to export heroin. Another defendant, Mr Turhan Mustafa, changed his plea on the same charge to guilty. Yesterday the court heard how Mr Mullen ploughed money he allegedly reaped from smuggling drugs which would be sold in Dublin into a luxurious lifestyle for his girlfriend and her two children.

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He kept up the veneer of respectability by presenting Allied Irish Banks with profit-and-loss accounts for 1995 and 1996 showing net profits from each year of just under £30,000.

Mr Mullen was guarantor on an application for a mortgage with the bank to buy a house in Woodhouse Gardens in Finchley worth nearly £140,000.

He had shocked a London estate agent by strolling into her office to secure comfortable rented accommodation in Etchingham Court, Etchingham Park Road, Finchley, with a bundle of musty £5 notes.

Then in August 1996 he made light of having nearly £6,000 in a carrier bag but no bank account details by saying his grandmother had left him the money.

From time to time Mr Mullen used new excuses. The prosecutor, Mr Graham Blower, told the court: "Mr Mullen was holding himself out at this stage to be a building contractor."

He was finally arrested by chance when robbery investigators stopped him after he was seen going to and from a Hampstead safety-deposit centre with bags.

The officers found £103,000 in cash in a bag Mr Mullen was carrying and thousands more in a safety deposit box he kept in the name of O'Brien.

Mr Gordon Pringle, for the defence, asked a finance investigator, PC John Laws, to confirm that Mr Mullen had sold a house in Clonliffe Avenue, Dublin, for £60,000 in 1996 but had bought it for only £16,500. The officer agreed.

The trial continues.