
Three men jailed for total of 99 years after shooting gangster involved in Britain's biggest robbery
Daniel Kelly, 46, Louis Ahearne, 36, and brother Stewart, 46, left
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Three men have been sentenced over the shooting of convicted robber Paul Allen
Credit: PA
He was shot in the throat through a kitchen window at a house he was
renting
from comedian
Old Bailey judge Sarah Whitehouse KC said other people were involved in the contract hit and that the three were 'motivated by a promise of financial gain'.
She said of the attack: 'Short of killing him it could hardly be more serious.'
Gunman Kelly, was jailed for 36 years while accomplices Louis and Stewart Ahearne got 33 and 30 respectively.
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They were convicted of conspiracy to murder.
Six weeks before the shooting, the trio, from South London, stole £2.8million of
Kelly is also wanted in Japan for a £680,000 robbery.
Allen, 47 had pocketed £1.9million from the £53million Securitas depot heist in Tonbridge, Kent, in 2006. He was freed in 2016.
Most read in The Sun
Securitas robbers sentenced for their role in biggest cash robbery in British history
4
Gunman Daniel Kelly was sentenced to 36 years in jail for the shooting
Credit: PA
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Accomplice Louis Ahearne was sentenced to 33 years for his role in the crime
Credit: Central News
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Stewart Ahearne was handed a 30 year sentence at the Old Bailey
Credit:

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The Irish Sun
an hour ago
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Thanked public for support Tory councillor Ray added sarcastically: 'Well done to Starmer for making it so difficult for a girl of 12. Let's all give him a pat on the back.' He said the family were delighted Lucy was coming home after more than a year and thanked the public for their support. Ex-childminder Lucy wore pink for her low-key departure from HMP Peterborough — crouching down in a white Skoda estate at 10am. She did not immediately return to the family's £400,000 semi in Northampton and is understood to be staying away from her home. In all she spent over a year behind bars — two months held on remand before she was sentenced at Birmingham crown court. She was freed at the automatic release point, after serving 40 per cent of her term in prison. Lucy Connolly is freed after jail term for racist tweet over Southport attack She will serve the remainder on licence under supervision. 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Speaking after Lucy's release, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said 'Her punishment was harsher than sentences handed down for bricks thrown at police or actual rioting. 'After Southport, Keir Starmer branded all protesters 'far-right' and called for fast-track prosecutions. "Days later, Lucy was charged with stirring up racial hatred — an offence that doesn't even require intent to incite violence. "Why exactly did the Attorney General think that was in the public interest? Meanwhile, former Labour councillor Ricky Jones called for protestors to have their throats slit. 'Law itself is broken' 'Charged with encouraging violent disorder, he pleaded not guilty and was acquitted by a jury who saw his words as a disgusting remark made in the heat of the moment, not a call to action. 'Juries are a cornerstone of justice, but we shouldn't have to rely on them to protect basic freedoms. 'Protecting people from words should not be given greater weight in law than public safety. 'If the law does this, then the law itself is broken and it's time Parliament looked again at the Public Order Act.' Sir Keir defended Lucy's sentence in May saying: 'I am strongly in favour of free speech. 'But I am equally against incitement to violence against others. I will always support the action taken by our police and courts to keep our streets and people safe.' Lucy was one of around a dozen lags freed from 1,200-inmate all-female HMP Peterborough yesterday. She had been put on a 'basic regime' after refusing to return to her cell. It meant she had £5.50 a week to spend in the canteen. Mr Tice claimed she was bruised after being manhandled by guards. Yesterday ex-prison governor Ian Acheson suggested Lucy could sue, which would mean jail logs would be disclosable to her lawyers. He added: 'I've no idea whether this will happen, but features of her treatment alleged in media were so perverse it's a real possibility. Interesting times ahead.' LOCKED UP FOR ONE TWEET IS SCANDAL By Lord Toby Young, from The Free Speech Union I was glad to see Lucy Connolly finally walk free today, but the fact that she has spent more than a year in prison for a single tweet -- quickly deleted and apologised for -- is a national scandal, particularly when Labour MPs, councillors and anti-racism campaigners who have said and done much worse have avoided jail. The same latitude they enjoyed should have been granted to Lucy. Sir Keir Starmer said in May that Lucy's sentence was justified because her tweet was 'incitement to violence against other people'. But was it? The test we employ when deciding whether to prosecute someone for supposedly inciting violence should be the same as it is in the United States, namely, was it intended to cause violence and was it likely to? I don't think Lucy's tweet met either limb of that test (and for speech not to be protected by the First Amendment in America it has to meet both). 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