Arthur Thompson’s evil empire has been told after it was shattered by a hail of bullets.
Arthur Thompson Snr(Image: Daily Record)
Glasgow’s reputation for violence has been maintained for more than a century despite attempts to clean up its image.
At times rivalries have boiled over to such an extent that part of the city seemed akin to the Wild West.
From the 1970s, Arthur Thompson Sr had reigned as the city’s most feared crime boss.
Known as the “Godfather”, he ruled through violence and intimidation to rake in £100,000-a-week as a loan shark, his protection rackets and the sale of drugs.
By the Nineties, however, his grip on the underworld withered as street vendettas gave way to high‑stakes heists and lucrative drug empires.
Arthur “Fat Boy” Thompson(Image: Daily Record)
A turning point came in August 1991, when his son Arthur Jr, aka Fatboy, was gunned down outside the family’s Ponderosa estate, named after the ranch in the television series Bonanza.
Suspicion fell on Thompson’s former enforcer Paul Ferris, who was arrested and prosecuted in a £4.1 million trial that became the longest and most expensive in Scottish legal history. Over 300 witnesses were called before Ferris was acquitted.
Then, in March 1993, Thompson Sr died of a heart attack.
It marked the dawn of a new era and new faces as criminals vied for a place in the upper echelons of the city’s underworld hierarchy.
Ian “Blink” McDonald and the notorious Mick Healy were among the most fearsome.
McDonald had built a reputation in the late 1980s for fighting and stabbing rivals in Glasgow’s schemes.
In 1991, he and Healy had led an audacious £6million NatWest bank heist in Torquay.
Ian “Blink” MacDonald pictured in 2015(Image: Daily Record)
After hiding in the bank for two days, the six bank robbers wielded shotguns as they ambushed the 16 staff members starting their shift.
A female worker survived being shot in the head before the gang, unable to get the keys to the vault, fled empty-handed.
Healy, described as the “UK’s most dangerous man”, was jailed for 19 years. MacDonald got 16 years.
Ferris was eventually imprisoned after his arrest in London in 1997 following a two-year surveillance operation by MI5 and Special Branch.
At his trial at the Old Bailey in July 1998 he was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment after being convicted of conspiracy to sell or transfer prohibited weapons, conspiracy to deal in firearms and possessing explosives, although the sentence was reduced to seven years.
The consolidation of lucrative drug operations also involved the likes of Ian Douglas McAteer, a prominent Glasgow gangster with ties
Paul Ferris walks free from court in 1991
to Liverpool’s drugs trade. McAteer went on to become one of the suspects in the 1999 murder of television presenter Jill Dando. That same year, he murdered a gangland associate Warren Selkirk, for which he was sentenced to life in prison. He remains behind bars.
As Glasgow gangsters competed for the drugs trade, Edinburgh also faced a crimewave as cocaine and ecstasy flooded into the capital.
Among the seediest of the city’s criminals was the “Blackhill Butcher”, Martin Hamilton.
Born in Glasgow’s Maryhill and a gay predator, Hamilton would routinely rape young men to satisfy his perverted sexual appetites.
He also abused and tortured his victims in a bid to take over the Edinburgh’s drugs trade.
Teenage dealers were supplied with heroin and ecstasy but faced horrific retribution if they failed to deliver cash.
Cases against Hamilton in Glasgow had previously collapsed due to witnesses being afraid to testify.
But his downfall came when a teenage couple bravely stood up to him in court.
A girlfriend and boyfriend had been held captive for 11 hours in a flat in Glasgow, during which they were scalded with boiling water and stabbed, all the while being forced to stand in a bath so they would not drip blood on to carpets.
Their willingness to testify allowed detectives to revisit Hamilton’s victims in Edinburgh and some agreed to provide statements.
A senior officer described him as “one of the most evil men I have ever come across in my service”. In 2000, Hamilton was found guilty of 11 out of 14 charges involving the sale of drugs, abduction, assault and torture.
On release from prison, he returned to his criminal ways but went missing in April 2015.
The body of the brutal sadist was found in a shallow grave in woodland near West Calder, West Lothian.
Chopped into pieces by underworld rivals, only his skull and some parts of his spine were recovered from the grim scene.
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