Date June 4 2002
Secretly recorded on tape, big Kim Dowding laughed about bashing a couple of suspects. But yesterday he wept in the witness box because his mate had betrayed him.
A police video of the gun stash being recovered from the Hawkesbury River. |
"I considered him my friend," he said of M5, a crooked policeman turned undercover agent for the Police Integrity Commission. "I trusted him ... [it's] a feeling of betrayal."
Inspector Dowding is not alone. M5 has betrayed a lot of mates, with the PIC yesterday suppressing the name of the eighth policeman to "roll-over" after getting the "supergrass" treatment.
Inspector Dowding is on sick leave and he has not rolled. He claims his only misdemeanour was "finding" a dozen or more firearms stashed by fellow officers and dumping them, helped by M5, in the Hawkesbury River.
M5 surreptitiously taped five conversations with Inspector Dowding and the tapes were obviously a bigger shock than finding the guns at Major Crime Squad North's offices at Chatswood in 1995.
Inspector Dowding wiped away tears, lowered his head and fell silent. Three times Chris Hoy, counsel assisting the PIC, offered him an adjournment, which he declined.
But Inspector Dowding's distress turned to anger when Mr Hoy played a tape on which M5 and a couple of colleagues made merry about Inspector Dowding's discovery of the gun stash.
M5 was sprouting a "fair bit or rubbish", Inspector Dowding said, denying he had stashed the guns himself so he and other cops could "load up" suspects.
"It didn't take place," Inspector Dowding declared emphatically, prompting Mr Hoy to wonder about his sudden recovery of his memory. "I didn't plant any gun."
Inspector Dowding's version is that his boss at Major Crime Squad North, Inspector Ron Smith, now a chief superintendent at Crime Agencies, told his men he wanted the premises cleaned of any incriminating evidence.
Inspector Dowding "volunteered" to do "a sweep" and found the guns in the locker room. They were all in unmarked lockers, so he could not identify whose they were.
That night in the Willoughby Hotel, he consulted his mate, M5, who suggested they dump them. The next day, he asked Inspector Smith if he could borrow his boat.
Inspector Dowding said he did not tell Inspector Smith about the guns, saying that he wanted the boat to go fishing. Inspector Smith asked no questions.
That night, Inspector Dowding and M5 sledgehammered the guns, which included two sawn-off Rugers and a shortened shotgun. They collected the boat from Inspector Smith, towed it to Brooklyn, put it in the water and dumped the guns off Long Island.
Inspector Dowding agreed he saw "nothing sinister" about the guns, strenuously denying he had "loaded up" two men with a shortened Ruger and a pistol in an operation Mr Hoy said they called Wogs Out of Work.
The guns did not work, the PIC heard. The men were bashed so badly they took their bruises to court and had the armed robbery charges thrown out.
On the booze with his mate M5 and other drunks with detective badges, Inspector Dowding and his mates had a big laugh. But the joke ricocheted when the tapes started to play.
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