Customs man bribed with ‘awful’ Ramadan soft drink gets community service

The court has sentenced a former customs official to community work after admitting to allowing a man access to a restricted area at the airport cargo section

Although no brand was mentioned during the court sitting, blackcurrant carbonated drinks tend to be popular during the Ramadan fast
Although no brand was mentioned during the court sitting, blackcurrant carbonated drinks tend to be popular during the Ramadan fast

A retired customs official has been perpetually interdicted and sentenced to community service after he pleaded guilty to accepting a sugary drink as a bribe.

Retired customs official Philip Grech, 64, from Zebbug, admitted to having accepted bribes from a Libyan man in the form of an unpalatably sweet drink, in return for allowing him access to a restricted area of the airport cargo section in 2013.

In a sitting in 2016, the then prosecuting police Inspector Jonathan Ferris had told Magistrate Donatella Frendo Dimech how on the 25 September 2013, he had been informed that a Libyan person was observed being granted access by customs officials to enter a restricted area of the airport housing a luggage conveyor belt.

The man, Jamal Mesdah Basher Al Gazale, was captured on CCTV in the act of taking several boxes from the conveyor belt. He was not challenged by customs officers on duty.

The inspector had explained that the door to the room could not be opened from the outside, but had to be opened from the inside by means of a sensor.

The footage showed that Al Gazale was accompanied by a customs official, who the inspector said had assisted the Libyan in loading 12 boxes onto a trolley.

However, although the conveyor belt showed 12 boxes, Al Gazale was then seen leaving the customs zone with 11. Philip Grech had been the customs official on duty that day, the inspector said.

The missing box had been found in Grech’s office, the court was told. The accused had told the police inspector that the sugary drinks tasted awful and were used during the Ramadan fast to supplement calorific intake. He had allegedly told the inspector that he had accepted them as a courtesy payment by Al Gazale, for allowing him to access the area.

Despite initially denying the charges, Grech had filed an admission in February 2019.

In her decision on the matter, Magistrate Donatella Frendo Dimech said she was taking into consideration the nature of the charges, his late admission and the fact that the crime had occurred in 2013. His criminal record was “not worrying” said the court, adding that it had taken into consideration the circumstances of the case as well as the recommendations by the man’s probation officer.

Finding him guilty on his own admission, the court sentenced Grech to 65 hours of community service and handed him a perpetual general interdiction, preventing him from holding any public office or employment. He was also ordered to pay €742 in costs.

Inspector Anne Marie Xuereb prosecuted. Lawyer Stefano Filletti was defence counsel.