Doubts were expressed by police and Customs and Excise officers as to the authenticity of the information that Haase and Bennett gave, and local
Liverpool MP,
Peter Kilfoyle campaigned for an investigation. In March 2001, Kilfoyle was granted a half-hour
Adjournment debate in the House of Commons at which he brought up the subject of Haase and Bennett; specifically the damage done to the people of Liverpool by them being allowed back onto the street after such a short period of time in prison, and the basis on which they got out (that is, the Royal pardon they received). During 2003, it was widely reported that a drug dealer and associate of the two heroin smugglers, Simon Bakerman, who was a cousin of Michael Howard and who openly boasted of his relationship with him, had received a bribe of £400,000 from Haase, which may have been intended to be passed on to the politician. There is no evidence that any such monies were passed on, or that Howard acted in any inappropriate way.
Merseyside Police now believe that Customs, the trial judge and Howard himself were duped by an elaborate plot by Haase and Bennett, who arranged for the drugs and guns to be planted where the authorities could find them. In May 2004, Kilfoyle again brought up the matter at an Adjournment debate. He had visited Haase in prison earlier in 2004, and had obtained a sworn
affidavit. The drug smuggler had provided "leads" about the guns which had in fact been planted at the request of him and his accomplice, Bennett. In the affidavit, Haase admitted contacting his acquaintances who were not in prison and getting them to plant guns across Merseyside and the North West of England. He then passed information about the guns' locations to his customs handler Paul Cook, suggesting the guns belonged to other criminals. Haase added, "It was a con all the way." Kilfoyle concluded his comments in the Adjournment debate by saying: Following the conclusion of the trial at which the two drug barons received sentences of 20 and 22 years for
perverting the course of justice in 2008, Kilfoyle called for an independent enquiry into the issues surrounding the case. He said: ==References==