Men caught with illegal Taser guns disguised as torches escape jail sentences | The Redditch Standard

Men caught with illegal Taser guns disguised as torches escape jail sentences

Redditch Editorial 2nd Aug, 2019

TWO men caught with illegal Taser stun guns which were disguised to look like torches have both been given suspended prison sentences.

James Mannion and Celvin Harrison pleaded guilty at Warwick Crown Court to possessing prohibited firearms, described in the charges as Tasers disguised as torches.

If they had been facing the more serious offence of possessing a disguised firearm, the two men would have been facing a minimum sentence of five years.

But instead 51-year-old Mannion, of Ryder Close, Hampton Magna, who also admitted selling or transferring one of the weapons, was sentenced to 12 months in prison suspended for 12 months.




He was also ordered to carry out 100 hours of unpaid work and to pay £100 costs.

Wheelchair-bound 38-year-old Harrison, of Napton Drive, Leamington, who has had his lower left leg amputated and has other health issues, was sentenced to eight months suspended for 12 months, without any unpaid work, and was ordered to pay £75 costs.


Prosecutor Daniel Wright said in December 2017 the police went to Mannion’s address in relation to another matter, during which they carried out a search.

They found what appeared to be a Night Watchman torch – but which ‘had the dual purpose’ of being a Taser stun gun capable of giving a high-voltage shock.

When Mannion was questioned about it, he said he had purchased it, knowing it was illegal and designed with a dual purpose, and had taken a number of them home to sell to others.

He said one of those was Harrison, as a result of which the police went to Harrison’s home in February last year and found a similar device, a Police 6610 torch stun gun.

Harrison told police it belonged to Mannion who had given it to him some time earlier, but he denied having bought it.

Mr Wright added both men had previous convictions, but none for offences involving weapons or violence.

Anthony Cartin, for Mannion, said: “There was one item found at his home. He was very candid. He was asked whether he had had any further items, and he said he had and had sold one of them to his co-defendant.”

Sentencing the two men, Judge Anthony Potter told them: “Both of you have become involved in possessing, and in your case Mannion moving to others, Taser items disguised in a bid to prevent their discovery.

“The danger of those items is that in untrained hands they are potentially fatal. It is for that reason they are illegal in this country.”

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