Theft victim jailed over plan to make booby trap bombs

Marked police vehicles and fire engines photographed in a sealed off street. Tenement flats on both sides of the road overlook the scene under a grey sky.
Image caption,

Several properties on Broomhill Drive were evacuated in February last year

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A man considered making potentially deadly "booby traps" after a series of thefts at his home, a court has heard.

Shazad Khan, 52, sparked a large-scale evacuation of his street in Glasgow's west end after suspicious items were found in his four-bedroom flat.

He had been due to stand trial at the High Court in Glasgow but instead pleaded guilty to a charge under the Explosives Substances Act.

Khan was jailed for three years and 11 months for actions that the judge described as "frankly baffling".

The court heard emergency services were joined at the scene by a hazardous materials support unit and members of the armed forces after the alarm was raised on 15 February last year.

Gunpowder, metal piping and bags of ball bearings were seized during the raid.

Prosecutors said these items were capable of being used or combined to make an explosive device.

Flats evacuated during search

Police Scotland had first been alerted after Royal Mail staff intercepted the delivery of three cattle prods - which were eventually deemed to be legal - to Khan's home in January 2024.

But weeks after the discovery, his flat was searched.

The court heard officers found the gunpowder in a shoebox, the ball bearings in a rucksack and the metal piping in a bedroom.

There was also a wooden board, covered in black paint and burn marks, while officers seized glue, a hacksaw and a vice.

Residents in two blocks of flats were evacuated and kept out of their homes overnight after a pre-planned search of the flat on Broomhill Drive.

A total of 26 people made use of a nearby emergency rest centre while others made alternative arrangements.

Prosecutor Greg Farrell said the 33g of gunpowder found was the type commonly used in commercial fireworks.

He added: "The expert opinion is that the metal pipes can be used as the container for an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).

"To form the IED, the pipe would need to be filled with a viable explosive substance such as gunpowder."

The ball bearings could have been "shrapnel".

But the court heard the pipes would have needed "further modification" for an explosive device to be made.

Khan mainly made no comment when interviewed by police.

However, he did claim officers had "got it all wrong" as the black powder was not gunpowder and confirmed all of the items belonged to him.

Khan's mobile phone was also checked, but no suspicious messages or web searches were discovered.

He had previously been jailed at the High Court in 2018 after importing more than 40 firearms from abroad hoping to then make a profit by selling them online.

The pistols - which could discharge harmful gases, blank cartridges or flares - cost £3,200 from a weapons company in the Czech Republic.

His lawyer said the latest offence continued "something of a theme" as he had "a habit of openly, but unwisely ordering items online".

'Absurd idea'

Tony Lenehan, defending, said Khan had explained to him "the journeys that he took on YouTube on all manner of things".

The KC said the father "lived in a nice house in Glasgow's west end", but that there had been break-ins at a basement area.

He had then thought of how best to keep his property secure.

Mr Lenehan: "His explanation is that, for a while, he had toyed with the idea of making booby traps.

"That is an absurd idea. A dangerous thing to do."

The advocate said Khan had "never paused to make sure that he is not doing anything wrong".

Lord Scott stated the offence carried a potential life sentence.

He told Khan: "It is frankly baffling that you thought that this was an acceptable response, even to repeated thefts from your property.

"Beyond possession of these items, there are no sinister purposes other than what I have been informed of, which are bad enough.

"It is just as well for you the authorities intercepted these deliveries before you attempted to set booby traps."

Lord Stott said Khan could have killed or maimed himself or even an innocent member of the public.

He added: "Taking the law into your own hands is not allowed."

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