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CRIME

Mastermind behind the Great Train Robbery dies in Spain

Gordon Goody, the mastermind behind one of Britain’s most notorious crimes, has died aged 86 at his home in Southern Spain.

Mastermind behind the Great Train Robbery dies in Spain
Gordon Goody during an interview for documentary. Screenshot from A Tale of Two Thieves

He was thought to be the last surviving member of a gang that in 1963 pulled off the crime of the century to get away with £2.6million – equivalent to more than €50 million today.

He died at his home in Mojacar, the seaside resort where he had lived for more than 30 years.

“He passed away at around six this morning surrounded by his friends,” a spokesman from Mojacar town hall told The Local on Friday.

The town hall issued an extraordinary tribute to surely one of the most notorious residents of the town. 

“All who knew him were struck by his friendliness, his love for his friends and family and the many pets he rescued from the street,” read the official statement from the town hall.

“He was a complete gentleman far removed from the image that those who didn’t know him might have had from those difficult years that marked a large part of his life.

“We will always remember his smile and his big heart that was always open to those around him.”

Goody’s health had been failing and in recent years he cut a frail figure, accompanied always by an oxygen tank at his side, one Mojacar resident told The Local.

Jessica Simpson, a local councillor from the town that has a majority of expat residents wrote: “R.I.P Gordon Goody. A true legend has left on his last train ride to the sky… Your love, light and laughter will remain in our hearts forever more. You were loved and admired by many and will be sadly missed,” she wrote on her Facebook page.

 

 

While fellow robbers ­Ronnie Biggs and Buster Edwards became household names and folk heroes, Goody kept in the background.

For some fifty years following the Glasgow train robbery, Goody had stayed silent on his role in the heist, only opening up about it in a 2013  documentary entitled “The Great Train Robbery: A tale of Two Thieves”

Dubbed the Great Train Robbery, the 15-strong gang held up the Glasgow to London Royal Mail train at Bridego Bridge in Buckinghamshire.

But it wasn’t a victimless crime as the train driver, Jack Mills, was coshed over the head with an iron bar during the robbery. He never fully recovered from his injuries and died seven years later.

Goody was sentenced to 35 years and served 12 but insisted that although he was the mastermind and instigator of the heist, the evidence that put him away was faked. “I was fitted up,” he said in the documentary.

He claimed that most of the money from the job had disappeared by the time he got out of prison, allegedly spent by his best friend.

After his release from jail in 1975, Goody moved to Mojacar where he set up a beach bar called Kon Tiki. He lived with his long term partner Maria and a motley pack of rescue dogs.

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CRIME

Spain investigates letters ordering companies to not hire foreigners

For five years, numerous companies in Spain's northern Navarre region have been receiving e-mails urging them to not hire foreign workers and threatening them with boycotts if not, correspondence that's now being investigated as a hate crime.

Spain investigates letters ordering companies to not hire foreigners

The email address  from which they were sent was always the same, the wording very similar. As far as authorities know, they continued for at least five years between 2017 and 2023.

A court in Pamplona has now taken the matter on and is investigating these e-mails as a possible hate crime.

Some of these e-mails were sent to the director of a residence in Estella/Lizarra in 2020. He received up to 10 of these from the same sender urging him to “nationalise his workforce”.

He publicly denounced the e-mail and released it. The text read: “In the face of possible economic reactivation after the current pandemic, we encourage you to nationalise your workforce; that is, to replace immigrants (including those who are naturalised) with nationals or, if you were to increase the workforce, to hire only nationals. Internally or externally (clients, neighbours, suppliers, etc.) we already know which companies have too many foreigners, and with that information, lists of companies have been made according to sectors so that people know who they employ with their money. Contracting is free, but so is consumption. This is politically incorrect, but not at all illegal. It is simply necessary”.

Many other companies received similar emails around the same time.

In the summer of 2023 the case reached the Racism and Xenophobia Assistance Service (SARX), which decided to carry out an investigation and finally passed it on to the Prosecutor’s Office.

Now, the first Investigative Court of Pamplona is investigating the size and scale of this situation to see how many companies the letters have actually reached.

Johanna Flores, lawyer and coordinator of the Racism and Xenophobia Assistance Service, has emphasised the importance of these e-mails being investigated as a possible crime: “It is very positive because when there is a person who wants to systematically send emails of this kind, they will think twice, since they know that it could have a criminal nature”.

Almost half of all new workers in Navarra in the last year are foreigners, according to 2024 social security figures.

Spain’s National Security Council warned the government about a rise in xenophobia and racist hate crimes back in 2019. There have also been numerous counts of racial discrimination towards prospective tenants and home-buyers. 

In 2023 Real Madrid star Vinicius was racially abused in Spain’s top flight football league. Writing on Instagram, Vinicius said Spain was viewed as “a country of racists” in his homeland.

READ ALSO: The racism problem that has blighted Spanish football

This type of racial abuse is not new in Spanish football.. In 2004, thousands of Spanish fans shouted racial insults at black players during an England-Spain match at the Santiago Bernabéu stadium in Madrid. This prompted outrage in the UK and threatened to escalate into a diplomatic row, with both prime ministers at the time – Tony Blair and José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero – condemning the actions.

Alba García Martín, a member of the anti-racism NGO SOS Racismo has explained: “The immigration law is racist to its core. It does not allow you to regularise your migration status for three years, it pushes immigrants to employment off-the-books and does not provide you any kind of rights as a citizen. All the other racial issues derive from this law. There is no anti-racist legislation, for example, for crimes related to racism. There are no anti-racist laws,” she adds. 

READ MORE: Spain to debate blanket legalisation of its 500,000 undocumented migrants

It’s hoped that if these e-mails are found to be a hate crime, it will set a precedent and stop others from considering these types of attacks in the future.

READ ALSO: ‘Homologación’ – How Spain is ruining the careers of thousands of qualified foreigners

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