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Welcome to the News desk.
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| Racehorse trainer robbed of £100,000 |
12/04/2010 |
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Helen Carter |
Durham police are
investigating a £100,000 armed robbery at the home of a leading racehorse
trainer last night when a balaclava-clad gunman and a man brandishing a knife
forced their way into his home.
John Howard Johnson, who trains Royal Rosa, which ran in Saturday's
Grand National but failed to finish, found two men had forced his front door
late on Sunday. One had an 18cm (7in) knife and the other a gun. He told police
one of the men dragged his wife, Sue, out of bed and held a handgun to his head
as he forced him to open a safe.
Armed response officers were called to
the scene at White Lea Farm in Roddymoor, County Durham, and searched the
surrounding area. Johnson has trained 60 National Hunt winners this season,
with prize money of almost £220,000. He is the leading National Hunt
trainer in northern England and well regarded in racing circles.
At 10.30pm he was reading a newspaper
when the raiders started to smash in his front door. He said: "All of a sudden
I heard a horrendous thud I thought a picture had come off the wall. I
jumped up and rushed to the door and there were two of them saying 'We're going
to get you, open the door.'"
"They were braying [hitting] on it and I
couldn't keep them back. They overpowered me and chucked me against the glass
doors. I shouted up to my wife, Sue: 'We're getting burgled.'"
Johnson,
56, was held at gunpoint while the knifeman went upstairs to the bedroom and
brought his wife down. He said the men took "six figures" in cash including
money he had won at Aintree. Armed officers were on the scene within minutes
after the Johnsons raised the alarm.
He said: "I couldn't act, they
would have killed us. I just kept cool. They [the robbers] never got excited
and they weren't shaking, they were professionals." He said the men told him to
not to contact police for at least three hours, otherwise the couple would be
shot. However they were able to dial 999 and armed police were on the scene
within minutes after the alarm was raised.
The couple were interviewed
overnight and were unable to return to their home until forensic examinations
were completed. He said it was lucky their five-year-old granddaughter was not
staying with them, as had been planned.
Johnson trains horses for the
computer millionaire Graham Wylie. He had earlier spotted a car nearby as he
finished his jobs for the day but thought it belonged to a "courting couple".
The trainer said the money taken was being saved up to buy his wife a
dream cottage. "It's just as well we had the cash. If we didn't I don't think
I'd be talking to you now.
"This is the biggest fright I have ever had.
I have never been as frightened in my life before and I have been kicked
by bulls and horses and was nearly killed by a cow."
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