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William Paterson guilty of Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll murder William Paterson guilty of Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll murder
(35 minutes later)
A man has been jailed for life after being convicted of murdering Glasgow gangland figure Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll.A man has been jailed for life after being convicted of murdering Glasgow gangland figure Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll.
William Paterson, 35, had denied shooting the 29-year-old dead in the Asda car park in the city's Robroyston area on 13 January 2010.William Paterson, 35, had denied shooting the 29-year-old dead in the Asda car park in the city's Robroyston area on 13 January 2010.
He claimed he was elsewhere at the time and incriminated six other people.He claimed he was elsewhere at the time and incriminated six other people.
Paterson was convicted of murder following a two-week trial at the High Court in Glasgow. He was told he must serve a minimum of 22 years in jail.Paterson was convicted of murder following a two-week trial at the High Court in Glasgow. He was told he must serve a minimum of 22 years in jail.
Judge Lord Armstrong told Paterson: "On the evidence this court has heard this murder appears to have been premeditated, planned, carried out by you and others in the most calculated way.
'An execution'
"It was not a spontaneous event which happened on the spur of the moment, it was in effect an execution."
The judge said Carroll was murdered in the "most vicious and brutal" way.
He added that it was carried out in a public car park where "ordinary members of the public were going about their everyday business" and "put at risk of gunfire".
The court heard that the shooting was carried out by two masked gunmen at lunchtime in the supermarket carpark in front of shocked shoppers.
It is not known if Paterson was one of the gunmen, or driving the Volkswagen Golf that was driven away from the Asda to Coatbridge where the weapons were dumped in plastic bags under shrubbery behind a library.
The getaway car was later found alight on a country road by a farmer in Glenmavis, North Lanarkshire.
The murder took just 25 seconds from start to finish and left Mr Carroll dead in the back of his black Audi A3 that was riddled with 13 bullets.
Mr Carroll was described in court as "violent" by a former drug dealer, Steven Glen, who met him at the supermarket minutes before he was killed.
Shooting threat
Mr Glen claimed Mr Carroll had told him: "You're working for me now, anybody that doesn't fall in line is going to get banged."
Asked what he understood by that, the witness said "shot".
The court heard that when Mr Glen went back to his car after the meeting and began to leave he heard "bangs and cracks".
He said: "I looked up and there was a motor parked in front of the the motor Gerbil was in, it was two people shooting at it."
During the trial, the prosecution described the shooting as "a brazen, organised assassination" that put the public at risk.During the trial, the prosecution described the shooting as "a brazen, organised assassination" that put the public at risk.
Jurors heard how Paterson's DNA was found on the handle of a bag that one of the murder weapons was found in. One eyewitness, shopper Emma Busby, described seeing a "Clint Eastwood-style gun".
The DNA of another man, Ross Monaghan, who was cleared of the murder in 2012, and was known to Paterson, was found on the handle of the other gun. She told the jury she was "hysterical" and physically sick after witnessing the shooting.
Teacher Anne McIntosh told the court how she could not believe what she was seeing as "masked gunmen came out of the car...with their pistols held in front of them" before she crouched down in fear.
DNA evidence
The prosecution case against Paterson hinged on DNA and phone record evidence.
Jurors heard how Paterson's DNA was found on the handle of a plastic bag that one of the murder weapons was found in.
The DNA of another man, Ross Monaghan, who was cleared of the murder in 2012 and was known to Paterson, was found on the handle of the other gun.
The court was told that "10 days after the shooting with the police investigation in full flow" Paterson had left Scotland for Spain.The court was told that "10 days after the shooting with the police investigation in full flow" Paterson had left Scotland for Spain.
Jurors also heard telephone evidence suggesting a mobile phone attributed to Paterson by police, ending in 1411, was near the scene of Asda at the time of the shooting. He contacted lawyers in June 2014 and agreed to return to Scotland to face the charges against him.
The court also heard that another phone, which was accepted as being Paterson's, seemed to be "joined at the hip" with the other phone. Jurors also heard telephone evidence that a mobile phone used by Paterson on the day of the murder placed him in Asda after being in the Cumbernauld area.
Both phones, the jury was told, were "co-located", meaning they were active within five minutes of each other and on 87 different occasions throughout January 2010, never contacted one another and were always in the same area. His phone was then traced to Coatbridge, where the guns were dumped, and was back in Cumbernauld by 14:11 - before the burnt out Volkswagen used in the crime was found in a country road in Glenmavis.
The prosecution said the 1411 number could be traced to the area where a Volkswagen Golf - believed to have been involved in the shooting - was captured on CCTV a short distance away from Asda shortly before the murder. Paterson denied the charges against him and incriminated six other people.
The phone was traced near Asda at the time of the murder, then at the area where the weapons were dumped in Coatbridge. Defence claims
He also lodged a special defence of alibi claiming he was at an address in Cumbernauld at the time of the shooting.
Paterson's legal team argued that he had returned to Scotland from Spain on the basis he was innocent.
They said the DNA evidence presented by the prosecution did not mean he had touched any gun or that guns were in the bag when he touched the handle.
It was also claimed that there was "no direct evidence" to say that the phone attributed to Paterson - that was traced to the Asda, Coatbridge and Cumbernauld - was with him on the day of the shooting.
His legal team claimed the phone could have been used by one of the men Paterson was incriminating, who also stayed in the Cumbernauld area.
They also said eye witnesses' descriptions of the gunmen were too short to be Paterson who is over 6ft tall.
After less than a day of deliberation, however, the jury returned a guilty verdict of murder.
After Paterson was jailed for life, procurator fiscal David Harvie said Mr Carroll's murder had been "a shocking and deplorable act".
He said: "Immediately after the murder, Paterson fled abroad, in a deliberate attempt to avoid the consequences of his actions.
"Illegal firearms have no place in civilised society and we will not stand by while innocent members of the public are put at risk by those involved in serious and organised crime."