12 Sep, 2010 @ 09:00
1 min read

‘Moving regularly and living off his girlfriend’

EXCLUSIVE By Jon Clarke

MOVING regularly and with the help of an unsuspecting expat girlfriend.

This is how dangerous wanted criminal James Tomkins lived for the four years he was being sought on the run in Spain, a British detective has told the Olive Press.

“He was moving quite a bit up and down the costas from Alicante to Malaga,” DI Mark Lawson revealed following Tomkins’ arrest in Puerto Banus a fortnight ago.

“We know he had been in Denia, near Alicante as well as various different addresses on the way down to Marbella.”

Incredibly police believe he had been living a relatively hand-to mouth existence, even perhaps surviving from handouts from an English girlfriend he met in Spain.

“He certainly didn’t have shedloads of money and he doesn’t seem to have got involved in any major crime in Spain,” added the detective who has led the investigation from London for the last year.

“It was his girlfriend, who appears to have been propping them up financially.”

The Englishwoman, who Tomkins met initially in Alicante, appeared happy to move up and down the coast with him.

“But apparently she knew nothing about his past at all,” continued Lawson.

“She was pretty surprised.”

The detective added that Tomkins was an old-school villain like “something out of the Sweeney”.

“Spain is well rid of him,” he continued. “He was a true professional villain, one of the last of his kind in terms of his attitude and his offences.

“I don’t suppose he will tell us anything. He is not looking for a deal. He is from the generation that believes in honour among thieves and will probably just quietly do his time.”

The detective admitted that police still do not have a motive for the slaying of Rocky Dawson who was shot as he got out of his car with his children in May 2006.

“We don’t even know if Rocky was his intended target and we don’t think he is likely to tell us.”

Jon Clarke (Publisher & Editor)

Jon Clarke is a Londoner who worked at the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday as an investigative journalist before moving to Spain in 2003 where he helped set up the Olive Press.

After studying Geography at Manchester University he fell in love with Spain during a two-year stint teaching English in Madrid.

On returning to London, he studied journalism and landed his first job at the weekly Informer newspaper in Teddington, covering hundreds of stories in areas including Hounslow, Richmond and Harrow.

This led on to work at the Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Mirror, Standard and even the Sun, before he landed his first full time job at the Daily Mail.

After a year on the Newsdesk he worked as a Showbiz correspondent covering mostly music, including the rise of the Spice Girls, the rivalry between Oasis and Blur and interviewed many famous musicians such as Joe Strummer and Ray Manzarak, as well as Peter Gabriel and Bjorn from Abba on his own private island.

After a year as the News Editor at the UK’s largest-selling magazine Now, he returned to work as an investigative journalist in Features at the Mail on Sunday.

As well as tracking down Jimi Hendrix’ sole living heir in Sweden, while there he also helped lead the initial investigation into Prince Andrew’s seedy links to Jeffrey Epstein during three trips to America.

He had dozens of exclusive stories, while his travel writing took him to Jamaica, Brazil and Belarus.

He is the author of three books; Costa Killer, Dining Secrets of Andalucia and My Search for Madeleine.

Contact jon@theolivepress.es

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Previous Story

New property portal for Andalucia

Next Story

A riot of coloured umbrellas

Latest from Crime & Law

Go toTop