Disgraced police chief behind Maccabi Tel Aviv row handed £57,000 taxpayer payout

The disgraced police chief at the centre of the row over Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters being banned from attending their Europa League fixture against Aston Villa has been handed a £57,000 taxpayer-funded payout.

Former West Midlands Police Chief Constable Craig Guildford was allowed to retire from his £220,000-a-year post despite his force being found to have used “exaggerated and untrue” intelligence to justify recommending a ban on Israeli fans travelling to Birmingham.

 

He has now received compensation and been allowed to keep his pension, despite the force later being found to have made misleading statements about Maccabi supporters and failing to engage with Britain’s Jewish community over the decision.

West Midlands Police based its recommendation on intelligence following the chaotic clash between Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters and Ajax fans in Amsterdam a year earlier – information that has since been dismissed as false or misleading.