The court fined Wilkinson £300, ordered him to pay £150 legal costs and £30 court costs. The prosecution was brought by the SIA.
SIA investigators and officers from the Police Service of Northern Ireland carried out two planned inspections of venues in Belfast's night-time economy on 28 September 2022 and Monday 3 October 2022. During the inspection on 3 October 2022, Mr Wilkinson was found to be working without a valid SIA licence in a Belfast nightclub. When he was asked why he was not wearing a licence he told the investigators that he was a ticket collector.
As a former licence holder, the SIA suspended Mr Wilkinson's licence on 18 August 2022. On 6 September 2022 Mr Wilkinson was convicted of assault at Antrim Magistrates' Court.
Mr Wilkinson was invited by SIA investigators to an interview-under-caution at Musgrave Police Station on 16 January 2023 when he denied working as an unlicensed door supervisor. He told the SIA investigator that he was working as a marshal. On 30 January 2023 the SIA revoked his licence.
Jenny Hart, one of the criminal investigations managers at the SIA, said:
Suspension means Mr Wilkinson was unable to work as a door supervisor, yet still chose to work illegally in Belfast's night-time economy when his licence had been suspended. The SIA's licensing regime is there to protect the public and a licence is awarded to a 'fit and proper person'. Mr Wilkinson had been convicted of assault and the SIA had suspended his licence, yet he chose to carry on working around potentially vulnerable people who were out enjoying themselves. Mr Wilkinson was a risk to those people. Mr Wilkinson has a criminal record following these convictions.
Notes:
- The offences relating to the Private Security Industry Act 2001 that are mentioned above are:
- Section 3 - working unlicensed as a security operative
- Section 22 - making a false statement to the SIA