London £1.38m watch robbery 'was staged', defendant tells court
London £1.38m watch robbery 'was staged', defendant tells court
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Junior Kunu, 30, and Mannix Pedro, 37, are charged with conspiring with others to commit the robbery after more than 70 luxury watches were stolen from the 247 Kettles shop in Richmond, south-west London. An alleged robbery in which watches worth £1.38 million were stolen was "staged" and everyone involved consented, including a jewellery store manager who later killed himself, a court has been told.
![[Junior Kunu and Mannix Pedro are on trial at Woolwich Crown Court charged with conspiring with others to commit the robbery (Nick Ansell/PA)]](https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/01/22/15/d40a6183893f4f8c0ea96a61b79d2c09Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzM3NjQ2NDIy-2.22876306.jpg)
Junior Kunu, 30, and Mannix Pedro, 37, are charged with conspiring with others to commit the robbery after more than 70 luxury watches were stolen from the 247 Kettles shop in Richmond, south-west London, on May 25 last year. Office manager Oliver White, 27, died by suicide the next day "as a direct result" of the robbery, jurors were previously told. Giving evidence at Woolwich Crown Court on Wednesday, Kunu repeatedly insisted: "This was not a robbery, this was staged," and said he was told he would be paid £5,000 for putting watches into a bag.
"I knew that I was going to take part in a staged robbery where everyone was consenting," Kunu said. "I knew that the person in the shop was going to comply. I knew that I was going to put watches in the bag and I had to do nothing else.". Two other men said to have been involved - Michael Ashman and Kyle Bowrage - are still at large, having fled abroad soon after May 25. Kunu claimed Bowrage had told him what was going to happen and that it all went according to plan.
"He told me that Oliver White was going to comply, he complied," he said. "He told me that police was not going to get called, they didn't get called. "He told me that he (Mr White) wasn't going to press the panic button or anything and he didn't. "At one point Bowrage was on one side and Oliver White was by himself. If this was a real-life robbery he would have pressed the panic button, he would have screamed or kicked up a fuss.
"Everything Kyle Bowrage told me happened to the exact tee.". He said "it would have been different" if Mr White had not consented. "He would have pressed the panic button," Kunu told the court. "We walked out of that place, we didn't run. There wasn't a car outside. "We walked to where the car was... if this was a robbery the car would have been outside, we would have run out. "This was, to my belief, an insurance scam. But I didn't know that.".
Jurors previously heard that Mr White was put in a headlock and tied up while the watches were stolen. Kunu said the actions, including using cable ties on Mr White, was part of "the role play" to "make the whole thing look real". "It was a staged robbery so I believed that it was consented," Kunu said. "If I actually believed that this was a robbery I would have never been there. "If I actually believed that he (Mr White) was uncomfortable or he looked like he was genuinely really struggling, this would have been completely different.".
Later, when viewing CCTV footage of the incident, Kunu repeatedly pointed out that "nothing else was taken" apart from the watches, claiming this shows it was a fake robbery. He insisted Mr White had ample opportunity to press the panic button and that the store manager would have put up "more of a fight" against Bowrage as he was being tied up if it was a "real robbery". When he was asked to put himself in the hypothetical position of resisting Bowrage, Kunu said he would have fought back, adding: "I would have walked out with a broken neck or broken arm.
"If he, Kyle Bowrage, wanted to use real force, you will see real force. He didn't use any force.". The court heard that Kunu had received a call from a "Mr X" asking him to be involved in the "staged robbery". The defendant refused to name the caller, citing concerns over his own safety and the safety of his family. Asked why he was chosen, Kunu told jurors: "Because prior to that I have had conversations with X and I told him that I was financially struggling.
"He knew that I needed money and I feel like he knew that I was just... I'm naive. He knew that I was naive. "He said I was going to partake in staged robbery and all I had to do was put watches in a bag. I asked him a number of questions and he just said everyone was consenting to the staged robbery, that nothing bad was going to happen.". He accepted he was - "at most" - a part of a "conspiracy to steal", but later agreed with the prosecution suggestion that the incident was "always going to involve violence or the threat of violence potentially", answering: "I guess so.".
He denied making his explanations up. Connor Thornton, the store's co-owner, denied believing the incident was an "inside job" when he gave evidence last week, while Mr White's mother, Amy Keane, described him as a "really hardworking young man" who was "devastated by the robbery". Woolwich Crown Court previously heard that Mr White tried to transfer £14,000 of his own savings to his bosses after the robbery.