The Beatles News

Beatles Seller Avoids Slammer

E! Online, Jul 16, 2006 10:14 pm PDT
All you need is luck--and a psych evaluation--to avoid jail time.

A schizophrenic man who allegedly tried to sell boxes of stolen tapes of rare Beatles recordings is free as a bird Friday after a British judge decided not to order him locked up on account of his mental illness.

According to the BBC, Judge Jeremy McMullen of London's Southwark Crown Court ruled that 55-year-old Nigel Oliver will not have to serve what would have likely been a four-year prison term, citing a jury's finding at an earlier hearing that the defendant was mentally unfit to be held responsible for his actions. Instead, the judge sentenced Oliver to two years of mental health supervision.

"It is necessary for the protection of the public that you take advantage of medication and treatment and counseling that you are getting," McMullen was quoted as telling Oliver.

In January 2003, Oliver was nabbed in a sting in Amsterdam after he allegedly tried to sell some hundreds of pilfered tapes along with other band memorabilia to undercover police officers for $460,000.

Among the Fab Four swag in his possession were 504 recordings the Beatles made during their historic "Get Back" sessions that was meant to accompany film footage that eventually became the 1970 movie Let It Be, more than 80 hours of sound footage of the legendary band, as well as George Harison's 1960 passport.

Neil Aspinall, the Beatles' original road manager who became managing director of the group's Apple Corps, says the tapes had gone missing sometime between 1969 and 1973 and featured over 200 one-off performances by the Beatles, including covers of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" and Rod Stewart's "Maggie May."

"There's lots of very unknown stuff and music on there that they wouldn't have recorded in a normal session," Aspinall told the court during the trial.

No one has been charged in the theft and it's unclear how Oliver came to acquire the stash. When police searched his apartment, there were written directions on how he should sell the merchandise.

Apple hasn't said whether it intends to release the rediscovered tracks anytime soon, though the company did announce plans to digitally remaster the group's entire catalog and, for the first time, make it available for download via online stores, but no timetable has been set.

Those fans dying to get back sooner might try flying to Las Vegas and take in Love, the new Cirque du Soleil extravaganza set to Beatles music handpicked by their main producer, George Martin, which premiered two weeks ago at the Mirage Hotel.

Surviving members Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, along with John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, and Harrison's wife, Olivia, gave their stamp of approval to the production and were all on hand for opening night.

More Artist News

Paul McCartney takes Meat-Free Mondays to EU

Dec 3, 2009 8:00 am PST

Paul McCartney took his "Meat-Free Mondays" campaign to the European Parliament on Thursday, saying the power to halt global warming lies as much with individuals as with their governments. McCartney met in Brussels with Rajendra K. Pacha...

McCartney pens song for DeNiro film about widower

Dec 3, 2009 4:00 am PST

There are only so many songwriting suggestions an outsider is allowed to offer Paul McCartney. Kirk Jones, director of the new Robert DeNiro movie, "Everybody's Fine," found the limit. McCartney, who has written only a handful of songs sp...

Ringo, McCartney duet on Starr's latest solo album

Nov 19, 2009 2:00 pm PST

Ringo Starr is joined by his former Beatles bandmate Paul McCartney for a duet on "Y Not," the drummer's forthcoming solo album due out Jan 12, 2010. The Universal Music release also includes vocal turns by Joss Stone, Ben Harper and ...

2 sites selling Beatles songs to remain shut down

Nov 18, 2009 9:00 pm PST

Two Web sites that sold songs by The Beatles for 25 cents apiece should remain shut down indefinitely, a federal judge ruled Wednesday. U.S. District Judge John F. Walter issued a preliminary injunction against BlueBeat.com and Basebeat.c...

US Library of Congress to honor Paul McCartney

Nov 16, 2009 8:00 am PST

The U.S. Library of Congress is awarding Paul McCartney its third Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. Librarian of Congress James Billington announced the prize Monday. An all-star tribute concert is planned for early 2010, though the librar...

1-6 of 1 videos

Artist on Last.fm