Former Bank chief 'is filmed snorting lines as he entertains four naked rent boys at hot-tub party in his back garden'
Photo: Sunday Mirror Disgraced former bank boss Paul Flowers was filmed snorting lines
'Crystal Methodist Minister' reverend Paul
Flowers was filmed snorting lines as he entertained four naked rent
boys at hot-tub party in his back garden'
video after cut
With crisps balanced on his nipples, disgraced ex-Co-op bank chairman
Paul Flowers is caught napping during a four-day cocaine and
ketamine-fuelled bender.
The drug-loving suspended reverend – nicknamed the Crystal Methodist at
the height of the scandal that enveloped him two years ago – was
earlier filmed snorting lines as he entertained four naked rent boys
at a bizarre hot-tub party in his back garden.
The disturbing images, recorded last weekend, reveal Flowers has again fallen prey to his demons.
He is still technically a church minister and vowed to change his ways after “life-changing” rehab.
A rent boy who attended the party told how the ex-bank chief, who was
in charge of billions of pounds, had sent him invitation texts saying
“I have Charlie and Katie”, code for cocaine and the horse
tranquilliser ketamine.
The male escort, who we are calling Kris, said: “There were a lot of
drugs. He just doesn’t seem to care. He just seems out of control.”
Photo: Sunday Mirror Paul Flowers has been filmed on a four day drug bender
Footage from the party shows Flowers, 65, chopping up white powder on a table while chatting to a group of young men.
He is later snapped topless and fast asleep in an armchair – with two crisps bizarrely balanced on his nipples.
Flowers admitted he had “sinned” after he hit the headlines in November 2013.
He was filmed in a car counting out $430 (£300) to buy cocaine and crystal meth in a drugs deal, earning him his nickname.
A few days earlier he had appeared before a Treasury Select Committee
to answer questions about the collapse of the Co-op’s deal to buy 600
Lloyds branches.He was accused of not even knowing the “very basic”
details of the bank’s finances.
Flowers was later arrested on drugs charges. In May 2014 he was fined $480
(£525) after pleading guilty to possession of cocaine, crystal meth and
ketamine at Leeds Magistrates Court.
Before his appearance he told how he had spent 28 days at a rehab
clinic tackling his habit. In court, his drug use was attributed to the
stress of caring for his terminally ill mother.
He was said to be remorseful and was continuing to seek professional help.
Flowers was suspended indefinitely by the Methodist Church in the summer of 2014 following his drugs shame.
The church has been unable to resolve his position because he is “too unwell” to attend meetings.
But his pledge to turn his life around is today exposed as a sham by
Kris who was first taken by a friend to an earlier party at Flower’s
home in Salford, Greater Manchester
Paul Flowers has previously been arrested on drugs charges
Kris said: “He was flouncing around speaking really posh. There were
about 15 people there and loads of drugs and alcohol. When I arrived he
told me, ‘I’ll get you at some point’.
“He was saying things like ‘to good health’ as he snorted something. There were drugs everywhere, ketamine, coke.
“He was talking about how he’d been in the papers in the past. He was paranoid about photos being taken.”
After the party, Flowers went on a month’s holiday to South Africa. But
while he was away he texted 22-year-old Kris with a series of crude
messages.
And following his return to the UK he invited him back to his house for another party – this time to frolic in a rented hot tub.
Kris said Flowers paid him £200 to go along – but he ended up staying at his house for four days.
A
Photo: Andy Commins/Mirrorpix Paul Flowers had previously said his drug use was down to the stress of caring for his mother“I went on the Thursday and stayed until Sunday,” he said. “There was a big jacuzzi in the garden but he’d covered it with a gazebo so the neighbours couldn’t see in. “We were all naked in there. I wouldn’t like to be the next people hiring that out after what was going on. "When he was in the lounge he was getting a few lines ready on a plate.
He did them side by side, one of cocaine one of ketamine. “There were a lot of rent boys, all around their early 20s, and a lot of drugs. People were coming and going all weekend. “Everyone was getting totally wasted. He was talking about getting a
float in the Manchester Pride parade with a load of rent boys on it
with him. He was also saying he has a guy who comes to his house to
clean it naked. “He blames the press for everything and whenever the Co-op was
mentioned he’d say ‘the b******s. He never spoke about his rehab.”
S Photo: Sunday Mirror Paul Flowers new life has been exposed as a sham
In early 2014, Flowers described the storm around his private and
professional life as “hellish” while revealing he had spent a month in
the Priory.
While still chairman of the bank, he said he had come under
“considerable pressure” from the Treasury to conclude the Co-op’s
agreement to buy the Lloyds branches.
The deal, which would have helped recoup millions in taxpayers money
spent bailing out Lloyds, was scrapped when the Co-op’s own financial
troubles came to light.
Flowers said: “For me personally, there have been several months when
it has been hellish. But during that process I’ve actually been very
well supported by a raft of very good friends.
“You certainly find out who your friends are, because a significant
number of people in politics and in the Co-op and some in the church
have been noticeable by their silence or their absence.”
S
Photo: Sunday Mirror Paul Flowers had drugs and booze at his home in Salford, Kris says
He said he had undergone an addictions treatment programme in rehab. “I found it both cathartic and traumatic,” he said.
“But it actually helped me to look at not so much the superficial
issues of the addictions themselves but the more deep-seated reasons
why people resort to any sort of addiction.
“For me that was life-changing. I am now much more secure in my own skin, much more self-aware than I was before.”
Flowers was the $189,000 (£132,000)-a-year chairman of the “ethical” Co-op bank from 2010 until June 2013.
He stepped down shortly after the bank was found to have a £1.5billion
black hole in its finances. His lifestyle was exposed a few months
later. SPhoto: Sunday Mirror Kris says Paul paid him £200 to go along to the four day party
At the time, Flowers said: “Many of the things that have come into
the public domain actually occurred after I had left office, and people
assume that they had occurred before, but they are quite wrong.”
After the allegations of his drug use emerged, the Co-op confirmed it
was seeking to recover contractual payments totaling $38,000 (£31,0000) made to
Flowers amid reports that he was also the subject of an inquiry into
“lavish” expense claims.
He resigned as a Labor councilor in Bradford in 2011 after
“inappropriate but not illegal adult content” was found on his
computer.
When Flowers appeared in court on his drugs charge his barrister said
he had “lost so much” as a result of events and was not currently
working.
He is still receiving a minister’s salary of around $730 (£510) a month,
although he had access to other assets after inheriting his mother’s
estate following her death in 2012. Photo: Sunday Mirror Paul Flowers stepped down from his role as chairman of the Co-op bank
Flowers
is understood to have paid $257679 (£180,000) for his three-storey town house
with funds from the estate, plus another $28,000 (£20,000) for a conservatory.
When asked if he would like to comment on the party at his house and
alleged drug taking, Flowers would only say: “No thank you.”
A Methodist Church spokesman said: “Paul Flowers remains suspended. We
regret that our disciplinary procedure has been on hold following
advice that he has been too unwell to attend meetings.”
Flowers can still be called Reverend but the disciplinary process could strip him of the title.
The church spokesman added: “We are very disappointed by these new
allegations and the disciplinary panel will now review how we progress
the matter.
"We are grateful to the Sunday Mirror for bringing this to our attention.”
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