Three Metropolitan police whistleblowers say David Hunt, a London businessman named by a judge last week as the head of an organised crime network, used "sleepers" inside the Yard to help him evade justice for three decades.
According to an expose by 'The Sunday Times', Hunt used a network of corrupt serving and former officers and details of the claims can be revealed for the first time after the newspaper won a libel victory against Hunt last week.
The allegations against corrupt police officers are contained in a 54-page legal letter sent to Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe by three of his own officers.
The officers, all seasoned detectives in east London, tried to take on Hunt in the run-up to the 2012 Olympic Games but claim to have been stymied by their corrupt colleagues.
They include a senior detective who held several sensitive roles.
A junior Scotland Yard detective in a sensitive intelligence role dealing with informants is alleged to have taken a 35,000 pounds bribe from Hunt in 2007.
He is one of three identified as working in east London police stations allegedly on behalf of Hunt.
An unnamed detective is also said to have accessed a sensitive police computer to find out information about an operation concerning Hunt.
