Chris Eubank Jr’s trainer, Brian ‘BoMac’ McIntyre, who ‘carelessly’ brought a gun into the UK has avoided jail due to ‘exceptional circumstances’.

McIntyre, 53, was charged and detained in custody after security officials found a loaded gun and ammunition in a suitcase at Manchester Airport last month.

The alarm was raised when a scan of the cornerman’s baggage, which was checked in ahead of a flight, showed the weapon, bullets and a magazine inside. McIntyre later said he forgot that the weapon had been in his luggage. 

Police officers then descended on the departure lounge at Terminal 2 and arrested McIntyre, who was due to fly to Atlanta after preparing Eubank for his fight with Liam Smith on September 3.

Judge Nicholas Dean KC today imposed a 20-month jail term at Manchester Crown Court which was suspended for two years. He said the ‘exceptional circumstances’ of the case had merited a departure from the usual five-year minimum jail term.

Brian ‘BoMac’ McIntyre (pictured), who ‘carelessly’ brought a gun into the UK has avoided jail due to ‘exceptional circumstances’ 

McIntyre (pictured centre left) is the trainer of British boxer Chris Eubank Jr (pictured centre right)

McIntyre was handed a 20-month jail term at Manchester Crown Court which was suspended for two years

Unbeaten welterweight boxing world champion Terence Crawford was among those to give evidence in person alongside others from the United States. 

McIntyre had guided Eubank Jr to his emphatic victory against Liam Smith in their rematch on September 2 before seeking to leave the country the next morning.

The court heard McIntyre had a licence to carry the weapon in the United States and at no point was aware it was in his luggage until it was detected at the airport.

McIntyre admitted unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition.

David Toal, prosecuting, said the gun and ammunition were discovered after it passed through scanners at the airport’s Terminal 2 at just before 9.45am.

Bodyworn footage from a Border Force officer was played to the court in which McIntyre says: ‘I swear to God man, I didn’t know that gun was in the bag.’

McIntyre was arrested and later told police it was a ‘honest mistake and I deeply regret this’.

In his basis of plea, accepted by the Crown Prosecution Service, the defendant said the gun and ammunition never left his suitcase while he was in the UK.

He had packed the firearm when travelling to Crawford’s training camp ahead of his world title bout with Errol Spence in Las Vegas in late July.

When in Las Vegas he agreed to train Eubank Jr and subsequently flew out to Atalanta and then arrived in Manchester on August 19, the court was told.

Welterweight boxer Terence Crawford (right) was among those to give evidence in person 

McIntyre (pictured second left) leaving Manchester Crown Court after being given a suspended jail sentence over a gun possession charge

His time in Manchester was ‘extremely busy’, the court heard, as he stayed in two hotels and an AirBnb.

The seasoned traveller was said to be ‘horrified’ when the discovery was made at the airport.

Paul Greaney KC, defending, said McIntyre, known as BoMac, and Crawford, known as Bud, had set up the B&B Sports Academy, a not-for-profit organisation based in Omaha where ‘gangs and crime are rife’.

He said: ‘It provides a gym where young people can go for free. The aim is not to just make them good boxers but good people.

‘What these two men have established in Omaha is a remarkable achievement.’

Hundreds of pages of testimonials to the good character of McIntyre, who has no previous convictions or cautions, were presented to the judge including from the chief of police in Omaha.

In the public gallery of courtroom 2 were McIntyre’s wife and daughter, as well as Crawford, who had all flown in from the United States.

Crawford entered the witness box and told the court that he had known McIntyre all his life and that he trained him from the age of seven.

Asked to describe McIntyre’s character, he said: ‘He is a loving, caring, good father figure, a good uncle figure, a grandpa, a husband, a brother.

‘He is an anchor in our community.’

He told Mr Greaney that McIntyre was ‘kind’, ‘gentle’ and ‘honest’ and that both had put their own money into the gym.

Boxer Terence Crawford outside Manchester Crown Court after boxing trainer Brian McIntyre was given a suspended jail sentence

McIntyre (pictured right) had guided Eubank Jr (pictured left) to his emphatic victory against Liam Smith in their rematch on September 2 before seeking to leave the country the next morning

Crawford said the academy’s mission was to keep the area’s youth off the streets and away from gangs.

McIntyre was ‘crucial’ to the mission because ‘he is the main one doing all the work’, said the boxer.

He said: ‘The kids look at me as the hero. They look at BoMac as the voice. He is the one who is hands on. He is everything.’

Fellow US fighter Stephen Nelson and other academy representatives also gave character evidence from the witness box.

Sentencing McIntyre, who had been in custody since his arrest at the airport, Judge Dean said: ‘It is clear to me that you have a great deal to be proud of in your life.

‘That is self-evidently so since a large number of people have chosen at their own expense to come from the United State to speak about you in a way that has been authentic and impressive if I may say so.

‘But you now have something you will be ashamed of for the rest of your life.

‘You were sufficiently careless to carry into this country a firearm, a prohibited weapon. You did not know you had done so but when you were leaving this jurisdiction through Manchester Airport that firearm was detected.’

The judge said he accepted McIntyre’s explanation that he had travelled extensively within the US in the days and weeks before his journey to Manchester and had forgotten about the presence of the gun in his luggage.

He went on: ‘You didnt know it was there when you were in this country. You didn’t use it in any way.

‘You are a man of effective good character, You are testament to the redemptive power of boxing as a discipline. That power is a bit of a cliché but nevertheless manifestly a truth.

‘More that your works are significant power for the good of your community.

‘You are, in short, a good man. A thoroughly good man. You are a power of good for your community and this world.’

McIntyre was said to be ‘horrified’ when the discovery of his gun was made at the airport

He said: ‘This is manifestly and obviously a case where it is appropriate to suspend the sentence.’

The judge thanked the character witnesses for coming to court and giving ‘authentic and powerful’ evidence which ‘made a difference to my approach to this case’.

McIntyre was ordered to pay prosecution costs of £1080.

Eubank Jr addressed McIntyre’s arrest 10 days after the incident, telling The MMA Hour: ‘I can’t talk too much on it because there’s a lot of legal stuff going on.

‘I still don’t even know how it happened, why it happened, it’s a crazy, crazy situation. We’re just going to pray that you can get him out of there and get him back to where he’s supposed to be.

‘He’s a great trainer and he has a great team around him. I’ve never had a team before, I know that sounds insane but it is the truth, I’ve trained myself for many, many years and when I did have trainers it was just one guy. 

‘I trained with Roy Jones for a few years, he was supposed to train me for this fight but he couldn’t do it.’

Eubank Jr’s team declined to comment when Mail Sport exclusively broke the story. 

A Home Office spokesperson said: ‘While we do not routinely comment on individual cases, Border Force undertakes to perform 100% checks on scheduled passengers arriving in the UK.’ 

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