Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Carlton Leach
View on Wikipedia
Carlton Leach is an author, occasional actor, and a former criminal.[1]
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Leach was born in Canning Town. A fan of West Ham United F.C., he became involved in the Inter City Firm, a gang of hooligans who followed the East London club. Leach was the original model for the cover of the Strength Thru Oi! album (1981).[2]
Criminal career
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (March 2023) |
Leach started work as a bouncer in East London, where he became involved with Tony Tucker, then Pat Tate, both of whom worked as large scale dealers in ecstasy during the rave era in the late 1980s. Tate, Tucker and Craig Rolfe were shot dead in December 1995 in a Range Rover on a farm track in Rettendon, in the Rettendon murders.
Later career
[edit]In 2003, Carlton Leach wrote a memoir about his criminal exploits, entitled Muscle. In 2007, a film based on the book was released, entitled Rise of the Footsoldier and starring Ricci Harnett as Leach.[3] In 2015, Leach worked with Harnett to organise another film about his life, Reign of the General,[citation needed] but after losing a legal battle over copyright, the film was taken over by the owners of Rise of the Footsoldier and released.[citation needed] The same people went on to make a third film in the franchise in 2017.[4] Leach claimed to have no part in the film, and commented on Twitter that it was fictional and no longer his story.[5]
In 2021, Carlton released what he called his last (autobiographical) book. Co-authored with Jason Allday, the book was titled, The Final Say.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Hard lessons from Carlton Leach's life of crime | Gazette". Gazette-news.co.uk. 13 March 2008. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
- ^ "Garry Bushell Speaks Out | Zani". Zani.co.uk. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
- ^ Summers, Chris (7 September 2007). "Fresh hope in Range Rover murders". BBC News.
- ^ "Rise of the Footsoldier 3: The Pat Tate Story - Carnaby International Sales and Distribution". www.carnabysales.com.
- ^ "Carlton Leach (@TheCarltonLeach) - Twitter". twitter.com.
- ^ Leach, Carlton (22 September 2021). Carlton: The Final Say. Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp. ISBN 979-8-4795-1828-7. Retrieved 25 October 2025.
Carlton Leach
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Upbringing in Canning Town
Carlton Leach was born on 12 March 1959 in Canning Town, a working-class district in East London.[1] Born to a working-class family, Leach grew up in poverty amid the East End's socioeconomic challenges.[5] These conditions instilled early lessons in toughness and self-reliance.[5] A budding interest in West Ham United emerged during this period, hinting at the football culture that would later define much of his youth.[6]Entry into football culture
Leach developed a lifelong passion for West Ham United during the early 1970s, when he began regularly attending matches at the club's Upton Park stadium as a young teenager.[1][7] The terrace culture of 1970s English football profoundly shaped his early experiences, immersing him in a world of boisterous chants, fierce local rivalries—most notably with Millwall—and the central social role that matchdays played in the lives of working-class youth like himself in East London.[7] Around the age of 15 or 16, Leach entered the emerging casuals subculture among football supporters, adopting its distinctive style of clothing such as Ben Sherman shirts and Doc Martens boots as key identifiers of the group's sharp, fashion-conscious identity.[7] In 1981, at age 22, Leach was selected as the original model for the cover of the Oi! compilation album Strength Thru Oi!, embodying the tough, working-class aesthetic of the era's young football followers, though he was ultimately unable to attend the photoshoot and was replaced.[8]Hooligan involvement
Role in the Inter City Firm
Carlton Leach, a lifelong West Ham United supporter from his teenage years, joined the Inter City Firm (ICF) in the late 1970s as a young enthusiast drawn into the group's organized activities.[3] The ICF originated in 1977 as one of the earliest structured football hooligan firms associated with West Ham, initially comprising around 20 to 30 dedicated members who adopted the name to reflect their use of the Inter City rail network for swift, coordinated travel to away matches, evading police surveillance and enabling pre-planned confrontations.[9][10] This tactical approach emphasized mobility and surprise, with the firm enforcing strict internal codes of conduct and organizing discreet meetings to maintain discipline and loyalty among members.[2] Within the ICF, Leach quickly progressed from a peripheral casual to a core member, earning respect for his exceptional physical strength and steadfast loyalty, which solidified his position in the group's hierarchy.[3] He cultivated a reputation as a formidable enforcer, leveraging his rigorous bodybuilding regimen to build an intimidating physique that deterred rivals and reinforced the firm's authority.[3] Leach forged important alliances with key figures inside the ICF, contributing to its tight-knit internal dynamics while navigating tensions with external groups, particularly Millwall's Bushwackers, whose aggressive style heightened ongoing rivalries.[3][2]Major clashes and incidents
During the 1980s, Carlton Leach's role as a frontline enforcer in West Ham United's Inter City Firm (ICF) placed him at the center of escalating football-related violence, characterized by organized brawls, pitch invasions, and ambushes that epitomized the era's hooligan crisis.[11] These incidents often involved coordinated efforts by the ICF to confront rival supporters, contributing to widespread disorder at matches across England.[12] A particularly intense confrontation occurred at Ayresome Park during a West Ham versus Middlesbrough match in the mid-1980s, where Leach and fellow ICF member Bill Gardner became separated from their group after police thwarted a planned mass incursion into the home terrace.[2] Surrounded by hundreds of aggressive Middlesbrough fans—reputed for their toughness—Leach later described fearing imminent death, as the pair faced potential severe beating without escape.[13] Displaying West Ham scarves and defiantly singing the club's anthem "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles," they created a momentary standoff, with the crowd parting in wary disbelief at their apparent fearlessness; police eventually extracted them safely.[14] The ICF, including Leach, frequently clashed with Manchester United's Red Army in ambushes and street fights, such as the chaotic 1985 FA Cup tie at Old Trafford on February 23, where thousands of West Ham supporters invaded the stadium, leading to widespread brawls and pitch disturbances.[11] Similar violence erupted off-field, exemplified by an August 1986 ferry brawl en route to a pre-season match on the continent, pitting a small ICF contingent against over 200 Red Army members in a brutal melee.[12] These encounters underscored Leach's active participation in the firm's strategy of targeting rivals via public transport hijackings and post-match pursuits.[11] ICF activities faced intensified policing amid the Thatcher government's crackdown on hooliganism, drawing significant media scrutiny, most notably in the 1985 Thames Television documentary Hooligan, which exposed the ICF's structured operations and fueled public debate on football violence.[11]Criminal career
Association with Essex Boys
In the late 1980s, Carlton Leach transitioned from his involvement in football hooliganism to the nightclub security scene, marking the beginning of his association with the Essex Boys gang. This shift occurred amid the burgeoning rave culture, where Leach leveraged his reputation as a tough enforcer from the Inter City Firm to secure roles as a bouncer in East London and Essex venues. Leach first connected with key figures Tony Tucker and Pat Tate through these nightclub environments and related social circles. He met Tucker specifically in 1990 at Tucker's health food shop in Ilford, leading to a close personal and professional partnership in running security firms for clubs. Tate, a prominent enforcer, collaborated with Leach on operational aspects, drawing from their shared East End backgrounds and mutual contacts in the door staff community.[15] The group's dynamics were built on strong loyalty bonds, forged through overlapping experiences in hooliganism and emerging criminal enterprises, with Leach serving as a protector in club settings and occasionally aiding in logistics. Their shared interests centered on ecstasy distribution networks, which exploded during the rave era, allowing the Essex Boys to control supply lines in nightlife hotspots.[16] By the early 1990s, these ties facilitated the expansion of Essex Boys' operations across Essex and London clubs, where Leach's security role enabled the taxation and facilitation of drug sales amid the era's acid house and warehouse party boom. This period solidified Leach's position within the inner circle of what became known as Tucker's Firm, emphasizing relational networks over formal hierarchy.[16]Drug trade and violent events
In the early 1990s, Carlton Leach became deeply involved in the ecstasy trade amid the burgeoning rave scene in East London and Essex, providing enforcement and debt collection services for drug deals as part of his role as a nightclub bouncer.[17] He associated closely with Tony Tucker, a prominent Basildon-based dealer who led the Essex Boys group, which dominated the distribution of ecstasy pills through nightclubs across the region from around 1990 to 1994.[17][18] This network capitalized on the high demand for MDMA during the acid house era, with Tucker and his associates supplying substantial quantities of tablets to venues and generating substantial profits but also fueling territorial disputes.[16][15] Leach's activities extended to protection rackets in nightclubs, where the Essex Boys leveraged their security firms to control drug sales and intimidate rivals, ensuring compliance through threats and violence.[16] Tucker, in particular, operated a legitimate-looking security business that supplied bouncers to Essex clubs, using it as a front to enforce order over ecstasy distribution and extract payments from dealers and venue owners between 1990 and 1994.[18][15] Leach, known for his physical presence and hooligan background, contributed to this enforcement, helping the group "rule Essex like we owned it" by intimidating those who challenged their operations.[19] The violent pinnacle came with the Rettendon murders on December 6, 1995, when Tucker, Pat Tate, and Craig Rolfe—key Essex Boys figures—were shot dead execution-style inside a Range Rover on a remote farm track near Chelmsford.[18] Leach had extensive prior knowledge of their drug operations, having collaborated closely with Tucker on importation and distribution rings, and later revealed he narrowly escaped involvement by not joining them that night for what was intended as a cocaine handover.[17][19] As a close associate of the victims, Leach described living in paranoia for years afterward, fearing he would be targeted next amid the fallout from their £60,000 drug debt disputes with rival groups like the Adams family.[17][20][15] The murders ignited retaliatory gang wars in Essex, with escalating violence between factions vying for control of the ecstasy trade, including shootings and assaults tied to unresolved debts and power vacuums.[15] Police responded with Operation Century, a major investigation launched immediately after the killings to dismantle the Essex Boys' remnants and probe related drug networks, though it initially yielded no arrests until supergrass testimony in 1998 led to the convictions of Michael Steele and Jack Whomes for the murders; these convictions remain controversial, with ongoing debates and appeals questioning the reliability of the evidence.[18][15]Reformation and professional shift
Move to security work
Following the Rettendon murders in December 1995, in which his associates Tony Tucker, Patrick Tate, and Craig Rolfe were executed in a drug-related shooting, Carlton Leach sought to abandon his criminal activities. The killings profoundly impacted Leach, transforming him from a confident enforcer into someone gripped by paranoia, as he feared becoming the next victim in the escalating gangland violence. This realization, coupled with a desire to avoid imprisonment or death and to safeguard his family's future, prompted his gradual reformation and exit from the Essex Boys' orbit.[17][1] After the murders, Leach initially worked as a bouncer in East London clubs, but this role involved providing security and muscle for illegal raves and drug deals during the rave scene. He experienced significant early hurdles, including persistent personal paranoia that lingered for four to five years post-murders and the stigma of his notorious background.[17]Business and entrepreneurial activities
Leach's earlier security ventures, run in association with Tony Tucker in the early 1990s, were registered companies that supplied door staff for clubs and pubs in Essex and London, but these were used to facilitate drug dealing and control nightlife taxation. Post-1995, he briefly shifted to debt collecting, employing former door staff. Over time, Leach fully transitioned to legitimate business, developing interests in property development by the 2000s. As of 2025, he maintains several business interests, including property development, marking a sustainable entrepreneurial pivot away from his past.[21][4][22]Creative pursuits
Authorship and books
Carlton Leach entered the literary world with his debut autobiography, Muscle, published in 2003 by John Blake Publishing.[23] The book chronicles his early life as a prominent football hooligan with West Ham United's Inter City Firm, his involvement in organized crime, and his eventual reformation, offering a candid account of the violence and underworld dynamics that defined his youth.[11] Muscle achieved commercial success as a bestseller, resonating with readers interested in gritty personal narratives of redemption.[24] In 2009, Leach released Rise of the Footsoldier: In My Game, the Choice Is a Jail or a Grave, also published by John Blake, which expanded on his experiences during the Essex Boys era, delving deeper into drug-related conflicts and gang rivalries in 1980s and 1990s Britain.[25] This sequel built upon the foundation of Muscle by providing more detailed insights into specific incidents and relationships within the criminal landscape, while maintaining a focus on his personal evolution.[26] The work further solidified Leach's reputation in the true crime genre, praised for its unfiltered depiction of events that later inspired a film series. Leach's most recent publication, CARLTON: The Final Say (2021), co-authored with Jason Allday and independently published, serves as a reflective capstone to his writing career, emphasizing mature perspectives on the consequences of violence and paths to redemption.[27] The book includes over 35 previously unpublished photographs and addresses lingering misconceptions about his past, positioning it as his definitive statement.[28] Like its predecessors, it quickly became a bestseller upon release.[24] Leach's writing style draws from his background in oral storytelling, resulting in a raw, direct narrative that prioritizes authenticity over polished prose, a hallmark appreciated in the true crime genre for its immersive, firsthand quality.[29] His books have received positive reception for their brutal honesty and no-holds-barred approach, earning average ratings around 3.8 on platforms like Goodreads and appealing to audiences seeking unvarnished accounts of British gangland life. This style has positioned Leach as a notable voice in true crime literature, contributing to the genre's exploration of redemption amid infamy.[27]Acting and film roles
Carlton Leach has ventured into acting sporadically, appearing in low-budget British crime and action films where his roles often reflect his real-life reputation as a former football hooligan and underworld figure. Without formal acting training, Leach relied on his authentic persona to portray tough, no-nonsense characters, contributing to a type of self-referential presence in the genre.[30] His acting debut occurred in the 2010 action-horror film Killer Bitch, directed by Liam Galvin, where Leach played a character named Carlton involved in violent confrontations, including scenes depicting him shooting multiple individuals.[31] The film, which featured other real-life figures like Dave Courtney, emphasized gritty, improvised-style action drawn from Leach's background. In 2013, Leach took on the role of "Carlton" in Green Street Hooligans: Underground, a direct-to-video sequel to the 2005 football hooligan drama Green Street Hooligans. His performance aligned with the film's exploration of firm rivalries, capitalizing on his historical ties to the Inter City Firm.[32] Leach made a cameo appearance in the 2019 comedy-drama I'll See What I Can Do, a satirical take on personal downfall that briefly showcased his recognizable tough-guy image. He also appeared in a cameo role as himself in Rise of the Footsoldier Part II (2015).[33] Beyond scripted roles, Leach portrayed himself in the 2009 documentary-style release Carlton Leach: Real Rise of a Footsoldier, a firsthand account of his life from hooliganism to criminal involvement, serving as a companion piece to the fictionalized Rise of the Footsoldier (2007), which was based on his autobiography Muscle.[34] Leach also contributed to film projects inspired by his experiences as an executive producer on Rise of the Footsoldier Part II (2015), subtitled Reign of the General, though he later publicly distanced himself from the franchise following a legal dispute over intellectual property rights.[35]Personal life and legacy
Family and relationships
Carlton Leach is married to Anne Leach, with whom he shares a long-term partnership. The couple has two children.[37] Throughout his life, Leach has prioritized shielding his family from the dangers associated with his earlier criminal involvement, particularly after the 1995 Rettendon murders prompted a significant reformation. As of 2025, Leach's family dynamics reflect an emphasis on stability and privacy, with his East London roots influencing a strong sense of familial loyalty.[37]Reflections on past and current status
In interviews promoting his 2021 autobiography The Final Say, Carlton Leach has publicly renounced his involvement in hooliganism and organized crime, describing them as destructive paths that led to profound personal loss, particularly following the 1995 Rettendon murders of associates. He emphasized the book as a platform to convey truth over glamorization, urging young people to avoid violence and learn from the severe consequences of such lifestyles. Leach has advocated for anti-violence messages, sharing cautionary tales in public talks to deter youth from similar errors.[37] Leach's legacy endures in popular culture through his influence on depictions of the 1980s-1990s UK underworld, with his 2003 memoir Muscle and 2009 autobiography Rise of the Footsoldier inspiring the cult film series Rise of the Footsoldier, where he is portrayed as a central figure transitioning from football hooligan to gang enforcer. These works have shaped British crime narratives, blending autobiography with dramatic retellings of East London gang dynamics and the Essex Boys saga. At age 66, Leach reflects on this portrayal with regret, using it to underscore themes of redemption rather than sensationalism.[38][37][39] Post-2021, Leach has maintained a selective public presence, participating in speaking engagements at crime literature expos and contributing to documentaries as a consultant on UK gang history. He promotes fitness as part of a disciplined lifestyle, often highlighting physical health as key to overcoming past addictions and trauma. Active on social media platform X under the handle @TheCarltonLeach, he critiques media portrayals of crime while sharing insights on personal growth.[37][4][40] As of 2025, Leach leads a stable, family-oriented life, married with two children, prioritizing emotional well-being over high-risk endeavors. He pursues business interests in property development. This measured approach reflects his ongoing commitment to a reformed existence, grounded in lessons from decades of turmoil.[37][4]References
- https://www.[imdb](/page/IMDb).com/title/tt3150966/fullcredits/
