Reg McKay was a social worker and then a crime writer for the Daily Record. He knows the East End of Glasgow and the main players involved in its underworld. I have never like biographies of gangsters as they never seem to ring true to me but this is different. It is a far from sympathetic account of McGraw. The way McKay writes reminds me of the likes of Roberto Saviano writing about the Camorra in Italy.
I am very interested in Italian culture and the mafia is a part of this culture. Saviano wrote recently, in response to the capture of Matteo Massina Denaro, that many the Mafia Don’s power is dependent on their connections with other families, politicians and the police. McGraw was known, according to McKay, to have links with the serious crime squad. Again this reminds me of what Saviano wrote; in particular that the state and the police in Italy have different factions that don’t alway have the same interests. McKay also describes this type of division within the Strathclyde police.
McGraw nickname was ‘the Licensee’ ie he had a license to commit crime. On the face of it how can this be? Should we conclude that the police are corrupt. It is a bit more complicated. I guess certain units in the police would argue that they need to have dealings with criminals in order to get intelligence. However things are more complicated when something goes wrong. When the Doyle family’s house was burnt down in a dispute about the territory of vans selling groceries, known as the ice-cream wars McGraw is in the frame. The police convict the wrong men and to this day no one has been convicted of the crime.
In the end, McGraw died of a heart attack. He died leaving a lot of unanswered questions and will remain in Glasgow folklore for a long time to come.