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Ian Douglas McAteer (born 1961) is a Scottish former gangster who was a prominent figure in the Glasgow and Liverpool criminal underworlds during the later 20th century.

Background
From 1979, McAteer established links with Glasgow's main drugs barons. He had preferred status as a distributor in Scotland, and had an even more profitable relationship with the Liverpool Mafia. Investigative journalist Graham Johnson reported that, aside from drug dealing, McAteer's work encompassed contract killings, gun running, debt collection and protection. He has a successful used car business, which was used to wash money obtained from illegal ventures. McAteer was described in the Daily Record as a "big-time dealer".

Former Glasgow gangster Paul Ferris characterised McAteer as being "so cautious as to be almost paranoid", while a senior Liverpool detective labelled him "extremely dangerous". He was known as "Mad Jock" within the criminal underworld; "Little Hands" has been reported as an alternate nickname of McAteer's, although Ferris has stated that he and other gangland figures are unfamiliar with this moniker.

Charges and convictions
In 1998, McAteer was acquitted of the daylight murder of Glasgow criminal John "Jack" Bennett, with whom he had conflict in prison in 1993.

Warren Selkirk worked as a drug courier for McAteer, whom he had met in jail. In 1999, however, McAteer feared that his colleague was becoming a liability (with particular concerns over his mounting gambling debts ): Selkirk was shot five times at Crosby Marina in north Merseyside, while his children waited for him in a nearby car. A plastic bag filled with dog excrement – a sign of "contempt" – was found in his right hand. Following his arrest, McAteer "threatened to shoot a number of police officers", as well as anyone who stood as a witness against him". At least two criminals were given new identities under the Witness protection program in return for testifying against McAteer, who in 2001 was ultimately convicted of Selkirk's murder and given a life sentence. McAteer was also convicted of plotting to supply ecstasy and heroin, and of attempting to pervert the course of justice.

In 2003, McAteer was refused permission to appeal his murder conviction. Following a 2006 review of the case London's Royal Courts of Justice, Mr Justice Grigson ruled that McAteer must serve a minimum of 22 and a half years before being considered for parole.

Paul Ferris has protested McAteer's innocence in the Selkirk case. In his 2005 book Vendetta, Ferris asserted that police pinned the murder to McAteer in order to assuage grief among the city of Liverpool. He reported that Selkirk had amassed debts in Ireland, which likely led to his demise, and that McAteer's colleague George Bell Smith had offered false testimony of McAteer confessing to the murder in return for having a child sexual abuse charge dropped. In an interview that same year, Ferris said: "It is common knowledge that [McAteer] did not do it. Even the dogs in the street know it... he is being kept inside because of politics and nothing else."

Later life
In 2011, McAteer, alongside another former Glasgow gangster, Jamie Stevenson, raised £3,776 for Glasgow's Royal Hospital for Sick Children by running a marathon on a prison treadmill. The donation was criticised by the sister of Jack Bennet, who maintained McAteer's culpability for her brother's murder.