PAUL Burton is the subject of the hard-hitting Channel 4 documentary 24 Hours in Police Custody.
In 2022, he made headlines with after being involved in a 14-hour armed standoff with Bedfordshire police. Here is everything you need to know about Paul Burton.


Who is Paul Burton?
Paul Burton can be seen in another instalment of the series , which is airing on Monday, April 28, 2025, at 9pm.
followed in 2022, who gave unprecedented access to the operation suite during the live 14-hour siege, which was sparked by a cold takeaway and saw a delivery driver taken hostage.
Burton, who was 45 at the time, and his accomplice lived in the flats at Bury Court in at the time of the incident.
What did Paul Burton do?
Burton and Turner threatened their neighbours with a rifle and Burton also shot at a police car.
In November 2022, armed officers from Bedfordshire Police were sent to surround a block of flats, following a 999 call from a woman reporting she had just seen two men, one with an AK-47 rifle, making threats to kill.
After assessing the scene, it was quickly categorised as a major incident.
Officers then received intelligence that the two suspects were Paul Burton and Nathan Turner – both of whom resided in the flats at the time of the incident.
The incident began around 3 am on November 27, 2022.
Footage emerged of Burton live-streaming on the platform , complaining to police that his takeaway delivery driver ”failed at his job”, his kebab arrived late and was missing its salad.
The men had both been drinking and taking .
They confronted the delivery driver as he arrived on the eighth floor of the flats, placing a coffee table across the lift door to trap him inside.
They kept him as a hostage for two hours.
A neighbour told of how she went to complain about the loud music she could hear the pair playing, before being threatened by Burton with a black rifle.
He also warned officers: ”You try even come through my f*****g door. I will kill your coppers in a heartbeat.”
Both men suffered from issues.
Discussing their extreme reaction to the late takeaway, Superintendent Steve Ashdown, who was in charge of the operation said: ”When you link into mental health conditions and the other stuff going on for those two suspects at the time, it feels like the final straw.”

“I've been a firearms commander for 10 years and this is the first siege of this type that I've dealt with.”;
At 8.45 am, the situation at the scene escalated after Burton fired at a police car’s windscreen, narrowly avoiding a dog handler.
Then Turner started throwing objects from a balcony during the day and damaged several vehicles below.
While Turner surrendered around 12:34, Burton relented at 17:49, almost 14 hours after the stand-off began.
Thankfully we achieved a peaceful outcome. I've been a firearms commander for 10 years and this is the first siege of this type that I've dealt with.
Superintendent Steve Ashdown
Upon entering the property, officers discovered the weapon, which had been modified, in a wardrobe.
There were also several and other reptiles in the flat, which were later re-homed.
The call-out fee for the raid cost an eye-watering £85,000.
Discussing the siege, Superintendent Ashdown added: ”Like with every other firearms incident, there is a sense of achievement and relief at a successful resolution.”
”All the residents were kept safe and no officers came to harm, which is not always a guarantee for police officers, sadly.”
“There was a sense of professional pride.”
Who is Nathan Turner?
As mentioned above, when police were provided with intelligence of the suspects believed to be involved in the siege, Turner's name was one of two officers received.
Like Burton, he too lived in the flats at Bury Court and was 37 at the time of the incident.
Following his arrest, Turner admitted to and four charges of criminal damage.
He was sentenced to 20 months.
Where is Paul Burton now?
Following his arrest, Burton was later jailed.
Sentencing him at Crown in October, Judge David Farrell KC said: “It was an appalling and terrifying incident.
“This was an extremely disturbing and frightening siege in which a firearm was present.”


Burton was placed behind bars for seven years after pleading guilty to attempting to cause and two charges of possessing a firearm without a certificate.
Superintendent Ashdown said after ten years of working with the Channel 4 TV programme: “You become familiar with the camera teams and it becomes second nature to walk past and ignore them”.
“It's very easy to look at the headlines and judge police and other emergency service on the outcomes but if you see the effort that goes into the investigations – and the actual siege in this case – you can see the added complexities that the public don't normally witness,” he added.
Watch 24 Hours in Police Custody: The Siege on Channel 4 on Monday, April 28, 2025, at 9pm.