LONDON — He was a bank boss, but had no apparent banking experience. He was a Methodist minister, but got busted for allegedly buying cocaine and downloading porn at work.
The spectacular downfall of Paul Flowers, the former chairman of Britain's Co-operative Bank, was a tale made for the tabloids. His troubles began with the near collapse of the bank he was heading. They came to a head this week when a newspaper released footage that showed him handing cash to a dealer selling drugs including crystal meth and ketamine, a farm animal tranquillizer used recreationally as a hallucinogen.
Flowers, 63, has apologized for his "stupid and wrong behavior," but his humiliation continues.
He was arrested late Thursday as part of a drug investigation, as more shadowy details are being dug up about his life.
A local government council said this week that he was found with "inappropriate" adult material on his work computer when he was an official there for the opposition Labour Party in 2011. It confirmed he resigned from that office immediately after.
And the Methodist Church in Britain said Flowers was disciplined and briefly suspended after he was convicted of drunken driving and an act of gross indecency years ago.
Those revelations, together with Flowers' poor leadership of his bank, left many in disbelief: How was a man like him appointed as a bank chairman in the first place?
That was the question asked by Prime Minister David Cameron, who on Wednesday ordered an independent inquiry into the role of Flowers at the Co-op, which he left in June after three years.