A NIGHTCLUB doorman who was caught by police with electric tazer guns and pepper sprays at his Farnham home was fined £800 last Friday. Police searched the home of Robert Davey, 30, in Weydon Lane after customs officials intercepted a parcel addressed to him containing three stun guns. Officers seized two more tazers along with the cannisters, and two shotguns which he had a certificate for. He claimed he kept the weapons for his own protection and was going to send the package to his brother in Zimbabwe. He denied planning to sell them to colleagues in the security industry he had worked in for 10 years. He was sentenced at Guildford Crown Court after pleading guilty to attempting to procure prohibited weapons and possession of prohibited weapons. Michael Spong, prosecuting, told the court that customs officers in London seized the package sent to the defendant from America. He said: "The description of the contents of the package was somewhat straightforward and appeared to be legitimate, but when the package was examined it was found that in fact it contained three stun guns." As a result, at the end of September last year the police arrived in force at Robert Davey's home with a warrant to search his premises for prohibited weapons. "He immediately said: 'I know what this is about anyway, I know it's about the stun guns'." said Mr Spong. Davey confessed to the officers he had two other tazers and two cans of pepper spray, saying he bought them to send to his brother in Africa. In a police interview he said that he had bought the pepper spray for his own protection and thought that he could legally keep it. The court heard that the stun guns were 'non-fatal' but had two electric prongs that could be pressed against the body of an attacker causing temporary paralysis. Mr Spong added: "The defendant is a part-time doorman, and he was asked in interview whether he purchased these weapons with the view to circulating them among the door staff community. "He strenuously denied that and said they were bought for the protection of him and his family." Graham Smith, defending, said that father-of-two Davey no longer works in the security business. "He has got a shotgun certificate and two shotguns. They have been taken in the raid. "I suspect if these items were found in his car around the corner from a nightclub he was working in, then it would have a very different complexion. "It does not appear this is a man who had entered into some sort of enterprise to supply these. Interestingly, he has been working in the security industry for a good number of years and he tells me he has certainly got no convictions."