Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chronicle Live
Chronicle Live
National
Rob Kennedy

Latex glove-wearing South Shields driver handed £210,000 cash to £17m drugs gang member

A driver who handed over £210,630 in cash to a member of a £17m drugs gang while wearing latex gloves has been spared jail.

Police had the gang under surveillance when they spotted John Purvis turn up in an Audi and pass a mutli-coloured package to a passenger in a Fiat van.

Newcastle Crown Court heard the vehicle and its occupants were being tailed by undercover police investigating a large drugs network that imported class A drugs from abroad, via Liverpool to be distributed across the North East from Teesside.

Prosecutor Jessica Slaughter told the court it was in September 2016 the van was seen parked at shops on Prince Edward Road in South Shields and Purvis drove past in his Audi.

About an hour later, the van stopped at the same shops and the 31-year-old drove past again, giving a "thumbs up" to the occupants.

Miss Slaughter said: "Police noticed he was wearing latex gloves. 

"Both the defendant's Audi and the van left in convoy and the defendant took the lead.

"They came to a stop at a secluded location.

"Police observed the defendant pass a multi-coloured bag for life to the passenger."

The court heard when the van was driven away from South Shields it made another stop in Washington before being pulled over by police at Wetherby.

Miss Slaughter added: "Inside that bag for life was a large quantity of cash, £210,630."

When the home of the van's occupants was searched police found drugs worth £650,000.

Miss Slaughter said there was no evidence to link Purvis to the drugs or any of the other conspirators.

Purvis was arrested in December 2018, after the drugs gang had been convicted and sentenced to "very long" prison sentences.

The court heard when police went to his home at The Crescent, South Shields, officers found two separate bedrooms had been equipped with three large tents being used to grow cannabis plants. 

Purvis told police had had handed over the carrier bag of cash without knowing what it contained, in exchange for £100 after a chance meeting with an old workmate.

Prosecutors accepted the cannabis growing at his home was for personal use. 

Purvis pleaded guilty to transferring criminal property and cannabis production.

Judge Robert Adams said Purvis's role in the conspiracy case was "very different" to the others and told him: "There is no evidence to link you to the drugs themselves.

"There is no evidence of telephone contact between you and the people to whom you were dropping off the money.

"There is no suggestion you had any more extensive involvement." 

Judge Adams sentenced Purvis to 12 months imprisonment, suspended for 18 months, with a two month night-time curfew and programme requirements.

The judge added: "Strangely, you were seen to be wearing latex gloves at the time, perhaps suggesting you had some idea of what was contained in the package."

The court heard Purvis handed in references to his ordinarily good character, has been assessed as a "low risk" and "naive".

Paul Reid, defending, said: "He has never been in trouble before and is never going to be in trouble again."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.