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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Andrew Nuttall & Abigail Nicholson

Mum, 44, to miss birth of her grandchild for playing role in drug gang

Members of a huge gang which transported heroin and crack cocaine between Liverpool and Wrexham were jailed for more than 46 years.

The Wrexham-based drug gang was blown apart after officers busted several doors and discovered the true scale of the operation. Seven of the 11 members found themselves before Mold Crown Court for sentencing on Thursday, May 5

This included Mehmet Ali Karadas, Julie Prile, Thomas Wright, Robert Reid, Cial Prandle, Jamie Wright and Kevin Roberts. Most were "trusted" with courier and dealer roles by the higher-up gang managers, NorthWalesLive reports.

READ MORE: Woman left dog to die in cage as she went on two week holiday

Simon Rogers, prosecuting, told the court how the 11-strong gang were operating a major drug supply chain over roughly a year. Their patch was predominantly in and around Wrexham, a place that the judge said was already "suffering greatly" from a drug problem.

The court heard the overall conspiracy took place for about a year - and during the height of the Covid-19 lockdown - between March 2020 and 2021. There was a haul of cocaine and heroin seized at some of the addresses raided by the police worth tens of thousands of pounds, however, the court heard how the true scale of the operation remains "incalculable".

Thomas Wright, of Fairfield Avenue, Huyton, was branded as the "upstream supplier" for head of the gang Levi Roberts. The 44-year-old - who sourced "kilos upon kilos" of hard drugs for the gang to shift in the Wrexham area - was jailed for 10 years.

His defence, Julian Nutter, claimed the "respectable" joiner was threatened into joining the trade. It was said he had been "forced" to work for criminals higher up the drugs supply chain.

Julie Prile, of Coed Efa in New Broughton, was responsible for ferrying shipments of cash between Wrexham, Liverpool and Northwich in Cheshire. The 44-year-old's phone revealed she had been involved in the conspiracy from the start and she hit her head on the dock as she found out she'd be jailed for five years.

The judge said it was "as staggering as it is sad" that having lost a brother to Class A drugs, she got involved in this trade. She will also miss out on the birth of her first grandchild later this year, according to her defence solicitor Debera White.

Kevin Roberts, Levi's uncle, played a significant role in the gang and was jailed for seven years and two months after he was caught in a van by the police stashing almost a kilo of heroin when travelling with his teenage son.

John Wyn Williams, his defending solicitor, said Roberts admits "drugs wreck lives". The court heard how the dad had "let things slip" during the pandemic.

Licensed cabbie Mehmet Ali Karadas, of Kingstown in Wrexham, was trusted as a courier and used his legitimate taxi business as a front. Karadas' part in the gang landed him behind bars for six years and six months and the court heard that, during his trial, the 47-year-old Turkish national had significant contact with the gang's head operator when actively involved in the supply and "would have known what he was doing".

The judge said that Robert Reid "foolishly" had a trial despite having been "well aware" on that one day he was involved in the conspiracy what the cash was he was transporting. Judge Parry said that, quite rightly, the jury rejected his "nonsense" excuses and sentenced him to six and a half years in jail.

Cial Prandle, of Overton Way in Acton Park, worked for the gang as a courier and was once caught with a bag of Class A drugs worth nearly £30k during the investigation. He ended up being jailed for six years and six months.

Andrew Green, responsible for defending Prandle, said his 29-year-old client "stupidly" got involved in this and that it shouldn't define him. He told the court how Wrexham man had previously, after leaving school, joined the army and conducted a tour of Afghanistan.

Jamie Wright, 23, of Hampden Way in Acrefair, was jailed him for four years and six months. He made one exchange for the gang but was "modestly paid" for doing so, the court heard. Simon Mintz, defending Wright, told the court how "reality has caught up" with his client. At the time of the conspiracy, he chose to "fleetingly" get involved in this plot without being aware of the "magnitude" of this enterprise.

Four more members of the gang are set to be sentenced later this month. This includes the gang leader Levi Roberts.

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