Five people have been jailed for their part in the supply of heroin and crack cocaine through Mid Wales – despite no illegal drugs being seized by police.

Dyfed-Powys Police’s specialist drugs investigation team was able to prove a county line was running between Wolverhampton and Aberystwyth thanks to in-depth analysis of data phone phoned used by an organised crime gang.

The investigation began in June 2020 when police were called to a disturbance at a flat in Aberystwyth and found two teenage boys, one of whom had been reported missing.

Members of a gang operating from the West Midlands had ‘cuckooed’ the address of local heroin user Glenn Williams. The two teenagers – Kyran Hill and Teejay Marks, both aged 16 at the time – were sent to live there, acting as ‘runners’ for gang members higher up the chain.

Detective Sergeant Steve Jones, of Ceredigion Priority Policing Team, said: “Cuckooing is a term used when drugs gangs take over the home of a vulnerable person to establish a base for dealing, storing or taking illegal drugs.

“In this instance, they had targeted Glenn Williams, convincing him to agree to letting them live at his home by offering heroin for his own use. In exchange, he was told to ‘keep them in’ and ‘keep them safe’ while they dealt drugs from his home.

“He told officers they would have drugs out on the table at his home – evidence gathered later corroborated this – and that they stayed until they ran out of drugs. During this time, they used him as a runner for deals arranged by their upstream controller.”

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When officers arrived at Williams’ flat on June 19, 2020, they found him on the street. He told police he had been "exploited", and that he wanted Hill and Marks out of his flat.

“Officers had spotted Williams the previous evening meeting with a man called Akeel Whistance,” DS Jones said.

“We believe he was spooked by our presence and reacted by throwing a package of drugs over a wall. When he returned to the flat empty handed, the others accused him of either smoking drugs worth £2,000 that night or hiding them somewhere for himself.

“It was this disturbance that led to us being called.”

When questioned by officers, Hill and Marks claimed to have been kidnapped and taken to Aberystwyth, however 51-year-old Williams’ account was that they had moved in to supply drugs.

Examinations of the teenagers’ phones showed the pair had travelled to Aberystwyth in the company of Kalvin Riley, aged 23, and Frank Keli, aged 26 on June 15, 2020.

During their journey, several short phone calls were made from one number to Williams and Marks, before a text message reading ‘Live best of both 24/7’ was sent to 15 different numbers in 58 seconds.

Further digital analysis proved Riley and Keli travelled back to Wolverhampton the following day, while Hills and Marks sent photos of cash and ziplock bags containing wraps of white and brown substances on Snapchat.

The words ‘intent to supply class A drugs’ were overlaid on one photo, and the pair could be seen and heard in videos counting cash and giggling. Further videos showing conversations between the pair and Williams relating to the supply of drugs were found on a phone belonging to Marks.

When officers examined Whistance’s phone, he was found to have facilitated the transfer of money earned through the supply of drugs back to the group and resupplied ‘runners’ with drugs.

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A drugs expert described the nature of messages found on the suspects’ phones as being ‘commonly encountered’ in drugs supply cases.

Through the use of data recovered from digital devices, along with associated call data, enough evidence was gathered to prove conspiracy to supply heroin and crack cocaine without the seizure of controlled drugs. All six members of the organised crime gang were charged and pleaded guilty to a number of drug-related offences.

They appeared at Swansea Crown Court between January 19 and February 28 this year.

County Times:

Kalvin Riley, of Millwalk Drive, Wolverhampton, must serve three years and three months in jail for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.

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Frank Keli, of Ashbourne Road, Wolverhampton, was sentenced to three years in prison for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.

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Akeel Whistance, of Llanfihangel-Y-Creuddyn, Ceredigion, was handed a two-and-a-half year prison sentence for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.

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Kyran Lee Hill, of Three Tuns Lane, Wolverhampton, was given a 12-month sentence to be served in a Youth Offenders’ Institute for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.

County Times:

Teejay Marks, of Hamilton Gardens, Wolverhampton, must also serve 12 months in a Youth Offenders’ Institute for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.

Glen Lewis Williams, of Brynrheidol, Aberystwyth, avoided being sent straight to prison after he was given an 18-month suspended sentence for conspiracy to supply ‘crack’ cocaine and heroin.