Daily Express

Gangs banned from meeting and parts of city in guns blitz

- By John Twomey

EIGHTEEN men from two notorious crime gangs have been banned from associatin­g with each other or participat­ing in music videos that promote gang-related violence after a landmark court ruling.

The action was taken against them after a spate of firearms offences that brought terror to the streets of Birmingham during the summer of 2015 and start of 2016.

Ten of the men are serving prison sentences, including Reial Phillips, 21, who was at the heart of a series of shootings in the city, which left eight people injured.

Bullets

The shootings were part of an ongoing feud between the Burger Boys Gang and the Johnson Crew, which escalated when members of the opposing factions uploaded rap videos online to taunt one another.

West Midlands Police and Birmingham City Council have now secured full injunction­s against the 18 men in what is believed to be the largest group gang injunction ever secured.

The men, who are aged between 19 and 29, are forbidden from associatin­g with each other and also from entering areas of Birmingham, including the city centre, Handsworth, Newtown, Winson Green and Lozells for the next two years.

Another condition of the injunction­s is that they are banned from participat­ing in music videos that promote gang-related violence. The injunction­s were granted after more than 80 witnesses gave evidence at Birmingham Crown Court and also allow police to restrict the vehicles and mobile phones they use.

Police and the council previously secured interim injunction­s following a spate of gun and drug-related crime in the city during 2015. The ban was welcomed by anti-gun campaigner Marcia Shakespear­e, whose 17-year-old daughter Letisha was shot dead in a drive-by shooting during a turf war between the two gangs.

Letisha a party with had been at friends when she and cousin Charlene Ellis, 18, were killed in a hail of machine gun bullets in the early hours of January 2, 2003.

Charlene’s twin sister Sophie and cousin Cheryl Shaw were also hit but survived.

Mrs Shakespear­e said: “It’s a big shock to still see so many young people involved in gangs. I see gangs as vermin in Birmingham and any means to help stop it spreading to vulnerable, naive and innocent young people is a positive way forward in our war on violent crime.”

Pain

“Violent crime has no winners. It just causes heartache, pain and has a life-changing impact on innocent victims and the perpetrato­rs’ families.”

The men are Naasir Francis, 19, from Nechells, Baboucar Huma, 19, from Handsworth, Akeen Ivy-Foster, 20, from Springhill, Ravelle Hutchinson, 20, from Winson Green, Tesfa Bernard-Wheeler, 21, from Hockley, Rayani Sutherland, 21, from Aston, Omarni Bernard-Sewell, 21, from Selly Oak, Lawrence Morgan, 21, from Nechells, Jerome Jones, 21, from Erdington, Jerome Christie, 21, from Nechells, Reial Phillips, 21, from Winson Green, Ushane Jeffers, 23, from Newtown, Kayne Robinson, 23, from Springhill, Ashai Grey, 23, from Walsall, Jacob Brown, 24, from Handsworth, Cash Wallace, 24, from Winson Green, Ishmail Lee, 29, from Wolverhamp­ton, and Isaac Duffus, 28, from Erdington.

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Ashai Grey
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Kayne Robinson
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Ushane Jeffers
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Lawrence Morgan
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Jerome Jones
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Jerome Christie

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