Daily Mail

THE FACEBOOK DRUG DEALERS

Exposed: Cannabis peddled to children on social media

- By Ben Wilkinson and Tom Kelly

DRUG dealers are openly using Facebook to target children, a Daily Mail investigat­ion reveals.

scores of criminals are freely touting for business on the site and other social media giants including Instagram and Twitter.

Many are offering cannabis for sale. one dealer, when contacted, offered to sell cocaine. A reporter posing as a teenage boy found dealers on Facebook willing to supply him with drugs even when they knew he was still at school.

on Instagram, the picture sharing site owned by Facebook, an account with more than 22,000 followers appeared to be dedicated to verifying genuine cannabis dealers in the UK.

Last night, the social media sites were accused of failing to shut down ‘blatant’ law-breaking and of ‘aiding and abetting’ the sale of drugs. They have already come under fire for their alleged failure to restrict terrorist material or launch crackdowns on the activities of child abusers.

MPs and campaigner­s yesterday called for internet giants to face tougher sanctions over the continued failure to root out criminal activity. Home office minister

Victoria Atkins said: ‘We want the UK to be the safest place in the world to be online. Anything that is illegal offline should be illegal online. We encourage people to report [anything] concerning to the police as well as ... report such images to the app providers themselves.’

The Mail’s investigat­ion followed a report earlier this month that warned that children as young as 13 were using social media to buy drugs online.

The report, from the charity Young Addaction, said dealers were using hashtags and emojis to advertise their wares, with a big rise in the trend in the last 18 months.

Now our inquiries have found evidence of the alarming scale of drugs being advertised on sites that are hugely popular with youngsters. Our reporter was able to find drugs offered for sale on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter within five minutes.

The sites were found to host thousands of posts and accounts linked to dealers and abusers. Pushers use emoji codes and hashtags – including #weed4sale – to attract buyers. They use photograph­y via Instagram to flaunt their stock and direct customers to their account on encrypted messenger app Wickr. Illegal deals are then arranged on the free app without fear of police accessing the messages.

Cannabis dealers provided a menu of both home-grown and imported marijuana in stock. Posing as a schoolboy, our reporter contacted two Facebook pages pedalling drugs online, and both immediatel­y agreed to sell. One page, which the Mail has chosen

‘It is just so blatant’

not to name, featured pictures of bags of drugs. Minutes after a sending a message, a man called back using the alias of a Tottenham footballer offering two grams of ‘banging Charlie’ [slang for cocaine] for £120 or some ‘great weed’.

He was unconcerne­d at being told the would-be buyer was still at school.

Another Facebook page provided a price list featuring an array of cannabis products costing from £100 to £350. One of its sister sites was shut down last week after the Mail got in contact. But yesterday afternoon there were at least four other sites advertisin­g drugs with the same contact details.

Drugs are also offered on Instagram. One dealer posted a photograph of two large bags of cannabis on Instagram, urging potential customers: ‘Don’t miss out.’

Other boasts included ‘we provide the most official delivery service’ and ‘get it delivered the next day’.

Punters are even offered a menu of different types of powerful cannabis with names including ‘alien glue’. A pusher from the US advertisin­g on Twitter offered 150 ecstasy tablets – a Class A drug – for £1,630 via the Wickr messaging service.

It is illegal to possess Class B cannabis in the UK and those caught dealing it face up to 14 years in prison. But youth drug worker Nick Hickmott, of charity Young Addaction, said drug dealing online was increasing and internet firms were ‘turning a blind eye’. He said Instagram was the ‘preferred choice’ among cannabis dealers, adding: ‘It is just so blatant.

‘It is unbelievab­le that it is allowed to operate like that. They are the only ones that have the power to police it. If these big multimedia companies wanted to do something about it they could.’

Mr Hickmott claimed that the picture sharing apps Instagram and Snapchat tended to be the platforms most used for dealing. The Mail’s investigat­ion now proves reports that dealers were sharing images of the drugs before providing alternativ­e contact details.

David Green, of the Citivas think-tank, said social media firms could find themselves criminally responsibl­e if they did not do enough to stop blatant criminalit­y.

He said: ‘It is another example of an organisati­on that claims to be nothing more than a platform that in this case is aiding and abetting the sale of illegal substances.’ Labour MP Helen Goodman, a former shadow culture minister, last night said: ‘This is yet another example of social media firms denying the power and influence they have and failing to act as responsibl­e citizens. It will reach the point with these social media companies where there are so many problems that the Government must ... start looking at both legal changes and proper enforcemen­t.’

Earlier this month, the Informatio­n Commission­ers’ Office warned Facebook, Twitter and Snapchat to tighten up age controls after it emerged the sites admitted millions of under-13s. Last night, a Facebook spokesman said: ‘We are grateful to the Daily Mail for alerting us to this illegal content which is not allowed on Facebook and has now been removed. We encourage our community to report any activity like this using our reporting tools so we can quickly remove it.

‘We recently announced we’ll be doubling our security team to 20,000 people over the next year to improve how we detect and remove content that shouldn’t be on Facebook.’ Instagram said it encouraged users to report illegal activity. Twitter said all users must agree not to use the site for unlawful purposes. A spokesman said account holders were not allowed to use it for ‘any unlawful purposes’.

He added: ‘By using Twitter, you agree to comply with all applicable laws governing your online conduct and content.’

n Internet giants such as Google and Facebook are failing in their ‘social responsibi­lity’ to tackle online child sex abuse, a police chief said yesterday. Lynne Owens, director general of the National Crime Agency, said tech firms should help fund police investigat­ions to help deal with the growing problem.

She accused the internet firms of being ‘passive’ and failing to pass on intelligen­ce about the criminals who use their sites to groom, abuse and blackmail children.

Mrs Owens said the companies must be ‘more proactive’ in pursuing paedophile­s and other sex offenders. ‘I don’t think they yet see their social responsibi­lity to be more proactive in identifyin­g child sex abuse,’ she told The Sunday Times.

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