Sunderland Echo

Drugs gang members behind bars

- by Echo reporter echo.news@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @sunderland­echo

Three foot soldiers of a large-scale drugs gang have been jailed.

Kevin Liddle, 47, and Rikki Ward, 29, from Sunderland and Alan Walton, 50, from Blaydon, pleaded guilty to possessing a Class A drug with intent to supply.

Three men involved in a large-scale drugs network have been put behind bars.

Drugs bosses Tony Trott and Tony Ross sat at the top of a hierarchy which oversaw a large scale illegal supply operation and used multiple close contacts to facilitate their illegal activity.

Three of their foot soldiers were jailedyest­erday for their involvemen­t in the undergroun­d crime ring.

Alan Walton, 50, Kevin Liddle, 47, and Rikki Ward, 29, pleaded guilty to possessing a Class A drug with intent to supply and have all been given prison terms.

Cash handlers Harold Trott-Dixon, 63, Lisa Dixon, 42, and Dawn Spurs, 38, walked free despite their involvemen­t in the network.

The court heard the offences happened in 2016.

On November 3, 2016, police officers watched Ward, who was riding a blue scooter, exchange a carrier bag with Walton, who was parked in a Nissan Qashqai in a Washington car park.

After following Walton’s car, police officers stopped him and searched his vehicle. A solid white substance was found in a knotted carrier bag, which was later identified to be a quarter of a kilogram of cocaine at a high purity rate of 85 per cent, which according to prosecutio­n barrister Deborah Smithies could be sold for £28,000, the court heard.

Sentencing, Judge Robert Adams said: “On this day Rikki Ward was acting on behalf of Tony Trott and it (cocaine) was to be given to Alan Walton, who was working on behalf of Tony Ross.”

Walton, of Buttermere Crescent, Blaydon, was jailed for two years and six months. Ward, of Chatham Road, Sunderland, was jailed for three years and seven months.

This will run concurrent­ly alongside a separate 15-year custodial sentence for manslaught­er after he killed a man after putting a firework through his letterbox.

A 38-month prison sentence was also given to Liddle, of Thorpeness Road, Sunderland.

On November 28, 2016, Liddle had been stopped by police officers while travelling on the A19 in the Northaller­ton area.

Judge Adams said: “Police officers recovered just over a kilogram of cocaine.

“He was bringing this back from Liverpool on behalf of Tony Trott.”

Ms Smithies had told the court that this was 74% purity and was valued at about £100,000. After his arrest, Liddle’s home was searched, where police found half a million pounds worth of amphetamin­e in 13 blocks totalling 16.1 kilograms in a cardboard box behind a piano in his garage.

A small cannabis farm of nine plants was also discovered in an upstairs bedroom.

Trott-Dixon, Dixon and Spurs avoided going to prison because of the relatively minor roles they played in the operation.

Dawn Spurs counted and packaged £29,000 of cash for her partner, Tony Trott.

Spurs, of Ringwood Square, Sunderland, claims she believed the money was a result of car sales and did not know it had been acquired through illicit drug sales.

She pleaded guilty to charges of possession of criminal property and received a prison sentence of 16 weeks suspended for 12 months.

Harold Trott-Dixon, the uncle of Tony Trott, and his wife Lisa Dixon were attempting to transport the cash which Spurs had counted to an address in Liverpool and admitted possessing criminal property.

Ms Smithies told the court that Dixon, of Albert Place, Washington, was driving the car and Trott-Dixon was in the passenger seat.

Judge Adams said she had been “exploited and used as a driver to get to Liverpool” and issued her with a 12-month community order and 80 hours of unpaid work.

Trott-Dixon, was given a 45-week suspended sentence for five months.

 ??  ?? Main picture, Rikki Ward, top right, Kevin Liddle, and, bottom right, Alan Walton.
Main picture, Rikki Ward, top right, Kevin Liddle, and, bottom right, Alan Walton.

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