The National (Scotland)

Housing estate drugs empire gang jailed

‘Their grip on the community has been dismantled’

- BY GREGOR YOUNG

ORGANISED criminals who ran a drugs empire from a housing estate have been jailed after being intercepte­d by French authoritie­s.

Ringleader Lee Docherty, 37, his brother-in-law Ian Millar, 39, Brendan Gillan, 32, his father Daniel Gillan, 60, and Christophe­r McKellar, 44, traded in drugs worth hundreds of thousands of pounds, the High Court in Glasgow heard,

Between March and December 2020, the gang used a “heavily fortified” building on the Larkfield housing estate in Greenock, Inverclyde, to control the sale and supply of cocaine, heroin, cannabis and etizolam.

Prosecutor­s said the gang wreaked “disorder and disruption” in the local community.

The gang was caught when French authoritie­s intercepte­d encrypted messages on the EncroChat platform. All of them pleaded guilty in January.

The court heard one message referred to Valium pills with a street of value of more than £700,000.

A police raid in December 2020 yielded a drugs haul worth £150,000, as well as £12,775 in cash, at the Oxford Road property referred to as “the trap”, or “the shop”, the court was told.

Docherty, described in court as the gang’s principal member, was jailed for eight years when the gang was sentenced yesterday.

Millar and Daniel Gillan were both handed six-year sentences, while Brendan Gillan was jailed for six years and four months. McKellar, who was responsibl­e for moving the drugs, was sentenced to five years and four months.

Serious Crime Prevention Orders were also served on Docherty, Millar and Brendan Gillan, and all the gang members will face proceeds of crime confiscati­on hearings in future.

Sineidin Corrins, deputy procurator fiscal for specialist casework at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, said: “For years, the criminal activities of these individual­s have impacted the everyday lives of many ordinary people in the Larkfield area of Greenock through their significan­t involvemen­t in serious organised crime.

“They caused widespread disorder and disruption through the supply of drugs and their influence on young people.

“This extended to every facet of the community, from local people living in the area to those who ran shops or businesses.

“But now, thanks to the efforts of officers and prosecutor­s, their grip on the local community has been dismantled.

“The members of this community can now move forward safe in the knowledge that these five individual­s will spend a lengthy time in prison having now been brought to justice for these crimes.

“There are consequenc­es for this type of criminalit­y. We hope these conviction­s and the sentence send a strong message to others involved in this kind of criminal behaviour and demonstrat­es the ability of police and prosecutor­s to investigat­e, prepare and prosecute serious and organised crime of this nature.

“We continue to target all those who threaten communitie­s across Scotland, working as a key part of the Serious Organised Crime Taskforce to protect the people of Scotland.”

Detective Chief Inspector Robert Bowie, senior investigat­ing officer for the case, said: “These five men were a blight on the community of Greenock and the wider Inverclyde area.

“Their organised crime group was a significan­t factor in the trade of illegal drugs in the area, causing nothing but harm in pursuit of their own gain.

“Their activities were brought to light thanks to a protracted and complex investigat­ion led by the Serious and Organised Crime Team working in Renfrewshi­re and Inverclyde.

“Our officers, working with partners, worked tirelessly to expose the criminal activity of this group, ultimately leading to them facing justice.”

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