The Scotsman

Scotland faces new ‘growing threat’ from organised crime gangs

Police are investigat­ing 164 known groups with 3,282 members

- By LAURA PATERSON

The threat posed by criminal gangs in Scotland is increasing, according to a new report.

A National Crime Agency (NCA) assessment of the extent of organised crime in Scotland, written in associatio­n with Police Scotland, found the number of groups is falling but the threat they pose is rising.

Police are investigat­ing 164 known organised crime groups (OCGS) in Scotland comprising 3,282 members, the report states.

The increasing risk posed is partially blamed on “ongoing feuds, violence and firearms incidents” relating to Central Belt crime gangs and police warn that despite recent firearms seizures these groups still have ready access to such weapons and some are prepared to use them in public.

The shooting of Euan Johnston as he waited in his car at traffic lights in Glasgow was said to have sparked “numerous reported and unreported acts of further violence”.

The 26-year-old was gunned down in the city’s Tradeston area in November 2016, the only shooting murder in police records for 2016/17.

Last week, David Scott, 33, was jailed for a minimum of 22 years after being found guilty of his murder.

Judge Lady Stacey told him: “The attack was a premeditat­ed, murderous assault involving the use of a lethal weapon. It can be correctly described as an execution. “It was carried out in a public street.” The NCA report states: “There is a current threat and harm presented by feuds and rivalries between six main OCGS operating in the east and west of Scotland.

“The situation escalated in late 2016 resulting in the shooting and murder of an individual connected to OCGS.

“This then led to numerous reported and unreported acts of further violence. The risk is heightened by access to firearms, including automatic weapons.

“A number of the attacks have been carried out in public places.

“Despite recent firearms seizures, it is assessed that the OCGS continue to have ready access to firearms that

some may be willing to use within public places.”

The strategic assessment of serious and organised crime for 2018 states two-thirds of organised crime gangs in Scotland are involved in drug traffickin­g, with Spain, followed by Holland and China, the main non-uk supply areas for illegal drugs heading to Scotland.

Liverpool is said to be the primary source of drugs supply to Scotland with “significan­t connection­s” between criminal gangs in the two areas.

Earlier this year an organised crime gang has been jailed for a total of 87 years after a police probe into violence, drugs and firearms offences.

The nine-man gang included cocaine dealer Mark Richardson and soldier turned gun-runner Martyn Fitzsimmon­s.

The police investigat­ion into the gang uncovered what was described as “a sophistica­ted web” of offences, which included the “merciless” torture of a man over an unpaid cocaine debt and a huge arsenal of weapons found hidden in a car.

The crimes spanned the years between 2013-17.

Prosecutor Alex Prentice QC told a hearing in December that the crime gang was “the most sophistica­ted encountere­d by Police Scotland”.

Police Scotland said the gang “were responsibl­e for bringing fear and misery to communitie­s across Scotland”.

Crime gangs are also involved in human traffickin­g across Scotland, with sex traffickin­g said to mainly involve adult women from Romania or Slovakia being exploited by perpetrato­rs from these same countries.

Perpetrato­rs and victims of people traffickin­g for slave labour in Scotland also tend to share a country of origin, the report states, including Latvia, Vietnam and China.

The report indicates abuse of the Common Travel Area between loch ryan and cairn ryan ports in Dumfries and Galloway, with commercial ships said to have been used in relation to human traffickin­g, immigratio­n abuse and “potential extremist travel”.

Roll on/roll off freight ships are said to have been used to enable illegal immigrants and Class A drugs to get into Scotland.

“[The gang] were responsibl­e for bringing fear and misery to communitie­s across Scotland”

POLICE SCOTLAND

 ??  ?? 0 The Richardson cocaine gang, including gun-runner Martyn Fitzsimmon­s, bottom left, were jailed for a total of 87 years
0 The Richardson cocaine gang, including gun-runner Martyn Fitzsimmon­s, bottom left, were jailed for a total of 87 years
 ??  ?? 0 Shot: Euan Johnston
0 Jailed: David Scott
0 Shot: Euan Johnston 0 Jailed: David Scott
 ??  ??

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