Birmingham Post

Internatio­nal drug gang kingpin gets 19 years

Gangster known as ‘Bomber’ lived in fortified Midland mansion

- Ellie Kemp Staff Reporter

AN internatio­nal crime organisati­on kingpin living in a fortified Midland mansion has been jailed.

Irish national Thomas ‘Bomber’ Kavanagh, 54, was a high-ranking member of the Kinahan organised crime group – a Irish network involved in drugs supply, firearms and money laundering.

The gang orchestrat­ed the importatio­n of multi-million pound drug shipments.

Kavanagh lived with his family in a fortified mansion, complete with reinforced doors and bulletproo­f glass, in Tamworth, Staffordsh­ire, from where he ran his criminal empire.

When the National Crime Agency (NCA) raided the property in January 2019, officers found numerous weapons, including an illegal stun gun for which he was eventually given a three-year jail sentence. Officers also seized cash worth around £35,000.

The raid was part of a wider investigat­ion to dismantle his drugs empire, with NCA officers also targeting his associates – Dublin-born brothers-in-law Gary Vickery, 39, and Daniel Canning, 43.

NCA investigat­ors were able to evidence their involvemen­t in large scale drug shipments worth around £30million at UK street value, as well as movements of cash and firearms.

Kavanagh, Canning and Vickery all admitted conspiring to import class A and B drugs, and money laundering, while Canning also admitted possessing a firearm and ammunition.

At Ipswich Crown Court on Monday, Kavanagh was sentenced to 21 years in prison, Canning was jailed for 19 and a half years, and Vickery got a 20-year sentence.

NCA Deputy Director of Investigat­ions Matt Horne said: “Kavanagh was a high ranking member of the Kinahan cartel, an organised crime group synonymous with acts of violence. He was their main man in the UK.

“Through their criminal connection­s overseas, his organisati­on was able to organise, import and distribute drugs worth many millions of pounds.

“These men considered themselves to be untouchabl­e, but we were able to systematic­ally dismantle the group and prove that this was not the case.”

The NCA’s investigat­ion into Kavanagh’s network began in early 2016.

In January 2017, Irish police linked a number of seizures of drugs and weapons to Midlands-based freight and logistics firms linked to Canning, Vickery and a third Irish man named Martin Byrne.

Vickery, Canning and Byrne were all arrested by the NCA in October

2017 following the seizure of 15 kilos of cocaine and more than 220 kilos of cannabis, found inside a six-tonne industrial tarmac removal machine at Dover.

The drugs had been hidden inside the machine, which had a tracking device fitted and was due to be delivered to an industrial unit in Wolverhamp­ton.

This led NCA officers to raid two industrial units linked to the gang, one in Wolverhamp­ton and one in Wednesbury.

An industrial transforme­r with traces of cocaine inside and a black

holdall containing a handgun and ammunition were found in the latter location.

Byrne’s DNA was found on the gun, and his fingerprin­ts on the bag. Kavanagh was arrested at Birmingham Airport as he returned to the UK on January 12, 2019. Communicat­ions between the group revealed they had been involved in at least four more drug importatio­ns prior to the Dover seizure in October 2017, bringing the estimated street value of cocaine importatio­ns by the group up to £23.4million.

Cannabis importatio­ns over the same period are estimated to have been worth around £6.4million.

The trio pleaded guilty to the offences they were charged with in July 2020, though legal arguments, the coronaviru­s pandemic and Vickery’s extraditio­n from Lanzarote delayed their eventual sentencing. Martin Byrne died of cancer in August 2018 before he could be charged.

Kate Anderson, Deputy Chief Crown Prosecutor of the CPS Internatio­nal Justice and Organised Crime Division, said: “This organised crime group imported millions of pounds worth of dangerous drugs into the country, concealing them in machinery in a bid to evade detection.

“They showed no regard for the communitie­s they were putting at risk and pleaded guilty in the face of overwhelmi­ng evidence showing their part in this illicit operation. Cases like this demonstrat­e our commitment to disrupting organised criminal activity – and ensuring they face justice.”

 ?? ?? Thomas Kavanagh who was jailed over the drug smuggling operation
Thomas Kavanagh who was jailed over the drug smuggling operation
 ?? ?? > Kavanagh’s Tamworth mansion has bulletproo­f glass
> Kavanagh’s Tamworth mansion has bulletproo­f glass
 ?? ?? > Drugs found inside a tarmac-removing machine
> Drugs found inside a tarmac-removing machine
 ?? ?? > Daniel Canning
> Daniel Canning
 ?? ?? > Gary Vickery
> Gary Vickery
 ?? ?? >
>

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