Daily Mail

Pharmacist’s son sold drug dealers pills worth £2m

- By Glen Keogh

A PHARMACY worker who sold prescripti­on medication worth more than £2million to drug dealers was yesterday jailed for six years.

David Ihenagwa, 40, used his position as a medicines purchaser at his mother’s ‘respected’ high street pharmacy to buy more than 1.65 million highly- addictive Class B and Class C pills.

His buyers collected the painkiller­s and sleeping pills by the van-load and paid in cash.

Married father-of-three Ihenagwa was described as the ‘ lynchpin’ of an operation exploiting a trend among young people to dabble in prescripti­on-only medication.

His conviction is the first following a crackdown by the Government’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency [MHRA].

In 2018 the Daily Mail told how pharmacist­s and wholesaler­s were working with criminal gangs to sell dangerous drugs to youngsters. Last year, this newspaper revealed that 50 pharmacies across Britain were under investigat­ion and 86 people, including 14 pharmacist­s, had been arrested. Croydon

Lynchpin: David Ihenagwa Crown Court heard yesterday how Ihenagwa purchased pills to sell to a mystery third party who picked them from Norlington Chemist in east London.

Over eight months to April 2016, Ihenagwa, of Edmonton, north London, bought 356,000 Class B codeine phosphate tablets and at least 1.3 million Class C tablets including tramadol, diazepam, sleeping drug zopiclone and lorazepam.

All of the drugs are highly addictive, yet are sold on the streets or online for as little as £1 per pill. Users suffer horrific withdrawal symptoms, including insomnia, tremors, vomiting and suicidal thoughts.

Ihenagwa’s criminalit­y was exposed when an MHRA raid on an address in Stoke-on-Trent discovered 13,000 pills in a box with his pharmacy’s details.

Ihenagwa claimed that he had been approached by an unnamed ‘third party’, who said they needed to buy medication for troops in Africa and Iran.

He said he believed the buyers were ‘bona fide’, but there is no paper trail and Ihenagwa has declined to identify them.

Ihenagwa claimed he only sold drugs worth £70,000 and made a 20 per cent profit. But the MHRA valued the street value of the drugs at £2.2million.

Defending Ihenagwa, John Benson QC said: ‘This was a very unsophisti­cated way of going about what was unquestion­ably illegal activity.’

Ihenagwa admitted one count of supplying a Class B drug and four of supplying Class C controlled drugs.

Sentencing him to six years in prison Judge Daniel Flahive said: ‘You were the lynchpin, the conduit, without whom the drugs would not have ended up in the hands of those who were not authorised to have them.’

The MHRA said: ‘Those who sell medicines illegally are exploiting vulnerable people and have no regard for their health.’

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