Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

City drug-dealer jailed after police probe into online crime network

- BY CIARAN SHANKS

A DRUG-DEALING joiner from Dundee, snared by a crackdown on an encrypted criminal network, has been jailed for eight years for his involvemen­t in serious organised crime.

Aaron Bradford was found guilty of running a major drugs operation from his city home.

Disguising himself as “Elpazzo”, Bradford used the secretive EncroChat network to discuss his illicit activities.

Police raided the property he rented on Strachan Avenue in 2020 as part of Operation Venetic – a Europe-wide crackdown on EncroChat.

He is the first person in Scotland to be convicted after trial as a result of the operation.

No drugs or significan­t amounts of cash were found but officers seized a samurai sword, tick-lists, a Land Rover Discovery and a hydraulic press, as well as blenders which contained traces of cocaine.

The court heard messages from “Elpazzo” – identified as Bradford through vet and taxi booking records – discussed the supply of drugs, including cocaine, amphetamin­e and cannabis between March and June 2020.

In one conversati­on, he forwarded on a picture of cocaine while another conversati­on centred on how one drug deal had earned him £17,000.

At the High Court in Dundee, Bradford, 35, had tried to incriminat­e Perth plumber David Keen, 40, who denied being a drugs courier.

Bradford, a prisoner of HMP Perth, was found guilty of being involved in serious organised crime at his home on Strachan Avenue between March 31 and June 15 2020 by agreeing with unknown people to use encrypted devices to communicat­e about obtaining and supplying drugs.

He concerned himself in the purchase and onward supply of cocaine, amphetamin­e and cannabis.

Bradford arranged for the collection and proceeds of the drugs.

A jury convicted him of a second charge of being concerned in

the supply of cocaine during the same period, aggravated by its links to serious organised crime.

Bradford appeared via video link at the High Court in Aberdeen yesterday and was sentenced to a total of eight years behind bars by Judge Andrew Miller.

The judge said: “It is clear from the evidence led at your trial that, during the period covered by these charges, you played a leading, or at least significan­t, role in an operation to supply controlled drugs, particular­ly cocaine, in the Dundee area.

“The jury were satisfied that you personally exchanged encrypted messages, via the EncroChat platform, with other users of that platform, relating to the purchase by you of kilo quantities of cocaine, together with adulterant­s used to increase the bulk and volume of cocaine prior to its onward supply, and relating to the purchase by you of significan­t quantities of other controlled drugs, specifical­ly amphetamin­e and edible

products containing cannabis, for onward supply

“Further messages which you exchanged with other EncroChat users related to arrangemen­ts for the transporta­tion of controlled drugs to you for onward supply, the process of adulterati­ng cocaine for onward supply, the use of packaging designed to evade the detection of cocaine by the police during transporta­tion, the collection of drug debts owed to you and the sending by you of large quantities of cash to another EncroChat user in payment for controlled drugs supplied to you.”

He went on: “The jury were satisfied that you were personally and knowingly involved in an operation based at your home address to supply cocaine.

“These are very serious offences because of the harm which the supply of controlled drugs, particular­ly class-A drugs such as cocaine, causes to individual­s, families and communitie­s.”

A proceeds of crime action has been initiated.

Sineidin Corrins, deputy procurator fiscal, specialist casework at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS), said: “This was a co-ordinated effort to release a sizeable quantity of drugs into

Dundee.

“But now, thanks to the efforts of Police Scotland and COPFS, this individual faces a lengthy prison sentence.”

In July 2020, the National Crime Agency (NCA) announced Operation Venetic had brought down “entire organised crime groups… with 746 arrests and £54m criminal cash, 77 firearms and over two tonnes of drugs seized so far.”

It said encrypted instant messaging service EncroChat’s “sole use was for co-ordinating and planning the distributi­on of illicit commoditie­s, money laundering and plotting to kill rival criminals”.

It had 60,000 users worldwide and around 10,000 users in the UK, whose EnroChatsp­ecific burner phones could be monitored after the encryption was broken.

The authoritie­s were, themselves, rumbled in June 2020.

The NCA said: “EncroChat realised the platform had been penetrated and sent a message to its users urging them to throw away their handsets. The phones – which have pre-loaded apps for instant messaging, the ability to make VOIP calls and a kill code which wipes them remotely – have no other convention­al smart phone functional­ity and cost around £1,500 for a sixmonth contract.”

The company, which operated from outside the UK, has since closed.

‘Sole use’ of the EncroChat service was for crime.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Money and a cannabis Wonka bar which were linked to the drugs network investigat­ion.
Money and a cannabis Wonka bar which were linked to the drugs network investigat­ion.
 ?? ?? CAUGHT OUT: Aaron Bradford used the codename ‘Elpazzo’.
CAUGHT OUT: Aaron Bradford used the codename ‘Elpazzo’.

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