Greenock Telegraph

‘Supermarke­t’ drug gang

- Ross Hanvidge ross.hanvidge@newsquest.co.uk

DRUGLORD Lee Docherty and his criminal cohort jailed for a total of more than 31 years yesterday ran a Greenock narcotics empire like a ‘supermarke­t’, a High Court judge has declared.

Lord Mulholland described the gang of five — who flooded Inverclyde with heroin and cocaine from a heavily fortified Larkfield base known as ‘the shop’ — as a ‘sophistica­ted’ organised crime group.

Kingpin Docherty, 37, his brother-in-law Ian Millar, 39, accomplice Brendan Gillan, 32, Gillan’s father Daniel, 60, and associate Christophe­r McKellar, 44, were each given lengthy prison sentences at the High Court in Glasgow.

The quintet had pleaded guilty to orchestrat­ing the lucrative criminal enterprise which raked in hundreds of thousands of pounds through the production and supply of class A, B and C narcotics.

Lord Mulholland told the gang: “You ran it as a drugs supermarke­t and kept a warehouse to house the drugs.

“One involved said it was a drugs empire and another said it was a business.”

“You used Encrochat phones to communicat­e with each other and had CCTV to see who was coming to the premises and metal doors to stop people entering the property.

“Recovery of the drugs and money shows the extent of the drugs traffickin­g operation ran by you all.”

The gang counted daily takings of between £5,000 and £10,000 selling cocaine, heroin, cannabis and ‘street valium’ etizolam pills from their Larkfield ‘shop’.

Over a two-month period between April and June 2020, they took in more than £130,000 from peddling to users in Greenock and the surroundin­g areas.

Docherty, who led the business that was launched at the height of the first Covid lockdown four years ago, has been locked up for eight years, while Millar will be behind bars for six years.

Brendan Gillan has also been imprisoned for six years, while his dad Daniel Gillan received six years and four months, and Christophe­r McKellar has been jailed for five years and four months.

Sentencing had been postponed in February while outstandin­g crime prevention orders — to impose binding conditions on

individual­s aimed at stopping further offending — were prepared for three of the cohort.

The money and drugs

recovered from a police raid amounted to £146,000 worth of narcotics and almost £13,000 in cash.

The Telegraph told pre

viously how the gang was smashed by authoritie­s during a Europe-wide probe into the EncroChat encrypted messaging service commonly used by criminals.

Advocate depute Alexander Sutherland said Docherty was the ‘principal of the OCG (organised crime group) orchestrat­ed by him’.

Second-in-command Millar was one of his most trusted associates, while Brendan Gillan collected and counted cash and referred to himself as ‘fronting a drugs empire’.

Daniel Gillan was said to have provided advice on how to run the day-today operation and often sampled the freshly-made drugs before offering ‘feedback on its quality and where improvemen­ts were needed’.

McKellar, 44, from Glasgow, was said to have had a lesser involvemen­t in the scheme but still regularly arranged pick-ups of hundreds of thousands of pills and other drugs for delivery to Larkfield and elsewhere.

Anthony Graham KC said that Docherty’s life had been ‘peppered with

continuous contact with the drugs environmen­t’, and he had contacts with people in the drugs trade ‘because he was a user’.

Mr Graham told the court that Docherty had had ‘a period of reflection as to his involvemen­t and the consequenc­es of that on his nearest and dearest and others in society’.

Millar was described as ‘far from a stupid individual’, while Gillan snr was said to be ‘an intelligen­t man’ who studied accountanc­y and business law at Strathclyd­e University before ‘things went off the rails’ in the late 1980s when he began taking drugs.

Thomas Ross KC, representi­ng first offender Gillan jnr, said his client was ‘vulnerable to temptation’ after losing his job and ‘made the wrong decision’ to become involved.

Meanwhile, a solicitor for McKellar - who admitted to assisting with the couriering of pills and powder between March and June 2020 - claimed that he has been ‘at pains to try and distinguis­h his involvemen­t from others on the indictment’.

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 ?? ?? Jailed Pictured from left are Brendan Gillan, Christophe­r McKellar, and Daniel Gillan. Pictures: Police Scotland
Jailed Pictured from left are Brendan Gillan, Christophe­r McKellar, and Daniel Gillan. Pictures: Police Scotland

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