Greenock Telegraph

Inside Lee Docherty’s drugs ‘empire’

THE Greenock Telegraph today lifts the lid on the inner workings of Larkfield druglord Lee Docherty’s serious organised crime gang. reports.

- ROSS HANVIDGE

AS Docherty and his cohorts begin prison sentences totalling more than 31 years, we can also reveal how a supposedly secure mobile phone network they used to orchestrat­e the flooding of Inverclyde with heroin and cocaine was smashed — in France.

Messages sent via the private EncroChat platform provide a flavour of the communicat­ion between members of the organised crime group (OCG) at the height of their major traffickin­g operation in 2020.

EncroChat was seen as a bespoke, safe and secret messaging service used across the UK and internatio­nally. Advertisem­ents were not found on the websites or in the shops of convention­al mobile phone suppliers.

Its servers were hosted by a legitimate company based in France - and it was the French authoritie­s that instigated the collapse of the platform in a joint investigat­ion with Dutch law enforcemen­t, known as Operation Emma.

Each device, costing between £1,200 and £1,500 for a six-month contract, was assigned one unique identifier, known as a handle. Lee Docherty used ‘renegadeba­ll’ and ‘goldenshar­k’, Ian Millar used ‘sarcasticf­lamingo’, Brendan Gillan used ‘unrealegg’, Daniel Gillan used ‘warmhail’ and Christophe­r McKellar used ‘mrrr-celtic’.

Another handle, ‘mrr-goldentrap­per’, was used by several different people and was permanentl­y located within the flats on Oxford Road, commonly referred to as the ‘shop’ or the ‘trap’.

The ‘shop’

It was the OCG’s centre of operations.

It was where customers attended to purchase controlled drugs. The property was well protected, with heavy metal doors.

The OCG had access to flats on the first and second floors of the Oxford Road building, affording it a surroundin­g view. In addition, CCTV monitors were installed at the ‘shop’, allowing the gang to monitor arrivals and police presence.

The EncroChat device with the handle ‘mrr-goldentrap­per’ was used, among other things, to alert members of the OCG and others to police presence.

Users were able to set ‘burn times’ for the messages they sent and received on the devices, with the default being seven days, while the entire content of the devices could also be deleted by the user entering a ‘panic wipe’ password.

Almost exactly four years ago, on

April Fool’s Day of 2020, French law enforcemen­t installed a data collection mechanism on all EncroChat devices worldwide giving them the capability to download material from any user, including details, usernames, passwords, stored chat messages, geolocatio­n data, images and notes.

Data related to EncroChat devices which pinged in Scotland was ultimately shared with Police Scotland and reviewed.

The Greenock gang used various different sites to store controlled drugs such as cocaine, heroin, cannabis and etizolam.

The messages recovered show communicat­ion, in a mixture of coded and normal speech, related to the sale and supply of controlled drugs on almost every day for the period from March 26 to June 13, 2020 (80 days), during the first Covid lockdown.

Total control

Each gang member was, albeit to differing degrees, actively involved in the OCG’s operation.

Advocate depute Alexander Sutherland told a High Court hearing that they were ‘involved in the drugs trade for profit’, while ringleader Docherty referred to it as ‘a business’.

Docherty, described as the principal member of the group, is said to have been an ‘establishe­d presence’ in the local community with a ‘large network of associates’.

The advocate depute told the hearing in February that Docherty was ‘in total control’ of the sale and supply of class A drugs within the Larkfield estate and more widely in Greenock.

It was said that the other gang members ‘answer to him’, while Millar was one of his ‘most trusted colleagues’.

Money, money, money

Twenty-three updates provided by money-man Brendan Gillan - who referred to himself as ‘fronting a drugs empire’ - over 76 days between March and June 2020, revealed a huge haul of cash taken in by the gang.

In another message on April 8, 2020,

Docherty confirmed to Brendan Gillan that £170,000 would be moved to a ‘safe house’.

Daniel Gillan provided advice on how to run the OCG, especially how to conduct business and control the activities of its lower-ranking members.

On two occasions, he made arrangemen­ts for deals with someone from Alloa, pointing to the group’s connection­s with the wider Scottish drug trade.

McKellar, who had a lesser involvemen­t in the day-to-day operation, arranged for the purchase and collection of drugs for Docherty. Indeed, on one occasion, he sorted the pick-up of half-a-million pills, while he also managed assignment­s of ‘tops’ - cocaine of relatively high purity.

Busted

EncroChat messages recovered provided intelligen­ce which led to Police Scotland seeking warrants to search various addresses in the Inverclyde area, including on Oxford Road.

Following a search of one property on December 15, 2020, cocaine, diamorphin­e, cannabis and etizolam were found, as well as £12,775.50 in cash.

Approximat­ely 1,752.1 grams of cocaine was recovered, with a value of around £113,700; 1,054.11 grams of diamorphin­e worth £19,550; 1,372.91 grams of cannabis with a maximum potential value of £10,787.15; plus 4,106 etizolam tablets with a maximum potential value of £2,050. The drugs haul totalled £146k.

The quantity of drugs recovered was deemed ‘excessive for personal use’ and Crown proceeding­s against the accused started in July 2021 at Greenock Sheriff Court.

After guilty pleas were confirmed earlier this year, the quintet were jailed for a total of 31 years and eight months.

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