Rochdale Observer

Cops seize ‘dirty cash’ and drugs

- BY JOHN SCHEERHOUT

POLICE investigat­ing a drugs gang have seized cannabis, cocaine and £20,000 during a series of raids.

Tactical Aid Unit cops smashed down doors at homes and ‘stash houses’ across Rochdale and Lancashire this morning.

Eight suspected gang members were arrested and are being questioned over what police have described as a ‘large-scale drugs conspiracy’.

They were held in police custody.

It follows a series of strikes led by the Serious Organised Crime Group of Greater Manchester Police which executed eleven warrants at addresses across Rochdale and Lancashire.

As well as raiding homes, several warrants were executed at premises suspected to be ‘stash houses’ for the gang. A search of these uncovered several mobile phones, quantities of cocaine, and cannabis plants, according to GMP. An estimated £20,000 in suspected ‘dirty cash’ was also seized.

Eight people, aged between 27 and 56, have been arrested on conspiracy to supply drugs. The raids are the latest resulting from a rich mine of data hacked by law enforcemen­t from servers in northern France which serviced the Encrochat encrypted communicat­ions platform, dubbed Whatsapp for criminals.

Police forces across the UK have been trawling through reams of incriminat­ing messages to help smash major gangs.

Greater Manchester Police says so far it has resulted in jail sentences topping 1,000 years and its operations were ‘undoubtedl­y saving countless lives as a result of huge hauls of drugs and firearms’.

Following the latest raids, Detective Sergeant Rich Mccorry, of the Serious Organised Crime Group, said: “The ability for criminals to benefit from the proceeds of drugs is a key driver for organised crime, and we have specialist detectives working tirelessly to eliminate the key players from criminal networks across the region.

“Today’s action is a result of months of hard work by detectives whose proactive investigat­ions into the drugs trade in Manchester has led them

through these doors today.

“We will continue to employ every possible tactic to target and disrupt organised crime groups, and ensure they are brought to justice.”

For years, the totally legal Encrochat service allowed 50,000 users around the world - 9,000 of them in the UK - to communicat­e in the knowledge none of their texts would be uncovered by law enforcemen­t.

That ended when investigat­ors hacked into Encrochat’s server in Roubaix, northern France, in April 2020, sending bogus updates to devices across the globe which effectivel­y mined the incriminat­ing data criminals wanted so much to conceal.

It prompted the hugely successful Operation

Venetic, the National Crime Agency investigat­ion into the data that has been recovered, and a series of splinter operations conducted by forces across the country.

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 ?? ?? ●●Police investigat­ing a drugs gang raid homes across Rochdale and Lancashire
●●Police investigat­ing a drugs gang raid homes across Rochdale and Lancashire

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