The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

‘Significan­t’ arrests in drugs crackdown raids

- BRYAN RUTHERFORD

Police have made three “significan­t” arrests in a crackdown on county lines drug dealing during a new “holistic” approach to raids across Aberdeen.

The Press and Journal was given exclusive access to one of the largest antidrugs operations ever to be seen in the city, which unfolded earlier this week.

Officers forced their way into 18 properties and seized “dealer quantities” of heroin, cocaine, crack cocaine and cannabis.

A total of £11,000 in cash was also recovered and a number of individual­s were charged, Police Scotland has said.

But Operation Protector, a new initiative in Aberdeen, also focused on giving immediate help to the city’s most vulnerable people who are at risk of drug-related harm.

Superinten­dent David Howieson said: “Operation Protector recognises that the harm caused by the supply of controlled drugs cannot be tackled by convention­al policing alone.

“Traditiona­l police tactics focused on the seizure of drugs and arresting those who were responsibl­e for their distributi­on, but Operation Protector makes sure that those who need support can get it in a time of crisis.

“What we are trying to do using traditiona­l police tactics is create a safe space for our partners to come in and engage with those who are vulnerable at the time of highest risk and make sure that there’s a pathway into support for them.”

As enforcemen­t teams carried out search warrants, support workers talked with the people found at the addresses.

The residents were offered access to help with housing issues, the cost of living and substance addiction.

A control room, which operated from Tillydrone Campus, coordinate­d support services in real time – dispatchin­g them to wherever they were needed on the day.

The hub was staffed by personnel that included a social worker and housing officer from Aberdeen City Council.

In one case, a man who was found to be gravely ill was arranged an urgent GP appointmen­t that same day.

And a woman who asked for help to kick her heroin habit was provided with a same-day prescripti­on of methadone, which helps to reduce withdrawal symptoms and stop cravings.

Over two days of action on Wednesday and Thursday, large teams of plain-clothed officers and others dressed in riot gear descended onto 18 properties.

They included homes at Bloomfield Road, Catherine Street, Froghall Avenue, Granton Place, Hutcheon Court, Nelson Street, Powis Place, Smithfield Gardens and Urquhart Road.

Police intelligen­ce had linked the addresses with alleged drug dealing and the occupants were suspected of exploiting the vulnerabil­ities and dependenci­es of their neighbours and others elsewhere in the community.

After battering rams were used to break through the front doors, support workers began their work.

Staff from social care provider Turning Point Scotland provided “a number of people” with the life-saving medicine Naloxone, which can rapidly reverse an opioid overdose.

The scale of the enforcemen­t action across the city was made possible using resources from the British Transport Police (BTP).

It deployed officers from as far away as London and Merseyside onto trains between Aberdeen and Stonehaven – a route frequented by drug trafficker­s.

BTP sniffer dogs patrolled Aberdeen train station and the bus station where a number of people were stopped, searched and caught with drugs.

The specialist national constabula­ry searched a total of 143 trains and 33 buses.

Three “significan­t” arrests were made concerning individual­s suspected to be involved in county lines – networks of cross-country drug runners that are often children or vulnerable people who are coerced into working for organised crime groups.

In a major success, a teenage boy who was suspected of being exploited through county lines was intercepte­d and safeguarde­d.

Separate from police activities, 136 outreach visits were made to homes where support for substance dependency, housing issues and cost of living was provided.

Health and social care staff in a mobile informatio­n bus situated at different locations in Aberdeen successful­ly engaged with 100 people.

 ?? ?? RAID: Officers force open a door in Powis Place, Aberdeen, during an anti-drugs operation on Wednesday. Picture by Chris Sumner
RAID: Officers force open a door in Powis Place, Aberdeen, during an anti-drugs operation on Wednesday. Picture by Chris Sumner

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