On August 14 Henson was still conducting business as usual. Despite growing fears he was being watched, he arranged to buy drugs with a wholesale value of £170,000.
By August 21 he was convinced he was going to take a police “hit” and he told Thirlaway to get rid of their mobiles.Despite his worries the operation continued. Thirlaway kept visiting Manchester for heroin from Dahou and tons of cannabis continued to pour in from foreign shores.At the start of September Henson was recorded saying he was doing three more deals before giving up the drugs trade for good and taking his wife to live abroad.Just a week later a team of officers tracked Thirlaway on the train from Manchester. They confronted him at Newcastle’s Central Station and he instantly owned up to carrying £22,000 of heroin, five mobile phones, and more than £2,500 cash.A second team followed John Rae, a scrapyard owner forced to run drugs to clear his gambling debts.He was watched carrying 100kg of cannabis resin, worth £284,000, from Henson’s drug hideout, in Winlaton Mill, Gateshead, to Bell Industrial Estate, Lemington, Newcastle. Police swooped on him there.Gang member Sean Hewitson, of Rotherford Street, Wallsend, who also brought heroin into the region from Manchester, was another who had nowhere to run when police tracked him down.Henson was picked up at his home. Meanwhile his daughter Amanda Elliot was arrested at her home, in Redwood Close, Hetton, County Durham. Police found more than £8,000 and $900 of drugs money hidden in her kitchen oven.In Manchester the sting closed in on Samir Dahou as police raided his home in Warrington.As officers stormed into his kitchen, the heroin dealer turned to his wife and said: “There’s something I need to tell you. I’ve been moving things. We needed the money.”
Two suitcases opened at the house had £1.5m of heroin and two semi-automatic guns with silencers inside.

0 comments:
Post a Comment