Eleven children safeguarded in organised crime gang crackdown
Police Scotland has instigated safeguarding measures for 11 children at risk from a Scottish organised crime gang.
The youngsters were passed into the care of family members or referred to social services as part of a two-year police operation to dismantle the Scotland-wide drug dealing gang.
Operation Intensity, which began in May 2023, has made about 100 arrests, seized more than 200kg (441lbs) of illegal drugs and taken three firearms off the street.
The force said the organised crime gang it targeted was operating across the country, in areas including in Dumfries, Ayrshire and the central belt.
News of the operation comes as Police Scotland deals with an ongoing gangland feud across central Scotland.
Speaking about Operation Intensity, the force said it found couriers were travelling by car to operate drug dealing lines, who were then resupplied from safe houses.
A total of 46 search warrants were executed as part of the two-year operation and they resulted in large quantities of drugs being seized, including cocaine, heroin and ecstasy.
More than £600,000 in cash and firearms were also recovered with the near 100 arrests taking place in both rural and urban areas.
Det Sup Stevie Elliot said: "This operation is a clear example of how we use our national resources, alongside the knowledge of our local policing teams, to bring down large gangs operating across the country.
"Our strategy was maximising the safety of the public and protecting vulnerable people, particularly children and young people who are all too often coerced and groomed by county lines drug dealers.
"Organised criminal gangs show no shame or remorse for their actions and all their activities are focused on profiting from exploitation."
He added: "These arrests and seizures highlight our dedication to tackling organised networks in Scotland. Illegal substances cause real harm and misery to individuals, families and communities."

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New York Times
23 minutes ago
- New York Times
Ex-Arsenal talent jailed for drug smuggling, who can beat Spain at World Cup?
The Athletic FC ⚽ is The Athletic's daily football (or soccer, if you prefer) newsletter. Sign up to receive it directly to your inbox. Hello. He once had Arsene Wenger purring. Now this former Arsenal forward is serving time for drug smuggling. On the way: The reason Jay Emmanuel-Thomas is now a former footballer is because of the story you're about to read. As recently as September of last year, he was playing out his days with Greenock Morton, a Scottish team on the outskirts of Glasgow. Then the police came knocking. That same month, Emmanuel-Thomas — best known as a product of Arsenal's academy — was arrested as part of a drugs bust and accused of smuggling cannabis with a street value of £600,000 ($814,000) into the UK. Yesterday, a court sentenced him to four years in prison. Aged 34, his name is tarred and his career is over, a sharp fall from grace complete. Advertisement It's many moons since mentions of Emmanuel-Thomas in dispatches were making ears prick at Arsenal and beyond. Ultimately, it didn't happen for him there and he soon became nomadic, passing through clubs in England, Scotland, Thailand and India. But he's still the guy Arsene Wenger once described as 'an unbelievable finisher' — so lethal and powerful that when he helped destroy Liverpool in the FA Youth Cup in 2009, Liverpool's players refused to believe he was young enough to be taking part in the competition. Why, then, did Emmanuel-Thomas embroil himself in the importation of narcotics, a crime his own barrister described as 'a catastrophic error of judgement', when, before this offence, he had been a law-abiding citizen his entire life? Danny Taylor was in court to find out. 'The most painful experience' By the time of his arrest, Emmanuel-Thomas was no longer earning big from football. His pay at Morton was £600 a week, before bonuses. The club terminated his six-month contract as soon as he was charged. Chelmsford Crown Court heard how he may have been tempted into criminality during his short time playing for Thai side PTT Rayong in 2019. The cannabis in question arrived on a plane from Bangkok. The court was also told that Emmanuel-Thomas enlisted two women — one of them his own partner at the time — to act as couriers, promising them £2,500 in cash and flying them business class via Dubai. The women were themselves charged by police, but the allegations against them were dropped after WhatsApp conversations showed they believed they were bringing gold back to the UK, rather than illegal drugs. Emmanuel-Thomas deleted his messages, threw away his mobile phone and, at first, denied all wrongdoing — before changing his tune and pleading guilty. The maximum sentence for cannabis importation in the UK is 14 years. He received four, although nine months of that sentence have already been served by him on remand. He called his conviction 'the most painful and eye-opening experience of my life'. Advertisement A father of two, he will re-emerge from prison before long, with no semblance of a career to cling to. As the judge told him, 'You will no longer be known for being a professional footballer. You will be known as a criminal, a professional footballer who threw it all away and put others at risk of imprisonment in pursuit of money.' The World Cup is rarely a foregone conclusion but, with the big kick-off in North America a little over 12 months away, is anybody looking beyond Spain? They're the European Championship holders, they've got Lamine Yamal running riot and they're different gravy. OK, their Nations League semi-final against France last night ended 5-4 in their favour, but I was packing up and heading to bed when they led 5-1 with 12 minutes to go. It was worth hanging on to see evidence (if any more was needed) of why Manchester City are so set on seducing France's Rayan Cherki. In the chaos of a frantic finish, he hammered in a beast of a volley (above) and plucked an assist right out of the Yamal playbook. These boys are the future, just like the Spanish, who face Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal in Sunday's final. Our pals at The Pulse run a regular section entitled 'Hi, my name is…', where they introduce us to a prospect we haven't heard of (or not in great detail). Today, I'm pinching it for a footballer who is 32. Ravel Morrison won't need introducing to many of you, but he's been so far off the radar for so long that some readers might not be familiar. How gifted was he as a teenage midfielder at Manchester United? Sir Alex Ferguson explained it best when he said he'd never seen anybody better. Morrison displayed his talent with an iconic instep volley during an England Under-21 training session, below. Danny Taylor has interviewed Morrison for The Athletic and it's a great get because Morrison doesn't do much media. From Old Trafford to West Ham United, Lazio and now a second-division team in Dubai, he carried the reputation of being a bad boy and a big-time problem as his promise melted — a reputation he earned on occasions. Advertisement Aged 17, and just after his United debut, he was convicted of intimidating a witness in a robbery case. Negative headlines had a habit of coming for him. These days, however, he's on the straight and narrow, and aiming to represent Jamaica at next year's World Cup. Reading Danny's piece, the popular caricature of him becomes faintly ludicrous. Did he quit Lazio because of a lack of salad cream (a sandwich condiment in the UK)? Did he p**s in a former manager's fish pond? Did he complain about his digs at West Ham being haunted? No, no and no. The truth about Morrison was less likely to send a tweet viral, but where's the fun in that? (Selected games, kick-offs ET/UK time) Friday: UEFA World Cup qualifier Group I: Norway vs Italy, 2.45pm/7.45pm — Fox Sports, Fubo/Amazon Prime. Saturday: UEFA World Cup qualifier Group K: Andorra vs England, 2.45pm/7.45pm — Fox Sports, Fubo/ITV. International friendlies (all U.S. only): USMNT vs Turkey, 3.30pm — TNT, Peacock Premium, Fubo; Canada vs Ukraine, 3.30pm — OneSoccer; Mexico vs Switzerland, 4pm — Univision, VIX. MLS: DC United vs Chicago Fire, 7.30pm/12.30am — MLS Season Pass/Apple TV. Sunday: UEFA Nations League final: Portugal vs Spain, 3pm/8pm — Fox, Fubo/ITV. MLS: LAFC vs Sporting Kansas City; Vancouver Whitecaps vs Seattle Sounders — both 9pm/2am and MLS Season Pass/Apple TV. Everyone makes mistakes, even your loyal scribes at TAFC. So we're about to throw stones from a glass house. But here's a howler of epic proportions from Finland. This week, the manager of Finland's women's team, Outi Saarinen, named her squad for a Nations League match against Serbia. She meant to include defender Nanne Ruuskanen but absent-mindedly filled in the teamsheet with the name of Stina Ruuskanen — a 51-year-old whose last international appearance for Finland came almost 30 years ago. Advertisement The error was picked up too late to be changed, leaving Nanne to kick her heels, while Stina joked to a local paper: 'I'm definitely ready if the call comes.' If the squad had anything about them, they'll have worn Stina Ruuskanen face masks to the next training session. (Top photo by)

Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘It's getting silly': The fare-dodging influencers running rings around TfL
Credit: mirr22_/Tiktok TikTok influencers are promoting fare-dodging on the London Underground in viral 'bumping' videos that have racked up millions of views. In dozens of videos seen by The Telegraph, TikTok users show off by pushing through the barriers at Transport for London (TfL) stations and other rail services, a practice that has been dubbed 'bumping' on the app. One account holder had uploaded more than 50 videos of them skipping the barriers at different Underground stations. A video with 72,000 views celebrated 'bumping from London to Scotland by train'. Some clips have attracted hundreds of comments celebrating different techniques for squeezing through the barriers. Another with 128,000 views showed off 'TfL hacks', including codes for opening gates at stations. In one video, a masked TikTok user who has just jumped a station barrier says: 'At what age are we gonna stop bumping trains? It's getting silly.' He suggests he might start paying rail fares when he is 25. Earlier this week, a government report found that rail staff feared fare-dodging had become 'normalised' and was viewed by offenders as a 'victimless crime'. A report from the Office of Road and Rail said: 'As well as occasional opportunistic fare evaders, there are some individuals who use a range of techniques to persistently underpay and avoid their fares.' Staff reported being met with 'aggressive and abusive behaviour' when trying to check the tickets of fare-dodgers. Some videos on TikTok showed fare-dodgers filming their interactions with station staff, goading them or trying to talk their way out of paying for fares. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, said: 'There is an epidemic of fare-dodging in this country. Yobs are laughing at working people who do the right thing. It's a disgrace. I am sick to my back teeth of it – the authorities need to be shamed into action.' Last week Mr Jenrick filmed himself confronting fare-dodgers at Stratford Station amid growing public anger that petty crime is going unpunished. Credit: X/@RobertJenrick Writing for The Telegraph last week, he said: 'I watched as people flooded through an empty barrier, while the enforcement officer was on his backside, feet up, watching on. It was a perfect encapsulation of Broken Britain. 'For ordinary hard-working citizens travelling into work on their morning commute, the sight of somebody slipping through the barriers without paying is a slap in the face.' However, on TikTok, many commenters praised the barrier-jumpers, encouraging them to try to dodge-fares at other stations. Some videos included people vandalising the barriers at stations. One video seen by The Telegraph was captioned: 'My excuse for bumping is that I don't support TfL funding. Bumping is a choice, I'm not broke.' Some channels are entirely dedicated to 'bumping'. One explains to uses 'how to bump narrow gates' on National Rail. The video says to wait until there is an 'influx' so the 'guards are distracted and s---'. It then says fare-dodgers should 'scope out your victim', follow behind them and cover the sensor on the gate. The user says 'follow for more bumping guides'. The Government has said that fare-dodging costs the taxpayer £400m per year. Failure to pay on the Underground can result in a £100 fine, although this is halved if paid within 21 days. Deliberately dodging fares is a criminal offence and can lead to a criminal record and fines of up to £1,000. Sir Sadiq Khan has been expanding a team of professional investigators at TfL to catch persistent fare-dodgers. The transport authority has a target of halving fare-evasion by 2030. It is estimated that passengers avoid paying for up to 3.4pc of all TfL journeys. TikTok has long struggled with users sharing videos of petty criminal activity or extreme pranks to bolster their online following. Last year, The Telegraph found evidence of gangsters advertising for cannabis farmers on TikTok. People smugglers have also used the app to recruit people for small boat crossings. Influencers have meanwhile undertaken increasingly extreme pranks, such as a wave of TikTok users posting videos of themselves trespassing in people's homes. After The Telegraph reported the videos to TikTok, the social media app took many of them offline. TfL was contacted for comment. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


New York Times
8 hours ago
- New York Times
Jay Emmanuel-Thomas – from Arsenal youth captain to shame and prison for drug smuggling
'One thing is for sure: he can score goals. That is a massive talent you cannot give to people — right foot, left foot, this guy is an unbelievable finisher, inside and outside the box.' — Arsene Wenger, Arsenal manager, 2010. As the judge imposed a four-year prison sentence, the former footballer standing in the dock bowed his head. Jay Emmanuel-Thomas stood impassively, hands behind his back, flanked by two security officials. He had once been a brilliant prospect for Arsenal and went on to become an accomplished centre-forward representing other clubs in England, Scotland and around the world. Advertisement Now, though, he was led away as an international drug smuggler who had tried to bring 60 kilograms (132lb) of cannabis, with a street value of £600,000 ($815,000) into England, duping his girlfriend into being one of his couriers. His playing career is finished, aged 34, and that was described by his barrister, Alex Rose, as an 'absolutely seismic shock' for a man who had 'succumbed to temptation in a catastrophic error of judgment'. But what led Emmanuel-Thomas to criminality? And how did a man with a 16-year career as a professional footballer — described in court as having led an 'utterly law-abiding life' — find himself in this position? Temptation, mainly — but also 'stupidity', by his own admission, and a level of financial hardship that demonstrates, perhaps, how the life of a footballer below Premier League level is not always as lucrative as many people believe. Emmanuel-Thomas had blown his career earnings, the court was told, and was no longer attracting the big contracts that came earlier in his life. At the time of his arrest, he was earning £600 a week, plus bonuses, at Greenock Morton in the Scottish Championship, the second division of the game in Scotland. 'It is clear this (crime) was about money, despite you being in a position where you had the privilege of playing football as a living,' the judge, Alexander Mills, told him. 'It is through your own actions that you will no longer be known for being a professional footballer. You will be known as a criminal — a professional footballer who threw it all away, and put others at risk of imprisonment, in pursuit of money.' It is 16 years since Emmanuel-Thomas captained Arsenal to a 6-2 aggregate win against Liverpool in the FA Youth Cup final. Arsenal's team for that two-leg contest included Jack Wilshere, Francis Coquelin and Henri Lansbury, all future Premier League players. Yet it was the boy known as 'JET', after his initials, who stood out — tall, imposing and broad-shouldered, scoring in each round and seemingly destined for stardom. Some of the Liverpool players refused to believe he was only 18. Advertisement Emmanuel-Thomas had got his first call-up to Arsenal's first-team squad at age 17, and there were almost two years when the teenager trained under manager Arsene Wenger's watchful eye. Perhaps the truth, however, is that Emmanuel-Thomas, in pure sporting terms, has always been something of a puzzle. He was too good for Arsenal's reserves, yet not quite good enough for their first team. Then, having moved away from the north London club, there were times when various managers with other teams saw him as an elegant frustration — likeable, talented and brilliant on his day, but falling short, ultimately, of being the player he was expected to be. At Arsenal, he played in every outfield position bar right-back for the youth and reserve teams. Steve Bould, a first-team coach and a legendary figure at the club from his own playing days, had wanted to turn the lad into a centre-half. Wenger, however, made it clear he saw Emmanuel-Thomas as a striker, just as the player did himself. It was never going to be easy, though, for any player to break into that first team while Thierry Henry and Robin van Persie were on the scene. Even after Henry moved on to Spanish side Barcelona in summer 2007, the competition was fierce. 'It was a tough period because, at the time, the attacking players at Arsenal were immense,' Emmanuel-Thomas told The Athletic in 2021. 'We still had Van Persie, Andrey Arshavin, Theo Walcott, Carlos Vela, Nicklas Bendtner. After those guys, I was the next choice. I'd already bypassed all the players from my year, and two years above me, in the academy but it was difficult to get (first-team) game time.' In court, his legal team talked about his criminal record being 'something he will have to live with, and the feeling of shame, for the rest of his life'. What can also be said with certainty, however, is that — even ignoring, for one moment, the events that brought him to Chelmsford crown court in Essex, east of London — this is a story of what might have been. Advertisement 'Arsene Wenger thought he could go to the very top with Arsenal,' says Steve Cotterill, who managed Emmanuel-Thomas at Bristol City in the English third tier from 2013-15. 'So, no, he didn't achieve his full potential. But there are so many players who I've seen over the years like that, so he wouldn't be different to a lot of them.' After deciding to leave Arsenal in 2011 following a series of loans to clubs in the second-tier Championship, Emmanuel-Thomas had two seasons in that division with Ipswich Town, and was rewarded for his gamble by playing 42 of their 46 league games in his first season. The 2013 move to Bristol City came next, and it was there that he played arguably the best football of his career. 'I knew straight away that he had great ability,' says Cotterill. 'He could go on some of the best 70-yard runs you've ever seen in your life. He could beat five players on those runs. He was a really powerful boy, he had a great left foot and a great understanding of the game for someone so young.' Was he a popular member of the dressing room? All the evidence says that, yes, he was liked and respected by his team-mates at all his clubs. 'JET was always a big character, always smiling,' says Aaron Wilbraham, another City striker from that time. 'He was good with the older lads, the younger lads — it didn't matter to him. He was a friend to everyone, including me, which he didn't have to be, considering I was his competition.' Staff at Arsenal took pride in seeing one of their academy graduates making a decent career for himself in the lower divisions of the game. Yet the player was held back at times because of weight and other fitness issues and that, perhaps, was the first indication he was not taking his football as seriously as he should have been. 'Because I was nearly 35, I was brought in to push JET on,' says Wilbraham, who joined from the Premier League's Crystal Palace. 'I remember Steve (Cotterill) pulling me in on my first day and saying, 'Jay has got unbelievable ability, but he needs a bit more of a professional attitude, like you — I think you'll be a good marker for him, but push him.' Advertisement 'I think Jay struggled because he was one of those lads that carried a bit (of weight) anyway. He probably never bought into the diet side of things or tried to have a summer where he properly went for it and was like, 'Right, I'm going to train all summer, strip down and go back in pre-season an absolute monster.' 'If he had done that, I think he would have been playing in the Premier League, because that was how good he was. 'He could have been unbelievable because of the ability he had — miles more ability than me, in his feet and his vision. Some of the stuff he used to do… even his penalties, when he used to walk up really slowly and look at the goalkeeper. He used to have the goalkeepers out after training for ages, trying just to save one.' Emmanuel-Thomas moved on to Queens Park Rangers in the Championship as a free agent in summer 2015, shortly after helping Bristol City win the League One title. During three years with QPR, he also had loan spells with fellow EFL sides Milton Keynes Dons and Gillingham without ever replicating the form that brought 21 goals in his first season at Bristol City. Although it was not mentioned in court, he also had 15 months out of the game when a proposed transfer to a Chinese club had to be abandoned in 2020 because of the outbreak of Covid. Then, in the past five years, he has played briefly in Thailand for PTT Rayong and then in Scotland with Livingston, Aberdeen (both in the top-flight Premiership) and Greenock Morton, either side of a brief stint in India with Jamshedpur and nine games for Kidderminster in England's fifth-tier National League. One finish, in particular, for Livingston against Hamilton Academical in March 2021, is a reminder of his eye for the spectacular: flicking the ball up, with his back to goal, then firing a swivelling volley into the roof of the net. 'That's magnificent from the man they call Jet' 😍Jay Emmanuel-Thomas scored an audacious volley in Livingston's 2-1 win against Hamilton Academical 👏 It was voted Livingston's goal-of-the-season award and was likened to his former team-mate Henry's famous volley for Arsenal against Manchester United in 2000. 'Proud of this one,' Emmanuel-Thomas wrote on his Twitter page — an account that, noticeably, introduced him as an 'entrepreneur' rather than a footballer. One of the more shocking parts of this court case concerns the way Emmanuel-Thomas tricked his girlfriend into being a part of his criminal operation. Raised in south London, by Caribbean parents, Emmanuel-Thomas was on a six-month contract at Greenock Morton when the police arrived outside his house on September 18 last year. Advertisement As he ran out for a game away to Queen's Park four days earlier, the former England Under-19 international must have known the law was about to catch up with him. His final match as a professional footballer — Morton announced his sacking on September 19 — ended in a 1-0 defeat. Emmanuel-Thomas was substituted after 65 minutes. On September 2, Border Force officers had stopped two women at London Stansted Airport. One was the player's 33-year-old partner, Yasmin Piotrowska, a fitness trainer from Kensal Green, north-west London. The other was her friend, Rosie Rowland, 29, from Chelmsford. Detectives discovered via WhatsApp messages and voicenotes that Emmanuel-Thomas had persuaded them to travel to Thailand and act as couriers in return for £2,500 in cash and an all-expenses-paid trip, flying in business class via Dubai. The women had been told it was gold they were bringing back. Unknown to them, it was actually cannabis, a class-B drug under UK law, vacuum-packed inside four suitcases. Each case had Apple AirTags to make sure the drugs weren't lost. Emmanuel-Thomas was arrested and, on his way to custody, he told officers from the National Crime Agency (NCA): 'I just feel sorry for the girls.' Yet he continued lying to Piotrowska after she had been arrested, sending her a WhatsApp message with instructions to 'delete everything from our chats if you can … this is impossible, I've never been involved in anything like this in my life. You know it should be only gold and cash.' The player deleted his own messages, disposed of his phone and bought a replacement to cover his tracks. After being arrested, he refused to answer questions from the police. Then, in his first series of court appearances, he denied any wrongdoing, insisting he was innocent and would fight the charges. Advertisement In reality, he had carried out 'extensive research' to set up the operation and had even arranged a dummy-run two months earlier to make sure everything went smoothly. Detectives believe his connections with the criminal underworld in Thailand may have begun during his 2019 spell there playing for PTT Rayong. 'Organised criminals like Emmanuel-Thomas can be very persuasive and offer payment to couriers,' says David Philips, the NCA's senior investigating officer. 'But the risk of getting caught is very high and it simply isn't worth it.' The two women had the criminal charges against them dropped at a court hearing last month, in which the prosecution accepted they had been duped and Emmanuel-Thomas changed his plea to guilty. Piotrowska dabbed her eyes with tissues. Rowland could be seen shaking her head in apparent disbelief. A month on, a tearful Piotrowska was back in court on Thursday to see Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced. 'Most of the boys (at Bristol City) would be amazed at what's happened,' says Cotterill. 'If you'd asked me, 'Do I think he would have got involved in anything like what's gone on?', no, I wouldn't. He was an easy-going, laid-back character. That's why I think this comes as a shock to probably everybody.' Will Emmanuel-Thomas have to spend the full four years behind bars? No. He has been on remand in prison since he was arrested and the judge told him he would have to serve 19 months in total before being released on licence, depending on good behaviour. The court was told he had already established himself as a mentor to younger inmates inside Chelmsford prison. In a letter to the judge, the footballer described his arrest, and everything that had happened since, as 'the most painful and eye-opening experience of my life'. It was the hardest letter he had ever had to write, he stated, explaining how he had let down his family and friends, as well as everyone he knew in football, including the supporters of the clubs where he had played. Advertisement He went on to talk about his deep shame, as a dad-of-two, bearing in mind he had looked upon his own father as a role model who led him away from temptation. His daughter had visited him in prison and the former Arsenal rising-star explained how 'that broke me — I never wanted her to see me in that light'. (Top photos: Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)