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County lines drug arrests in West Midlands rail operation

County lines drug arrests in West Midlands rail operation

BBC News7 days ago
Nine people have been arrested as police targeted West Midlands rail stations to tackle county lines drug operations.British Transport Police (BTP) and West Midlands Police swooped on stations in Coventry, Wolverhampton and Birmingham over two days.Drugs, cash and weapons were seized, two men were recalled to prison and seven people including five children were the subject of safeguarding referrals, BTP said. More than 30 stop-and-searches were conducted and two men were taken to safety from a suspected "cuckooed" premises - where criminals take over the home of vulnerable people.
Safeguarding organisations, The Railway Children and The Children's Society, were part of the operation and encouraged station staff, passengers and commuters to be mindful of child exploitation and to report any concerns they witnessed.Det Supt David Udomhiaye said: "This week's activity to shut down county lines and identify and safeguard those they exploit was another nail in the coffin for the gangs that hide behind the vulnerable."These operations, using resources including our passive drugs dogs, knife arch and covert officers, take place every day across the network, sometimes you'll spot us, sometimes you won't, but rest assured we're always there to take action."
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Woman in her 60s stabbed to death at home in ‘murder' linked to man, 20, found dead on train tracks
Woman in her 60s stabbed to death at home in ‘murder' linked to man, 20, found dead on train tracks

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

Woman in her 60s stabbed to death at home in ‘murder' linked to man, 20, found dead on train tracks

A MURDER investigation has been launched after a woman was found stabbed to death - with incident linked to man found dead on train tracks. Officers received a report at around 9pm on Sunday (July 27) from British Transport Police (BTP) following concerns for the welfare of a woman at an address in Bushy Close, Romford. On arrival, officers located a woman in her 60s with multiple stab wounds. She was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. A murder investigation has been launched and officers have remained in the area throughout today to continue enquiries. Met officers continue to work closely with BTP following information that connects the woman's death to that of a 20-year-old-man on the train tracks at Romford railway station earlier on Sunday. BTP are treating the man's death as non-suspicious. The woman's family have been notified and continue to be supported by specialist officers. No arrests have been made at this time and the investigation remains ongoing. Early enquiries indicate that the man and woman were known to each other. Detective Chief Inspector Joanna Yorke, from the Met's Specialist Crime Command said: "Our thoughts remain with victim's family at this difficult time as we investigate the circumstances behind this terrible incident. 'At this stage, we believe this to be an isolated incident with no wider risk to the public". Detective Superintendent Simon Giles, from the East Area investigations team added: "I understand that the incident is distressing for the community and we are working closely with our colleagues in the Specialist Crime Command to progress the investigation as quickly as possible. 'Those in the area today can expect to see our officers and we encourage anyone with any information to speak with them.' Those with information can also call 101, report online or contact 'X'@METCC quoting CAD6914/27JUL. 1

American 'hitwoman' accused of failed assassination attempt on Birmingham shop owner tells jury she flew into the country to celebrate her birthday and attend boat party
American 'hitwoman' accused of failed assassination attempt on Birmingham shop owner tells jury she flew into the country to celebrate her birthday and attend boat party

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

American 'hitwoman' accused of failed assassination attempt on Birmingham shop owner tells jury she flew into the country to celebrate her birthday and attend boat party

An American 'hitwoman' who has been accused of attempting to assassinate a Birmingham shopkeeper flew to the UK to celebrate her birthday and attend a boat party, a jury heard. Aimee Betro, 45, disguised herself by wearing a niqab and tried to shoot Sikander Ali at point blank range outside his home in Measham Grove, Birmingham, but the gun jammed, allowing Mr Ali to flee, the court was told. She is alleged to have flown from Wisconsin as part of a plot orchestrated by co-conspirators Mohammed Aslam, 56, and Mohammed Nabil Nazir, 31, of Elms Avenue in Derby, to attack a rival family on September 7, 2019. Giving evidence in her defence on Monday, Betro explained that she visited the UK three times before the shooting. She told Birmingham Crown Court she had slept with Nazir at an Airbnb during a visit to the UK spanning December 2018 and January 2019. During a second visit to the UK in May 2019, she said she did not meet Nazir, who she 'had feelings' for. In her evidence, Betro said on both occasions she did 'touristy' things, including attending music events, viewing street art in east London, visiting a friend in Birmingham and taking care of a dog 'at someone's house in the middle of England'. Asked why she had paid a third visit to the UK, arriving at Manchester Airport from Atlanta around two weeks before the shooting, Betro told jurors: 'To celebrate my birthday and I won tickets for another boat party in London. 'And there was another little festival that was at Crystal Palace that I wanted to go to.' Betro denies conspiracy to murder, possessing a self-loading pistol and a charge of fraudulently evading the prohibition on importing ammunition. Her barrister, Paul Lewis KC, asked her what she thought of Nazir after meeting him on a dating app, communicating with him via Snapchat and meeting him in London. Betro answered: 'He was charming and I did like him. He was sweet and I did have feelings for him.' She told the court 'I would guess so' when asked if she thought Nazir had feelings for her, but added that she was not trying to build a relationship with him because they lived in different countries. Standing up in the witness box, Betro, wearing a casual round-necked navy blue top and square-rimmed glasses, began her evidence by giving personal details, including her height as being 5ft 5ins. During her evidence, Betro was asked about messages between her and Nazir which referred to a gun broker website and a silencer. She said she did not remember the message referring to a broker, but told the court she had posted 'gaming things' relating to an an old gaming system. She also told the court she had lived at an address in West Allis, Winsconsin, from 2013 to 2019 and had 'a couple of different degrees' in early childhood education and graphic design. The Crown alleges that Betro returned to the scene hours after the shooting and fired three shots into Mr Ali's house, which was empty at the time, before leaving the UK and flying back to the US the next day. The court heard father and son Aslam and Nazir, who were jailed last year for their part in the bungled assassination plot, were involved in a feud with Mr Ali's father, Aslat Mahumad. Nazir and Aslam had been injured during disorder at Mr Mahumad's clothing boutique in Birmingham in July 2018, jurors have been told, leading them to conspire to have someone kill him or a member of his family. Opening the case, Tom Walkling KC, prosecuting said: 'On the seventh of September 2019 in a suburban cul de sac in South Yardley a would-be assassin tried to shoot a man called Sikander Ali at close range outside his house. 'The assassin was a woman who tried to disguise her appearance by wearing a niqab - a face covering - and what looked like a burka.' He told jurors the gun jammed but she was 'not deterred' and 'returned to the same address on the same cul-de-sac a few hours later and used the now working gun to shoot three bullets through the bedroom windows of the victim's home.' The court was told her two co conspirators Mohammed Nazir, 30, and his father Mohammed Aslam, 56, from Derby, had already been tried and convicted over the plot. Both have been convicted of conspiracy to murder while Nazir was also convicteded of possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence. Mr Walkling said Betro was in contact with Nazir before she flew to Manchester Airport in August 2019. Mr Walkling said Betro had two phones - a normal 'day to day' phone which she used regularly - and a 'dirty phone' - bought before the shooting. Mr Walkling said the motive for the murder was 'revenge'. He said Nazir and Aslam were involved in a 'vendetta' with a family in Birmingham, specifically a clothes shop owner called Aslat Mahumad, whose son was Sikander Ali. Both men lived at an address in Measham Grove, South Yardley where Betro allegedly tried to murder Mr Ali and where she fired bullets through the window. The court heard that in July 2018 there was a disorder at Mr Mahumad's clothes shop which resulted in damage to the premises and Nazir, Aslam, and Aslat Mahumad all getting injured. Mr Walkling said: 'This is the background to the shooting and attempted shooting outside Aslat Mahumad's house the following year, and the only connection we have between Nazir and Aslam and the family who lived at that address in Measham Grove.' Jurors were told that on August Betro went to Birmingham and hired a Mercedes C Class car from Enterprise at Birmingham Airport. The car was later involved in a three car collision in Derby with Mohammed Nazir and another woman. Both later received insurance payouts, the court heard. She then stayed at a hotel in Derby for two nights before travelling to London and Brighton before returning to Birmingham and then back to Derby. The court was played a video clip - from Nazir's phone - showing a gun being fired into the ground three days before the attempted shooting in Birmingham which prosecutors said was a bid to 'test' the weapon. Mr Walkling said: 'It's a firearm that fires the same calibre of ammunition that police recovered from outside the victim's home a few days after this video was made.' The 'metadata' for the clip shows it was created on September 4, 2019, the day Betro was in Derby and three minutes before Nazir added Betro's snapchat details into his phone. Mr Walkling said to jurors: 'You have to ask your self was Betro there with Nazir testing this gun? Other CCTV footage from Rotunda hotel in Birmingham shows Betro in a summer dress, hoodie, rucksack and flip flops. While at the hotel on September 6 she phoned Aslat Mahumad, claiming she wanted to buy the car he was selling online. Mr Walkling said: 'Mr Mahumad recalls being called by a woman with an American accent... He was confused, as he hadn't listed his number online. 'The woman said she wanted to buy the car today, but Mr Mahumad said she could see it tomorrow. 'As I'm sure you have guessed, ladies and gentlemen, we say the woman with the American accent was this defendant, Aimee Betro, and that she was calling Mr Mahumad as a pretext to set up a chance to kill him. And who else could it be? she had the phone she bought it only hours before.' Later that night she met up with Nazir, who went with her to her hotel room where they ordered food on Deliveroo before he travelled back to Derby with his father in their transit van. The following day she tried to kill Aslat Mahumad's son, jurors were told. The court heard she left the hotel and bought another cheap mobile phone and SIM card - all caught on CCTV. She later called a man selling used Mercedes E240 from his garage, Rock Cars, in Alum Rock. Mr Walkling told jurors: 'He sold it to someone he described, perhaps unkindly, as a short, fat woman, who spoke with an American accent, wore a summer dress, and had a bag over her shoulder. 'Helpfully you can see still images of what Betro wore when she went out that day. A fitting if unflattering match to the description [he] gave.' He said the car was later driven to Measham Grove, the scene of the shooting. He said: 'It's the car in which the would-be assassin waited, and its the car from which she emerged to try and kill Sikander Ali.' Jurors were told that when buying the car she gave the name 'Becky Booth' and a false address. Mr Walkling said Becky was a 'nom de guerre' that Betro used again later that day when booking a taxi after the botched shooting. After buying the car she called Mr Mahumad once again on the pretext of looking at a car. Mr Mahumad said he couldn't meet, and that she could meet someone else with the car the next day. Later that day she met with Nazir and Aslam with mobile phone data showing her dirty phone connected to Nazir's wireless network - known as a 'hotspot'. The Mercedes was later seen at the entrance to Measham Grove. Mr Walking said the driver 'appears to be wearing a face-covering, a niqab'. He said at 7.22pm hours, Betro drove onto Measham Grove and waited for her target. He said she waited for more than 45 minutes. At 9.10pm Sikander Ali pulled onto Measham Grove in his black SUV which was all caught on camera. In video footage played to the court, a woman which the prosecution said was Betro, can be seen approaching the SUV and firing but the gun jams. Mr Ali is able to reverse away at speed, clipping the Mercedes' door as he does. The court was told the collision bent the the door badly enough that it wouldn't close, and Betro had to drive away with the door half open. She later dumped the Mercedes. Police found a black glove with Betro's DNA inside. 'Further proof if any was needed ... that she was the gunwoman in the burka',' Mr Walkling said. Six minutes later she was again caught on CCTV shown to the jury from close to where the car was dumped wearing a summer dress, hoodie and flip flops and carrying two bags. 'There is no doubt that is Betro,' Mr Walkling said. She later called a taxi to take her back to the hotel, a recording of which was played to the jury. The caller had a distinct American accent and used the name 'Becky'. CCTV, also shown to the jury, shows her returning to the Rotunda, still wearing the same summer dress and flip flops. She left the hotel an hour and 10 minutes later having changed her outfit to trousers with white stipes down the side and black Converse trainers. Betro then sent text messages to her intended target, the court was told. Screenshots of the texts were shown to the jury. She said to him: 'Where are you hiding? followed by 'Stop playing hide and seek you are lucky it jammed'. Betro then called another taxi to take her back to Measham Grove. Jurors were show CCTV of a figure matching Betro's description firing three shots in to the family home. 'Ladies and gentlemen the gun didn't jam that time did it?' Mr Walkling said. 'Did you note, the hoodie, and the handbag worn across her body, just as Betro was dressed earlier. 'Three shots were fired. Three bullets went through the windows of Aslat Muhamad's family home. Three bullet casings were found in the street outside.' Jurors were shown pictures of the damage the bullets caused. Mr Walking said: 'Two went through the bay window on the left. The other went through the bedroom window on the right.' Mr Walkling said Betro then got back into the taxi and during the journey she sent a text message to Mr Mahumad which said: 'you wanna rip me off you wanna be a drug king go look at your house watch your back i'll be shedding blood'. She flew back to the US the following day from Manchester Airport. Nazir flew out to join her three days later.

Mum issues scary warning after revealing way stranger tried to ‘drug' her on the train when she was alone with her baby
Mum issues scary warning after revealing way stranger tried to ‘drug' her on the train when she was alone with her baby

The Sun

time15 hours ago

  • The Sun

Mum issues scary warning after revealing way stranger tried to ‘drug' her on the train when she was alone with her baby

A MUM has shared an urgent warning about the horrific new way criminals are trying to drug women on public transport. Aysin Cilek, 22, was travelling on a train to Birmingham 's Moor Street last week with her daughter when the alleged incident took place. 4 4 The mum-of-one says she was approached by a stranger who she now believes was trying to drug her with Devil's Breath. The substance, which is also known as scopolamine, has been dubbed the 'world's scariest drug.' Victims say it puts them in a zombie-like state and can make you confused and easy to manipulate, while others say it's nothing but a myth. But Aysin claims a man tried to drug her with it while travelling with her baby daughter, Neveah. Taking to social media, she said: "Guys, the scariest thing happened to me today and I am literally just posting this for awareness, for other people, for other mums. Please be careful." Aysin said she got on the train and 'everything was fine' until a 'dodgy looking' man joined her carriage. She added: "Just as we were getting to the next stop, he comes over and he's like 'hi'. He passes me a stamp but it's obviously not a stamp - it literally looks like an acid tab. "But I wasn't thinking straight. He passes me this thing and I take it off him. I thought he was trying to sell me something. And he goes 'Can you put my stamp on my letter?'" Aysin initially agreed to help him out but soon backed out when he asked her to 'lick it.' She said the man told her 'you need to lick it [the 'stamp']. You need to get it wet to stick it on there'. 4 Ket had me peeing every 2 seconds Later on, she claims he may have had more sinister intentions. She continued: "The 'letter' wasn't even a letter, it was a piece of paper. "This guy was definitely trying to drug me. It was just me and Nevaeh. I'm actually getting teary thinking about it. If I was that stupid to just lick the stamp and put it on, I could have been drugged, and Neveah could have been gone. "This is serious guys, you need to be so careful when you're out and about. I would never ever have imagined something like that would happen to me. I've never been so scared in my life." To make things even worse, the man kept peering into her pram, saying 'don't wake the baby'. Now, the mum says she won't be getting on public transport alone again and is afraid to leave her own house. She says she reported the incident to the British Transport Police and enquiries are ongoing. A spokesperson for the police confirmed to the MailOnline that a complaint was made. The clip quickly went viral on her TikTok account @ aysincilek2 with over 3 million views and people were quick to share their thoughts. One person wrote: "This is actually so awful. Please report this. I've never heard of devil's breath ever! I am so glad you and your baby are okay." Another commented: "This is so scary for people, especially who aren't aware of devil's breath. I'm so sorry that this happened to you." "Stop being 'nice' to strange men you come across in the street. Ignore them and keep walking, especially if you're with your child," penned a third. What is Devil's Breath? REPORTS of the Devil's Breath drug have been seen across South American, Europe and even in the UK. Some people may take the drug on purpose for a "dream-like state" it can induce, mistakenly thinking it will be like mainstream hallucinogens like LSD. But Devil's Breath hallucinations tend to be far more disturbing and disjointed, often manifesting as nightmarish visions or confusing scenarios that blur the lines of reality. It may also be taken by mistake due to its close resemblance to cocaine. The correct dosage of the drug is notoriously hard to pin down, and even a slight miscalculation can lead to an overdose. This can lead to respiratory failure, acute psychosis and even death. Symptoms may include dry mouth, difficulty speaking, lethargy, hallucinations, rapid heartbeat and disorientation. Source: The UKAT Group Meanwhile a fourth said: "Do not take things that have been offered to you that's all I say." "Legitimately never heard of this before this video so thank you for raising awareness!' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "Scary, and worse still. If it was a grandparent might not have thought twice as we are old school and stamps always used to be licked." 4

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