logo
Gun-wielding Breaking Bad gangs torch our cars & terrorise roads… now they're using new trick to turn kids into dealers

Gun-wielding Breaking Bad gangs torch our cars & terrorise roads… now they're using new trick to turn kids into dealers

The Irish Sun27-04-2025

A FEMALE pensioner bends down and watches as her crown green ball slowly rolls down the pristine bowling green.
But the picture-perfect English scene soon descends into chaos courtesy of a gang of laughing yobs, who launch a terrifying attack.
11
Terrifying footage from a 1am gun attack on a home in Oldham, which was live-streamed on Snapchat
Credit: Snapchat
11
Operation Vulcan officers have carried out raids and arrests across Greater Manchester, including in Derker
Credit: Greater Manchester Police
11
More than £300,000 worth of drugs were seized during one week of raids in December
Credit: GMP
The elderly members of Stoneleigh Park ladies' bowls team were forced to flee in terror as bricks and stones were thrown at them in one of the many anti-social attacks that has plagued this deprived pocket of Oldham.
Drug gangs have so terrorised the residents of the Derker area of the Greater Manchester town that many have been left too scared to leave their homes at night.
Over recent months, cops say the violence has been "escalating" with a spate of arson attacks and shootings, including four since November.
Balaclava-wearing teenage thugs aged as young as 13 have been caught delivering crack cocaine, heroin and cannabis on £5,000 e-bikes that plague the roads, with the shadowy gang leaders behind them found operating Breaking Bad-style crystal meth labs.
READ MORE FROM FEATURES
Kids, aged ten and 11, have even confessed to cops and teachers in class: "I am frightened of the men on bikes".
But while one officer has compared the area to the "Wild West" after shocking recent events, police are now fighting back against the drug gangs operated by local white British crime families.
Greater Manchester Police (GMP) have launched a two-month crackdown called Operation Vulcan and local residents claim the arrests of suspected dealers has already made a big difference.
The raids have also revealed the chilling new tactics used by gangs to turn vulnerable children into drug mules, with police telling us how youngsters are "gifted" pricey e-bikes, then forced to work off the 'debt' when they are seized by cops.
Most read in The Sun
Grandmother Carol Knight, 76, said: "I have been scared to go out at night. But it feels like the area is getting back to what it was - much safer.
"There have been so many shocking incidents. My car was torched outside my own home.
Moment cops wielding GUNS snared drugs gang, seized £5,000 cash and cache of weapons in SIX UK-wide raids
"It was terrifying - they wrongly thought I was a grass as my daughter is a councillor.
"There was even an attack on the ladies' bowling team. They were playing on the bowling green when they were pelted with bricks and stones by young lads. It was terrifying for them."
Live-streamed shootings
A mum-of-three, who did not want to give her name, said: "We had a lad jump into our garden after being chased by cops.
"You get lads wearing balaclavas riding around selling drugs and causing trouble. A neighbour's car was torched and bricks have been thrown through people's windows.
"It can be scary at night. I don't let my kids play out in the street."
11
A gun recovery from an Oldham address
Credit: GMP
11
Vape vials were also found in one of the raids
Credit: GMP
11
Cops lead away a suspect cornered during the operation
Credit: GMP
11
Locals say gangs terrorize their streets on high-powered e-bikes
Credit: GMP
Unemployed Paul Hill, 37, said: "You see kids on scooters and bikes dropping drugs off all over the place.
"They race up and down on off-road bikes and scare people by almost knocking people off pavements.
"There are a lot of gangs that come into the area, they are pretty brazen about it as people are scared of them."
There's still a long way to go. The gangs are still here - they have just retreated for a bit
An unnamed father
In May last year, a shocking gun attack at a home just a mile away from Derker was live-streamed on social media site Snapchat.
Footage appeared to show a man firing at least six shots through a window in the 1am attack on a home on Prince Edward Avenue.
Cannabis plants worth £4million were found at farms in the area in just a month, while another sinister case saw an 18-year-old man shot as he got out of a taxi by a gunman on an e-scooter.
Oldham's crime gangs
Oldham is seven miles north-east of Manchester. It rose to prominence in the 19th century and was a boomtown of the industrial revolution with textile manufacture at its centre.
However, it now has high levels of deprivation and crime - two years ago, Oldham was named among the UK's crime hotspots in a landmark report advising the Government on its levelling-up strategy.
A 2022 document estimated there were 176 organised crime groups (OCGs) operating across Greater Manchester, with almost a quarter of the gangs identified said to have access to guns.
Drugs are said to remain the 'primary crime type' for the vast majority of the gangs.
Of the 176 active organised crime groups, 55 are said to be 'impacting the city of Manchester' - accounting for 31 per cent of all known OCGs in the county.
Oldham and Salford have the second highest number of organised crime groups, with 19 and 18 respectively.
Happy Valley's Sarah Lancashire, radio presenter
Former TV comedians Cannon and Ball and Take That's
11
Carol Knight reveals residents are scared to go out at night
Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvin Media
11
Forensics comb the scene in the aftermath of last year's shocking gun attack on Prince Edward Avenue
Credit: MEN Media
However, police raids are at last putting a dent in the drug dealing.
On one morning last month, an officer sawed a house's door in half as another smashed it in with a large red hammer.
In a bedroom, cops found £7,000 in cash as well as a stash of crystal meth, cocaine, ketamine and party drug MDMA. Four men were arrested.
'Debt bondage'
GMP has said the raids have disrupted the drug gangs and people are starting to feel "safer".
There have been 35 arrests including possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence as well as drug dealing.
Nine people have been charged with various offences, while 31 cars and e-bikes have been seized along with drugs worth £50,000 and £11,500 in cash.
Chief Inspector Andy Torkington tells us: "We've had anti-social behaviour, drug dealing and nuisance off-road bikes.
"Those are issues that have caused the most misery for people on this estate. We've had women and children say they are scared to go to the shops at night.
The worrying rise of 'ghost guns'
By Josh Saunders
WHILE the UK's gun laws remain far tighter than in the US, so-called 'ghost guns' are an ever-escalating concern for police.
Knocked up in garden sheds and bedrooms using 3D printers and tutorials online, these weapons have taken off in America and are increasingly favoured by crime gangs in Britain too.
In 2023, Graeme Biggar, head of the National Crime Agency, called for possessing 3D-printed gun blueprints to be made illegal after a four-fold rise in seizures.
Birmingham was among the hardest hit areas, overtaking London as the UK gun crime capital, with local MP Kaur Gill expressing concern over the "serious and growing threat".
It's known these weapons are falling into the wrong hands and many are desperate to obtain them - from potential terrorists to crime gangs and lone-wolf criminals.
Scores of thugs have been sent down for manufacturing ghost guns in recent years including Owain Roberts, 19, who was sentenced to nearly five years for trying to assemble an 'FGC-9' weapon - the letters stand for 'F*** Gun Control'.
There was also Neo-Nazi Jack Robinson, 20, who was in the "advanced stage" of building a semi-automatic rifle and appeared to have planned a mass killing spree.
And Dion Matthews, 60, was jailed for 11 years after he produced four viable hybrid semi-automatic rifles and hundreds of rounds of 9mm ammunition.
The top cop said the force was 'acting on intelligence to take out those causing the most harm' - notably drug dealers, who are employing 'vulnerable young people'.
He added: "Incredibly the drugs have been everything from cannabis all the way up to crystal meth, amphetamines, crack cocaine and heroin.
"Children from 13, 14, 15 and up to young adults are involved in selling the drugs. We have seen debt bondage too, so they are given an expensive e-bike.
"If that bike is taken off them by the police, or they lose it or it is damaged then you are debt bondaged over that bike, so you have to sell more drugs to buy off that debt."
GMP have held community events in Stoneleigh Park to improve relations with locals.
But there remains a long road ahead to brighter days and residents still fear a return of the recent dark days that have plagued Oldham.
One dad said: "The police have improved things but there's still a long way to go. The gangs are still here - they have just retreated for a bit."
11
Operation Vulcan officers leading away a suspected county lines crook in Derker
Credit: GMP
11
GMP's Chief Inspector Andy Torrington is leading the fightback against the crimewave
Credit: Andy Kelvin / Kelvin Media

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How illegal migrants are paying £20k to fly into the UK using fake papers before disappearing in new border threat
How illegal migrants are paying £20k to fly into the UK using fake papers before disappearing in new border threat

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

How illegal migrants are paying £20k to fly into the UK using fake papers before disappearing in new border threat

APPROACHING British passport control, a mum grips her young daughter's hand nervously. She fidgets with the documents they hope will fool airport officials into letting them through. 7 Cops arrested the crooks they believed had been trafficking untold numbers of illegal immigrants into Britain Credit: GMP 7 Cops ready to strike on a morning raid in Bolton Credit: GMP 7 An officer whacks the door with a battering ram Credit: GMP 7 Two policemen lead their suspect towards a van Credit: GMP With her eyes darting nervously and head hung low, it doesn't take long for border control officers at Manchester airport to clock something is not quite right. And on closer examination, it is clear the paperwork is forged. Immediately, they are blocked from entering the UK. But while this mum and daughter failed, there are plenty more queuing up to take their place — and the majority are Iranians, cops believe. And far from risking death in treacherous Many will get through — mysteriously disappearing once they have conned their way through customs. Or they will dump their forged or stolen documents and immediately head to the closest immigration office to beg for asylum. But on this occasion, Greater Manchester Police were called and an investigation — named Operation Alfriston — was quickly formed. Most read in The Sun Its aim is to discover who these ruthless smuggling gangs are and how they operate across the UK. This week The Sun was invited to watch as cops smashed down doors and arrested the crooks they believed had been trafficking untold numbers of 13 migrants jumped from the back of a lorry at a Sainsbury's distribution centre in South East London At 6am yesterday, 129 GMP police officers, alongside seven immigration compliance and enforcement officers, stormed 15 different addresses. They arrested eight men, between the ages of 18 and 52, and two women, aged 32 and 43, all involved in a conspiracy to facilitate a breach of immigration law by assisting illegal entry into the UK. If charged and found guilty, each member could face life in prison for their role in the smuggling ring. 'I think we're just scraping the surface' The arrests took place in Greater Manchester — Bolton, Sale, Bramhall, Salford, Leigh and Cheadle — and Cricklewood, North London. We saw cops from the Tactical Aid Unit shatter a glass door and then break down an internal one to enter a property in Bolton. They alerted the occupants to their arrival with shouts of 'police' as they marched inside in full protective gear. Greater Manchester Police's Head of Intel, Detective Chief Superintendent John Griffith, told The Sun: 'Tackling immigration crime has become a priority for us. With the arrests yesterday morning, I think we're just scraping the surface. 'By focusing on gathering intelligence on the infrastructure around how people are entering the UK illegally, hopefully we can deter other people from doing it.' 7 Migrants met by officers after arriving in Kent Credit: AFP Often people who are smuggled into the UK will end up working for little money at businesses such as car washes, nail bars and hairdressers. DCS Griffith, who has a background in counter terrorism, added: 'These people are hugely vulnerable. 'If you can imagine some of the travelling conditions that they will have faced across Europe when coming into the UK — to put up with that, there must be a real desire to get here. 'That desire often transfers into a willingness to pay a lot of money to individuals to facilitate that entry, irrespective of the success of that entry or not. 'There are numerous individuals who have paid these facilitators and actually have never arrived in the UK, but continue to engage with them and pay them just for the attraction of coming here.' Not long before Christmas last year, the ringleader of an organised crime gang dealing with migrants was picked up at the airport and flagged to police. At the time, he was not arrested. Instead, cops gathered intelligence so that when they struck, they could take out all the key players. While this is technically smuggling, it sits in a grey area that shares characteristics with modern slavery. Justine Carter The crook did most of his communications in the Persian language Farsi, adding a stumbling block for the team of 12 police officers. For fake documents or stolen identities and paperwork to enter the UK via an airport, the group was charging around £20,000. Investigation leader Detective Chief Inspector Tim Berry told The Sun: 'Our main suspect, who is actively involved in facilitating people into the UK, is generally using false documents of various nationalities. 'To do that he needs a number of people around him to facilitate and support with various elements, such as supplying false documents, booking travel, moving monies — that kind of thing. 'We know that he's offering the full package for around £20,000. It's that profit that motivates organised crime gangs to do this kind of work.' The Manchester force has spent thousands of man hours to identify all the key players in the group, with their tentacles extending as far as Cricklewood. Police believe most of the people who have paid the extortionate fee to travel safely through the air, rather than crammed on a small boat in the Channel, are of Iranian nationality. 7 Det Chief Supt John Griffith from Greater Manchester Police Credit: Greater Manchester Police 7 Fake passports are being sold by callous criminals Credit: Getty But not all the fake documents work, meaning the holders are turned away at the border and sent back to the country they have flown in from. The process of sorting what is sold as safe passage to the UK requires a team of people. DCI Berry explained: 'We have evidence of travel booked by travel agents and our view is that they're doing that knowing that they're acting illegally, rather than blindly. 'We've also arrested people involved in money exchange services because you have to move money across Europe to pay for these documents. 'A lot of the people arrested fall into the logistics and facilitating category rather than being the organiser.' 'Exploitation isn't always visible or physical' But things could be more sinister than just people smuggling — it is possible that the gang is also going on to exploit the people it has helped to enter the country illegally. This would fall under modern slavery, where illegal immigrants are forced to work long hours for low pay or be exploited sexually to pay off their debt. DCS Griffiths said: 'Modern slavery in organised immigration crime is interlinked significantly. For me, organised immigration crime is the primary offence. 'People are coming into the country illegally, and we need to stop that collectively through our police action and partnership action. 'But once people are here, they are tied into the country through debt bondage. 'They get pulled into the grey economy as gangs exploiting these people either utilise their labour or engage them even further in criminal enterprise. 'Ahead of the curve' 'This would be criminality such as drug supply and cannabis farms and other sorts of premises where crimes can be undertaken.' Traditionally, immigration offences were dealt with by the National Crime Agency, Border Force and immigration enforcement officers. But with the flood of illegal migrants by boat and other entry points, local police have been asked to step in too. DCI Berry said: 'In recent years, there's been a real push from the Home Office and from the National Crime Agency for police forces to improve their response to organised immigration crime. 'I would like to think as a force that we're actually fairly ahead of the curve because we have a dedicated team. 'We absolutely do look to take this work on and we're still developing an understanding about our work from an intelligence point of view. 'But wherever we get opportunities to investigate this, we will do — because we recognise the risks around it and the vulnerabilities and the harm that can be caused by it.' Justine Carter, director of strategy and business services at anti-modern slavery group Unseen, said: 'While this is technically smuggling, it sits in a grey area that shares characteristics with modern slavery. 'These cases typically involve recruitment, movement, deception, and significant financial exploitation, which can often lead to debt bondage and long-term vulnerability. 'Even without forced labour, the legal threshold for trafficking may still be met if the acts, means and purpose are present. 'In these cases, the purpose is not labour or sexual exploitation, but financial gain through the exploitation of vulnerable people. Read more on the Irish Sun 'It's a reminder that exploitation isn't always visible or physical — it can be economic and deeply systemic.' The ten people arrested are being interviewed under suspicion of conspiracy to facilitate a breach of immigration law, assisting illegal entry into the country by non-UK nationals in breach of immigration law, conspiracy to money launder and participating in the activities of organised crime.

Teen (18) produced child pornography by sharing intimate images of girl (15), court told
Teen (18) produced child pornography by sharing intimate images of girl (15), court told

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Teen (18) produced child pornography by sharing intimate images of girl (15), court told

As the female teenager was a minor at the time of the alleged offence, the man is also facing two charges under the Child Trafficking and Pornography Act on November 15th 2022. A Clare teenager, just turned 18, posted a collage of intimate images of a 15 year old girl onto his Snapchat stories in a so-called Coco's Law prosecution, a court has heard. In the case before Kilrush District Court on Tuesday, the accused - now aged 20 - appeared in connection with being charged with three alleged offences over the posting of the intimate images in November 2022. Judge Alec Gabbett said that the case comes under Coco's Law, which is formally known as the Harassment, Harmful Communications and Related Offences Act 2020 which criminalises the non-consensual distribution of intimate images. In the case, the accused, aged 18 at the time, is charged with on November 15th 2022 publishing or distributing an intimate image of the female without her consent with the intention to cause her harm contrary to Section 2(1) and (3) of the Harassment, Harmful Communications and Related Offences Act 2001. Stock image News in 90 Seconds - Tuesday June 10 As the female teenager was a minor at the time of the alleged offence, the man is also facing two charges under the Child Trafficking and Pornography Act on November 15th 2022. The man is accused of knowingly having in his possession child pornography, the image of the female aged under 17 which, the charge says, depicts her genitals on the date. The man - accompanied to court by his mother and a sister - is also charged with producing child pornography for the purpose of distribution, publication, exportation, sale or show contrary to Section 5(1) of the Child Trafficking Act and Pornography Act1998. In court, Garda Nadine Keane, now of Roxboro Garda Station, Limerick said it will be alleged that the accused had in his possession a collage of four intimate images of the female on November 15th 2022 and posted them to his online Snapchat stories on the same date. Garda Keane said that one of the images depicting the girl's genitalia was a Category Two image as categorised under the Child Trafficking Act and Pornography Act. Judge Gabbett said that Category One would be regarded as the most serious followed by Category Two. Garda Keane said that the images were left online for a number of hours before they were taken down by the man who allegedly posted them. He continued by saying that the female - who turned 18 earlier this year - made a statement of complaint to Gardai and was interviewed by specialist Garda interviewers. The Garda said that the case was investigated by the Clare Division Protective Services Unit based at Crusheen. Garda Keane said that when charged at Kilrush Garda Station on May 29th, the accused made no reply after caution. He added that the DPP has directed that the case be heard in the district court on a plea of guilty only. After hearing an outline of the facts, Judge Gabbett said that he was declining district court jurisdiction and the case will now be transferred to the circuit court where more serious penalties apply on conviction. Judge Gabbett said that he was declining jurisdiction due to the seriousness of the alleged offences, the categorisation of the images and that the case warrants consideration by the circuit court taking into account the impact on the alleged injured party. The judge said that if the accused was aged under 18 at the time, he would have kept the case in the district court. In the district court, penalties for the Coco's Law offence can be up to one year on prison on conviction and Sgt John Burke said that before the circuit court, a 14 year prison term can apply on conviction. Judge Gabbett remanded the man on continuing bail to appear at Kilrush District Court to July 15th. Judge Gabbett imposed reporting restrictions on the identity of the accused and the injured party due to the age of the injured party at the time of the alleged offences.

Deirdre Reynolds: I believe my stalker had a 'rape or kill' list of women in Irish media
Deirdre Reynolds: I believe my stalker had a 'rape or kill' list of women in Irish media

Sunday World

time4 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Deirdre Reynolds: I believe my stalker had a 'rape or kill' list of women in Irish media

SPEAKING UP | Under cross examination, I was asked if being threatened with rape or murder was not just 'part and parcel' of my high-profile job. Typically penned in green, by an author appropriately mad as a box of frogs, over the course of almost two decades writing for national tabloid newspapers, it's fair to say I've had one or two – though none to rival the well-known travel writer who once received human faeces gift-wrapped in one of their articles, in a large brown envelope with address crazily scrawled in, what else, but green ink. Among fellow hacks, we laugh about this so-called 'fan mail', which now more typically comes in the form of emails or Facebook or Instagram DMs. August 14, 2023, was the day I stopped laughing. Mark McAnaw first addressed me as a 'proper little sort' whom he wanted to 'see in various styles of sexy underwear while wearing heels' and 'give a really, really, really good seeing to'. Amanda Brunker and Deirdre Reynolds Just days later, when I hadn't agreed to 'a f*cking basic thing like a normal phone call', so that he could 'get this on the go on a regular basis', the 53 year-old British man was promising to come to Dublin 'armed to the teeth' on a specific date to 'put a bullet in [my] f*cking nut'. On Thursday, the 'IRA Top Boy' and 'most powerful god there ever was', as he also referred to himself in the string of frightening mails that followed, was reduced to anything but, as he was sentenced to 11 years in prison for harassing me, Nicola Tallant and Amanda Brunker. Sitting in the back of Court 10 at the Criminal Courts of Justice, I couldn't help but eject a couple of quiet tears of relief, partly for myself, but also for every other woman out there who's ever faked a phone call to their sister while walking back to their car after dark or kept a tiny body spray in their handbag for more than just freshening up while out and about. As he stood up to whisper with his defence team, spruced up for the day that was in it in a freshly-ironed white shirt and navy bomber jacket, mostly though, I was thinking of the young foreign student, who was just 19 at the time he raped her at a house in Donegal in 2010, and how she had resisted so strongly that the radiator had been pulled from her bedroom wall; while selfishly glad he'll never get the chance to do the same to me as he'd schemed. Amid all the legalese, I didn't even realise that the schizophrenic, whose 30-plus year history of the most stomach-turning violence against women also includes kidnap, had just volunteered to spend an extra year locked up rather than seek medical help, among other bond conditions. Nicola Tallant When Judge Pauline Codd praised us for remaining 'calmly courageous' throughout the near two-year case, which began with me casually giving a statement to a detective in an office at work, I didn't have the heart to tell her how my knees had damn near buckled the first time I had to walk right past him to take the stand. Or how it had been pounding so furiously coming up to other court dates that it took an ECG, cardiac MRI, and several hundred euro to confirm that the tightly-wound knot in my chest was just the panic of breaking one of the golden rules of journalism, by becoming the story. 'I'm glad he's not on the streets', says victim as convicted rapist who threatened 3 female journalists is jailed' – announced just one of the many headlines about the case on Friday. Victim? Surely, they didn't mean me? But, surreally, they did, and as the 'Fair play, missus' messages from everyone from colleagues to cousins to old school friends started trickling in, I also didn't reply how if I'd known from the beginning that I'd wind up like the proverbial deer in headlights on RTÉ's Six-One News or Morning Ireland, I might simply have dragged McAnaw's messages into the trash folder, where they belonged, said nothing, and hoped for the best. Mark McAnaw was jailed for 11 years News in 90 Seconds - Tuesday June 10 The 'danger to [the] public', as Judge Codd called him on Thursday, didn't really give me that option, however, when he told me he had '30 girls on [his] list' – among them 'all the 2FM girls' – whom he would 'keep emailing' if I didn't 'start replying to [his] messages'. 'What happens to you lot now is firmly in your court,' he chillingly warned me. It was my strong belief then, and remains so now, that McAnaw, just like Englishman Gavin Plumb, who was jailed for plotting to kidnap and murder Holly Willoughby last year, has a fantasy 'rape or kill' list of women in Irish media. In speaking up, I can only cross my fingers that I haven't jumped straight to the top of it should he ever be free to torment us again. Under cross examination, I was asked if being threatened with rape or murder was not just 'part and parcel' of my high-profile job. Read more One last time with feeling: it's not. Nor should it be. Now imagine how the woman who mailed me in recent days to say how she'd been asked by a female Garda if she found her stalker 'attractive', or the countless rape survivors who've been quizzed about their underwear choices or alcohol consumption in a system more usually weighted in favour of perpetrators than victims must feel. Deemed 'untreatable' by a forensic psychiatrist, as well as being at 'highest risk' for re-offending, McAnaw has been ordered to stay at least 10 miles away from me for the rest of his life. As my heart rate slowly returns to normal, moreover, let's hope he never gets anywhere near any woman or girl ever again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store