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Friday, March 15, saw the final sentencing for the ‘Goldie’ county lines operation at Cardiff Crown Court.
Operation ‘Goldie’ was a complex investigation into the ‘Goldie’ county line Organised Crime Group (OCG). The ‘Goldie’ line was controlled from London from October 19, 2018, and May 23, 2019, and it flooded the Bridgend area with high quality diamorphine (heroin) and ‘crack’ cocaine with the total quantity of both equating to 3.29 kilograms.
During several enforcement phases within Bridgend and London, nine people were arrested and subsequently convicted of Drug Trafficking and Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA) offences.
The head of the county line was Caine Morris-McGibbon (AKA ‘Goldie’), who controlled the ‘line’ from South London, with a network of individuals each playing a vital role in facilitating the supply of drugs into Bridgend or allowing bank accounts for the proceeds to be deposited.
Detective Sergeant Richard Gregory said:
“We have disrupted a major county line drug dealing gang jailing nine people involved in a significant organised conspiracy after a five-year operation which has taken a large number of dangerous people and substances off the streets”.
“The case saw officers trawling through a vast amount of media data, phone analysis, automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) along with forensic and tactical enforcements which needed overlaying to order to put forward a meticulous prosecution case.”
“We will continue to proactively target those we believe to be involved in drugs and use the powers we have to make sure their activity is disrupted.”
The nine involved were:
Detective Constable Adam Yeates added:
“County lines crime continues to be a problem which often involves the exploitation of vulnerable individuals in the supply of illegal drugs which causes harm to our communities.
"This sentence sends a clear message that individuals involved in the supply and transportation of harmful drugs into our communities will be brought to justice and dealt with robustly."