23 Aug, 2020 @ 08:28
1 min read

Four Manchester drugs traffickers jailed over plot to import cannabis from Spain’s Costa Blanca

Cannabis_in_tin_image

FOUR men have been jailed in the UK for their part in smuggling drugs from Alicante on the Costa Blanca.

The men from Manchester were caught red handed with £800,000 worth of cannabis. They have been sentenced to a combined 13 years and nine months in prison. 

Daniel Gore, 41, Javid Ahmed, 49, John Arnold, 56, and Scott Hoolighan, 36, were arrested in February 2018 when 110 kilos of cannabis was intercepted in a flatbed van by National Crime Agency offficers as it was transported from Northolt, London to Manchester.

Cannabis_in_tin_image
Cannabis was hidden inside catering tins labelled ‘Panko Breadcrumbs’

The group attempted to evade detection by swapping between flatbed vans midway through their journey and stopping and starting at various points. They communicated throughout using encrypted mobile telephone devices.

The drugs had been concealed within industrial sized tins labelled ‘Panko Breadcrumbs’ and had been transported from Alicante, Spain by a legitimate haulier before being collected in London by the group.

The plot was aided by an Albanian crime group based in the Spanish city.

Two other men, who investigators believe were involved in the importation, fled the UK immediately following the seizure and remain wanted.

Ringleader Gore pleaded guilty to conspiring to import and supply class B drugs in November 2019.

Hoolighan, Arnold and Ahmed were found guilty of conspiring to supply class B drugs following two separate trials at Manchester Crown Court.

Gore was sentenced to five years in prison and Hoolighan to three years and nine months.

Arnold and Ahmed were both jailed for two years.

Nigel Coles, Operations Manager, NCA, said: “We have prevented the successful importation of a sizeable amount of cannabis, preventing those involved from selling in the UK, and ensuring they were brought to account.

“The profits made from illegal drugs are often re-invested into other forms of serious and organised crime, fuelling violence and exploitation.”

“The NCA continues to target organised crime groups seeking to profit from international drug supply.”

Dilip Kuner

Dilip Kuner is a NCTJ-trained journalist whose first job was on the Folkestone Herald as a trainee in 1988.
He worked up the ladder to be chief reporter and sub editor on the Hastings Observer and later news editor on the Bridlington Free Press.
At the time of the first Gulf War he started working for the Sunday Mirror, covering news stories as diverse as Mick Jagger’s wedding to Jerry Hall (a scoop gleaned at the bar at Heathrow Airport) to massive rent rises at the ‘feudal village’ of Princess Diana’s childhood home of Althorp Park.
In 1994 he decided to move to Spain with his girlfriend (now wife) and brought up three children here.
He initially worked in restaurants with his father, before rejoining the media world in 2013, working in the local press before becoming a copywriter for international firms including Accenture, as well as within a well-known local marketing agency.
He joined the Olive Press as a self-employed journalist during the pandemic lock-down, becoming news editor a few months later.
Since then he has overseen the news desk and production of all six print editions of the Olive Press and had stories published in UK national newspapers and appeared on Sky News.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

red tape
Previous Story

If you want to remain in Spain legally you’d better get a move on!

mortgage
Next Story

NO CHANCE: Spanish youngsters need to double their incomes to be able to afford a mortgage

Latest from Costa Blanca

Go toTop

More From The Olive Press