02/10/2015

Two Men Guilty Of Major Drug Import And Distribution Business

Two men in their 50s have been found guilty of running a multi-million pound drug import and distribution business from a storage unit in Essex and selling class A and B substances to dealers around the UK.

Gary Vick, 58, from Rainham and Paul Knight, 52, from Canvey Island were tracked down after a consignment of drugs was discovered by Border Force officers at Birmingham International Airport in March 2013, in 12 boxes that were being transported by courier from the Netherlands.

The boxes contained more than 90 kilos of class A and B substances, including heroin, cocaine, MDMA and cannabis.

Investigators then followed the load as it was delivered to a storage unit in Dagenham. Vick was arrested after signing for the packages. At the time of his arrest he was on the phone to Knight, who had rented the unit.

CCTV showed both men had been there regularly. They were often seen handing boxes similar to those picked up at Birmingham Airport to other visitors to the site.

Twenty other consignments, weighing a total of around 1.7 tonnes, had been shipped from the Netherlands to the address in Dagenham in the preceding two months. Phone evidence showed both men were at or near the site on the days the consignments were delivered.

Knight vanished, but was located in October 2013 following an appeal by the National Crime Agency on the BBC's Crimewatch programme and in local media in the Essex area.

He would later plead guilty to importation charges. Gary Vick was found guilty on 14 September 2015 following a trial at Chelmsford Crown Court.

On Thursday 01 October Knight was jailed for ten years, while Vick was handed a six year prison sentence.

Knight was also handed a Serious Crime Prevention Order limiting his future use of phones, computers and the internet.

NCA branch commander Jacque Beer said: "This has been a long and painstaking investigation, but it has resulted in the imprisonment of two men who were heavily involved in importing drugs into the UK.

"Knight and Vick acted as wholesalers, using the fast parcel courier system to bring in the drugs and then distributing them on to dealers around the south east.

"The load recovered in March 2013 on its own would have had a potential street value of almost £4.75 million, but we estimate that these men were likely to have been involved in importing tens of millions of pounds worth."

(MH/CD)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

29 January 2008
Wife Guilty Of Anti-Freeze Murder Bid
A seventh wedding anniversary celebration with a difference has left a man blind and deaf. Lee Knight also suffered brain damage and kidney failure, after his wife, Kate, poisoned him with anti-freeze, She has now been found guilty of attempted murder.
09 November 2011
Know Your Overseas Shopping Limit
Customs and Excise have issued advise for those engaging in overseas shopping this year to stop shoppers getting fined for overdoing it.
28 February 2008
Curry Poisoner Jailed For 30 Years
A woman who attempted to kill her husband by putting anti-freeze in his curry has been jailed for 30 years. Kate Knight, 28, was found guilty of the attempted murder of her 38-year-old husband Lee at Stafford Crown Court last month.
21 January 2010
Caution Over Unemployment Dip
An unprecedented fall in UK unemployment could be reversed before the summer, Government ministers have warned. Figures released by the Office of National Statistics yesterday, showed a 7,000 drop in joblessness, a 15,000 drop in the claimant count and a 7,600 drop in the youth claimant count last month.
30 March 2009
Slumdog Director Wins Further Accolade
A major awards ceremony last night saw several stars of the British film world dominating the prestigious event. The Jameson Empire Awards brought together Hollywood actors and small screen personalities as well as household names from showbusiness at the glittering event in London last night.