‘Gangs of sinister, feral young men’ from England fuelling Scotland’s drug deaths, targeting vulnerable women and causing small town violence surges

Professor John Robertson OBA

The Scotsman last week had:

Gangs of sinister, feral young men show why Police Scotland needs extra £140 million – Police Scotland’s Chief Constable Jo Farrell has sounded an alarm that politicians must heed

Just who these young men are where they come from is left out so that readers might think they’re Scots but they’re not.

As far back as 2018, the Liverpool Echo began a run of reports telling exactly where they’re from, with:

How Liverpool’s drug criminals are fuelling Scotland’s gang wars

In 2022: Liverpool drug gangs target Scots towns and cities as police carry out cross-border raids

It goes on. Local media in the Highlands report it accurately as Scotland’s MSM look the other way, for the Union:

In the Strathspey & Badenoch Herald, January 2025, but nowhere in Scotland’s MSM, not even on BBC Scotland’s Highlands & Islands latest news website:

Highland police ‘success’ tackling County Lines drug gangs from Liverpool behind 2023 violence after working with Merseyside cops to tackle the those dealing in the north – In the Strathspey and Badenoch Herald and Inverness Courtier but nowhere in Scotland’s MSM, not even on the BBC Scotland, Highlands and Islands website: Police Scotland’s Highlands and Islands division has expanded the team of “dedicated officers” with the “sole purpose” of tackling County Lines drug gangs – often from the Liverpool area.

County Lines is the now notorious Silk Road of drug trafficking from “major cities such as Birmingham, Derby, Liverpool and London” into rural areas across the UK that has led to misery for many. In his report to councillors Ch Supt Shepherd said: “North Division has also recently expanded its team of dedicated officers with the sole purpose of targeting County Line offenders, working in partnership with Partner agencies and protecting vulnerable persons”.

Those vulnerable people are frequently addicts whose homes are taken over for payment in drugs by those working County Lines routes in a practice known as “Cuckooing”.

https://www.strathspey-herald.co.uk/news/highland-police-success-tackling-county-lines-drug-gangs-f-372737/

Only two weeks ago, the same local newspaper had:

A 29-year-old Huyton man has been jailed for three years and nine months for drugs supply offences in Inverness after he was snared by a joint Police Scotland and Merseyside Police operation. Ryan Finlay pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of cocaine and possession of cannabis through what is called a County Line – a way of transporting illegal narcotics from cities to other parts of the UK.

What is the 2023 violence being referred to?

In Highland Region, from 2018 to 2022, as County Lines gangs have spread from English cities, all over Scotland, all forms of crime have almost trebled from 3 731 to 10 186 and crimes of violence from 88 to 326.

In the same period, across Scotland and crucially including the larger cities where County lines gangs are not able to dominate local drug gangs, overall crime has fallen slightly and crimes of violence have only increased by 2.2%.

https://www.gov.scot/publications/recorded-crime-scotland-2023-24/documents/

Is this a one-way flow from England into Scotland?

See these extracts from Community Experiences of Serious Organised Crime in Scotland:

  • Evidence from drug market research and policing suggests that the most common route for illicit commodities into Scotland is through the open border with England, with major drug supply routes entering the country by road and rail.
  • The profitability of the heroin trade has however led to an increase in SOC groups from England penetrating markets in north and rural Scotland. These groups use road, train, and bus routes to create steady supply routes in these areas, effectively ‘bypassing’ the traditional groups in Scotland’s central belt and directly accessing other markets in rural areas. A police officer noted the regularity of the trade, with ‘young people or low-level patsies acting as couriers’.
  • There’s an awful lot of folk coming up from [city in north England] and they’ll target a house, they’ll basically just come into the house and, and they’ll take over the house while they’re dealing their drugs and giving that tenant what they need so they can use their house and that… The best explanation that I’ve heard is [in] our area, there’s not a firm, like, family that’s in control of the drugs. So they’re just coming up and taking advantage of that (Police Officer, National Diffuse).’
  • They [OCGs in the local area] are linked to a group in the north [of England] … the group have not come up to supplant the indigenous group as there are no turf wars. Rather they co-operate with drug supply, but also collaborate on some other criminal activities… [they] had a guy living in the area. What the group added was increased capacity in terms of supply and sourcing drugs and increased flexibility in terms of moving drugs north (Police Officer, National Diffuse). https://www.gov.scot/binaries/content/documents/govscot/publications/research-and-analysis/2018/06/community-experiences-serious-organised-crime-scotland/documents/00536071-pdf/00536071-pdf/govscot%3Adocument/00536071.pdf

Why are Scotland’s MSM, especially the national broadcaster, BBC Scotland, not covering such topics?

These stories have all the essential features of a newsworthy story. Most journalists are familiar with the seven ‘news values’ held by news media gatekeepers – impact, timeliness, prominence, proximity, bizarreness, conflict, and currency.

‘English drug gangs terrorising locals’ has them all so there has to be some other powerful factor causing editors to turn away from it. Does it undermine the argument that we are better together in the UK in quite a visceral thus powerful way?

In Glasgow and surrounding areas – Lanarkshire, Dunbartonshire, Inverclyde – non-sexual crimes of violence have increased but only by less than 10%.

In sharp contrast, the increases in such crime, in smaller towns, on or easily accessed from the main east coast rail lines from England, from 2018-2022, are shocking:

  • Borders – 78%
  • East Lothian – 47%
  • West Lothian – 53%
  • Perth & Kinross – 70%
  • Fife – 54%
  • Angus – 94%
  • Aberdeenshire – 71%
  • Moray – 96%

BBC Scotland alone refuses to cover this.

Source: https://datamap-scotland.co.uk/category/crime/

Finally on the targeting of vulnerable women:





BBC Highlands and Islands have the above and:

County lines gangs are forcing vulnerable women into joining networks supplying crack cocaine and heroin to the Highlands and Islands, a senior detective has warned. Det Ch Insp Craig Still said criminal groups based in major UK cities were sending associates north to co-ordinate drug dealing.

He told BBC Scotland‘s Scotcast that the suspects were often young men known for violent offences in their home cities.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy0xdxdl40o

Funnily enough, Det Ch Insp Still seems to have said something a wee bit different, more geographically precise, to the ears of the Daily Record reporter listening to the same interview:

They tend to be individuals who have been through the justice system IN ENGLANDmay have convictions for violence. They may have gang connections and they may regularly be in possession of weapons.” https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/gangsters-sending-teen-drug-dealers-to-terrorise-highlands-as-overdose-deaths-rise/ar-AA1MZ4Mx?ocid=BingNewsSerp

Funny that, eh? It’s almost as if BBC Scotland have an agenda.

Talking-up Scotland's special crowd funder has closed but you can support at any time at: https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/checkout/help-talking-up-scotland-tell-truth-about-scotland/payment/nBQxjVzq/details or by direct bank transfer method - Bernadette/John Robertson, Sort code 08-91-04, Account 12266421

9 thoughts on “‘Gangs of sinister, feral young men’ from England fuelling Scotland’s drug deaths, targeting vulnerable women and causing small town violence surges

    1. ?? You can unsubscribe from the blog if you really want, or in Word Press settings you should be able to opt for no or fewer emails…and to not see comments via emails. Though on a mobile phone might be more complicated, hmm, that’s why I don’t use mine for anything other than texts and calls.

      Like

  1. Keep up the good work! it is indeed a mystery why the public service broadcaster can’t bring themselves to admit that our open border with England comes with a huge social cost.

    Surely people in rural Scotland deserve to know the threat of drug addiction and violence in their towns and villages exists.

    Surely we all deserve to know that the cost of policing and treating this contagion comes from our social budget.

    But that would detract from the impression that we are the “drug capital of Europe” because we are feckless and incapable and not because we are a dependency with no control over drug policy or borders.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Yes indeed it was on England’s watch, when they had full control of Scotland, that Scotland was known as the drug capital of Europe and poor man of Europe…SNP should remind people of that at FMQ’s!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. WE NEED ALL INDY SUPPORTERS TO COME TOGETHER

    AND EXPOSE THESE CRETINS

    THEY TREAT SCOTS AS THE ISRAELIS TREAT PALESTINIANS

    SECONDCLASS PEASANTS

    Like

Leave a reply to matgaretb Cancel reply

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