Gregory
King, 26, was convicted of conspiracy to supply controlled drugs and
encouraging or assisting the supply of a class A controlled drug at the
Old Bailey on Thursday
....'moved 50 kilos of benzocaine in just one transaction, compared to world’s biggest pharmaceutical company, Glaxo Smith Klein, which used just 25 kilos for its entire global production last year.'
Gregory
King, 26, would blend bulking agents in grubby lockup, making so much
that he had to use a mini-cement mixer to break up slabs of
chemicals.
Read the story here ...
....'moved 50 kilos of benzocaine in just one transaction, compared to world’s biggest pharmaceutical company, Glaxo Smith Klein, which used just 25 kilos for its entire global production last year.'
The agents, which included be benzocaine, paracetamol, caffeine and lidocaine, were then sold online for huge profits.
King, from Wetherby, West Yorkshire,
claimed he had legitimate clients and was selling to research
pharmacists, dentists and laboratories at £100-per-kilo.
But he was found guilty of conspiracy
to supply controlled drugs and encouraging the supply of Class A drugs
at the Old Bailey on Thursday.
Judge Anuja Dhir QC said he faces an inevitable jail term when he is sentenced on May 6.
King was arrested after Desmond Bellamy, 33, was stopped having collected a 50 kilo purchase from King’s lockup.
He was alleged to have said to pass on
25 kilos to a henchman of London-based Alfred Henaj and Renato Pulaj,
both 35, before continuing on to Southampton.
Bellamy was arrested at a service station on the M3 in June 2014 with 25 kilos of benzocaine and $5,000 (£3,500) in cash.
He was acquitted of drugs charges after
insisting he had no idea of the contents of the barrels he had
collected from King’s lockup and that he never asked questions of his
mysterious boss.
Henaj was found guilty of conspiracy to
supply controlled drugs and also faces a lengthy jail term, while
Pulaj was acquitted of all charges.
Benzocaine, although not illegal, is
the cutting agent of choice for cocaine dealers because it can be used
at a ratio of 50/50 with no loss of quality.
Like cocaine, the antiseptic has a mild numbing effect, and is commonly used in very small quantities in mouth gels.
Prosecutor Janet Weeks said: ‘Glaxo
Smith Klein, which is the world’s biggest supplier used 25 kilos in
their entire global production last year. That gives you an idea of its
use in very, very diluted quantities.
Benzocaine
is a mild local anesthetic which is commonly used in throat tablets
and gels - it is favoured by cocaine producers as it does not affect
the quality of the drug. Paracetamol is also used to cut cocaine,
making smaller amounts of the drug go further
‘Mr King, in just one day, was selling 50 kilos and over the period of the indictment you’re looking at nearly 1.5 tonnes.’
King claimed he was supplying to laboratories and research pharmacists and also to manufacturers of legal highs.
But King had previous warnings from the
Serious Crime Agency about his activities, after they had seized
shipments addressed to him from UK ports and airports, jurors heard.
Despite the warnings, King set up a new website, Benz Shop Ltd, in July 2012, which only sold Benzocaine.
His lockup was coated in dust and he used a grubby mini-cement mixer and a trowel to break up the chemical.
Ms Weeks said: ‘Because of the way he
stores his chemicals, the Crown says it is clear he has no legitimate
clients who needed their chemicals to be in an uncontaminated form.’
‘It was going to class A drug suppliers who have no concern for the health consequences of the end user.’
Father-of-three King is expected to get a prison sentence when he returns to court on May 6
Bellamy was arrested after driving all
the way to the West Yorkshire market town of Wetherby from Southampton
to collect 50 kilos of the chemical.
He took his partner and three daughters
along for the ride and said he didn’t get suspicious when his boss
asked him to make a diversion to London on the way home to meet two
unnamed men.
He was directed to the top storey of a Morrison’s car park in Holloway, where he handed over 25 kilos to two henchmen of Henaj.
He claimed the $5,000 (£3,500) found in his glove box was from a loan shark, and was not payment for the cutting agent.
Bellamy became distressed when Ms Weeks referred to his beloved car as ‘old’ and had to be soothed by the judge.
He said ‘That’s low, that’s enough,
insulting my car, that’s low,’ and insisted his wheels were known all
over Southampton because of the fancy Lexus strip lights he’d had
fitted.
King, of Wetherby, West Yorkshire, was
convicted of conspiracy to supply controlled drugs and encouraging or
assisting the supply of a class A controlled drug. He was acquitted of
two similar charges.
Bellamy, of Southampton, was acquitted
of encouraging or assisting the supply of class A controlled drugs and
conspiracy to supply class A drugs, but convicted of possessing
criminal property.
Henaj,
of north London, was convicted of conspiracy to supply controlled
drugs. Pulaj, of the same address, was acquitted of the same charge,
while both were acquitted of a further charge of encouraging or
assisting the supply of controlled drugs.
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