Read Gangs Online

Authors: Tony Thompson

Tags: #True Crime, #Organized crime, #General

Gangs (29 page)

Huge quantities smuggled in from abroad or grown on the secret farms are distributed to the coffee shops by gangsters, who sell off the excess to anyone who can afford it. Certain coffee shops – like the one Jason had pointed out to me – are particularly well known for this. Providing you know the owner, you are allowed to enter via the rear door and make your way up to the office above the main bar where you can negotiate for as many kilos as you like of whatever you fancy.
Living on the edge of criminality, Jason first got involved when he started selling puff for a notorious local villain, Syd. ‘Selling the stuff had shown me how easy it was to make a little bit of money at that end and I knew that the profits from smuggling were going to be much higher. Syd seemed to be doing very well out of it and I wanted some of what he had.
‘But Syd had doubts. He was worried about the fact that, at the time, I’d never been abroad in my life – I’d only got a passport for the first time a week or so earlier. He’d decided to stick to his usual team but then Fate lent a helping hand. One of the crew, a guy called Paul, got himself arrested for breaching a warrant banning him from entering Belgium. He had just been caught out by a routine Customs check as he was getting off the boat and they discovered he was the subject of a ten-year ban. It all meant that the gang was one man short for the next trip so Syd called on me.
‘We met up with another member of the team, Peter, and made our way to Folkestone. On the way Syd told me that he wanted me to go to Amsterdam with him to meet John, his main contact over there because, with Paul in prison, I’d be making the trips over there to complete the first stage in the smuggling process.
‘All I had to do was to pick up the drugs in Amsterdam, having negotiated a good price, then drive them all the way to Belgium – there’s no border between the two countries so I didn’t have to worry about being stopped unless I did something really silly or I was just plain unlucky. Once in Belgium, Syd would meet me at the beach in his specially adapted speedboat. I’d load the drugs in and he’d set off back to England where he would make for a secluded beach and meet his friend Jack, who would help to unload the drugs. Once Syd was on his way, I’d be free to make my own way back on the ferry and, even if I did get stopped and searched, there would be nothing to incriminate me. I have to admit, it sounded like a pretty good plan and the two grand a time he promised me for the work sounded even better.
‘We got to Folkestone and Syd pulled out a bundle of cash from his bag to cover the cost of the tickets. “How much you got in there anyway?” I said, as a joke, really. Syd looked at me. “Eighty grand.” He said it so casually, I tried not to sound like I’d never seen that much money before in my life. “Oh. Right. Drinks are on you, then.” I guess until that point I hadn’t realised the scale of his operation.
‘We finally got to Ostend in the early hours of the morning and I drove all the way to Amsterdam along the coast road. By the time we pulled into the centre of the city and Syd told me where to park, I was absolutely knackered.
‘We walked to the café, which is on a road that runs parallel to the Damrak and nearly opposite a police station. When we arrived John wasn’t there and we waited in the bar. The place was full of English blokes just like us, none of whom were smoking. And in every group, there would be one bloke holding a bag just a little bit too carefully. And slowly I realised that everyone there had come to do a deal.
‘This tall blond guy with a pushbike arrived and put his head through the door. He saw the three of us sitting there, stared at us for a minute, and then came over and introduced himself. Syd and John were being really friendly – over-friendly. It was obvious that they hadn’t actually met before. John had been in prison in Britain at the same time as Syd and they had been put in touch with each other through a mutual friend.
‘John invited us all upstairs to the flat above the café. The place was full of masses of video equipment with loads of cameras trained on the café below. Apart from that, the room was very basic with a large table, one big corner sofa, a couple of chairs and a ski-machine for exercising.
‘We all sat around drinking coffee and chatting about drugs and exchange rates because everything there was bought in guilders. He also explained that he had no drugs for us to buy and could not say when there might be some as there was currently a shortage across the whole of Amsterdam. He simply didn’t know whether it would be soon or not. Syd decided that he couldn’t take the money with him back to England so he decided to leave it with John – I guess he trusted the guy completely by then. It was left that John would contact Syd, and I would go over and do the deal with John to ensure the exchange rate was correct.
‘A couple of days later, Syd rang to say that the drugs were ready to be picked up. It was time to go abroad again. I drove over to Syd’s and then followed him in his car to the pub where we had met Pete the last time round. The three of us then went to a cashpoint in Clacton where Syd took out two hundred and fifty pounds – money to cover our expenses.
‘It was another overnight ferry so it was nearly ten a.m. the following morning when we met John in Amsterdam. We agreed a price of £1150 per kilo, which gave us just under seventy kilos of top-quality cannabis resin. The drugs themselves weren’t kept at the café so we had to wait for them to be brought to us. One of John’s business partners pulled up outside the café in a brand new Merc about three hours later with the drugs in his boot. Rather than just taking them there and then, I asked him to guide me to the main road out of the city so I didn’t end up driving round in circles for hours. Once I knew where I was, he pulled over and we swapped the drugs over from the boot of his car to mine and then I set off towards Belgium.
‘We only made one stop on the way – at a payphone to call Syd and let him know that we were on our way to Blankenberg. He had a four-hour journey across the English Channel and wasn’t particularly keen to leave unless he knew we definitely had the goods. I could hear the excitement in his voice as I told him that everything was fine and that we’d meet up with him as planned. It was the first time he had done any proper smuggling since he’d been sent to prison back in 1990. As far as he was concerned, the good old days were back again.
‘We made really good time and got to Blankenberg about three hours early. The area had been chosen because it had a perfect ready-made smuggling spot that Syd had taken advantage of many times in the past. If you stand on the pier and look out to sea, on your left is a beautiful, ten-mile-long sandy beach. On your right there are three or four really ugly great concrete pipes, which take sewage or something into the sea. The pipes stick up out of the water a good few feet and Syd was planning to bring the boat up by the second pipe on the right. That way he’d be hidden from the beach and the pier.’
The pair had been given a Marine Band radio to communicate with Syd once he got within range. Although he had a satellite-navigation system on the boat it was only accurate to within twenty metres and he would need guidance for the final approach. Jason and Peter planned to flash a torch out to sea to help Syd find their position.
‘We soon saw the silhouette of the boat come into view, packed all the drugs in and then Peter climbed on board. Syd turned to me, a big grin on his face. “Call Jack, tell him that it’s all going to plan.” The boat had come so far into shore that it had virtually been grounded, I had to push it back out to sea and the water was coming up to my chest. I pushed the boat as hard as I could but it just couldn’t seem to break free of the waves that were pushing it back to shore. Then suddenly, the propeller caught and it shot off into the darkness. I was soaking wet and walked slowly back to the car where I changed into my tracksuit bottoms and trainers. It was absolutely freezing and so was the water, but I was so worked up with the adrenaline that I couldn’t feel the cold at all. I was shaking, but it was with excitement. All my nerves and fear had gone and all I could think was, Fuck, I’ve done it. I’ve got away with it. I’ve got to admit, it was a great feeling.’
Jason made the short drive from Blankenberg to Ostend, arriving just in time to learn that he had missed the last ferry. The next one didn’t leave until seven the following morning, which in turn meant he would not be at home until the middle of the following afternoon. Not wanting to spend the night in his car he decided instead to drive to Calais where a ferry to Dover would be leaving at two thirty a.m.
‘When I reached the French-Belgian border, I got pulled over by one of the guards and asked where I was going. They searched my car and found my wet clothes in the boot and asked what I’d been up to. I was feeling confident and cocky – after all, there was nothing to link me to any kind of drug-smuggling. I had nothing to fear. I told the guard that I’d been playing around in the sea earlier that day and I’d missed the last ferry home from Ostend so I decided to go back via Calais so that I’d still be home the following morning. He looked a bit suspicious but checked my passport, ran my name through the computer and let me go.
‘I got to Calais and, on my way to the boat, I got pulled over by French Customs. “Fucking hell,” I said. “I’ve already been searched once tonight.” The guy’s face didn’t even break into a grin let alone a smile. “Not by me you haven’t.” He proceeded to give the car a really good going-over but, of course, couldn’t find anything so he let me get on the boat. I tried to get to sleep on the ferry but I couldn’t because the crossing was so rough. Once we got to Dover, the only thing on my mind was getting back home and going to bed as quickly as possible.
‘I drove the car off through Customs and, as sod’s law would have it, I got pulled over again. I was so tired, so totally exhausted, that I just couldn’t handle it. I freaked out. I was swearing and shouting and going on about the fact that I must have some kind of guilty sign stamped on my forehead because I’d been pulled over twice already. In the end I think they felt sorry for me. They just photocopied my passport and let me go home.
‘We did another run a few weeks later, then another, and before I knew it I felt like a veteran. When it came to the fifth time Peter was off on holiday so Syd wanted me to find someone to go to Amsterdam with me – I’d be running the whole thing. It also meant I’d be the one going back in the boat. For my trouble I’d get double the usual fee.
‘The next day Syd gave me seventy grand and strict instructions to try and get grass rather than resin, even though it was bulkier and a lot harder to handle. There was, of course, method in his madness. Syd charged three hundred pounds per kilo to import drugs. It didn’t matter what he was importing, that was the amount he charged. Because grass was a bit cheaper per kilo than resin, it meant we came back with an extra thirty or so kilos, which meant that Syd earned an extra nine thousand for taking exactly the same risk. Clever boy, old Syd.
‘I took my mate Christian and we got the overnight ferry from Felixstowe to Zeebrugge, then drove to Amsterdam. Syd had phoned John a couple of days earlier to tell him to expect me, and within a couple of hours I was heading to Blankenberg with three nylon laundry bags full of grass in the boot of my car.
‘Syd and the boat arrived at the rendezvous at dusk, sticking out like a sore thumb because it wasn’t as dark as it had been the time before. But Christian and I loaded the boat and I got in. I was trying to pretend that I was really cool about it but the truth was I was really excited about being in the boat. I wasn’t disappointed. When we sped off it was the most incredible sensation. There was loads of noise and spray flying up all over the place, and because we were so low down, it felt like we were going at a million miles an hour. Syd was in front and I was directly behind him. The sea was really calm, as flat as a pancake, and in the half-light, you could see for miles. It was like being on some gigantic pond. Absolutely fantastic.
‘After about ten minutes, when we were well out of sight of Blankenberg beach, Syd stopped the boat and started fishing around in a bag. “Here, put this on,” he said, handing me a buoyancy aid. “The weather’s not too clever ahead so you’d better wear it. Unfortunately, I’ve only got the one life-jacket and I’m wearing it.” As I put the buoyancy aid on, I had a good look at Syd. I saw that, as well as the life-jacket, he was wearing a full dry suit – proper boating clothing. He also had a safety line attached to the console so if he fell in, he wouldn’t end up separated from the boat. If I fell in, my waders would fill up with water and I’d sink to the bottom in seconds. All I could do was hold on. And pray.
‘We set off again and Syd told me that, rather than sitting down, I should straddle the seat directly behind him. That way, if the boat left the water for second and came down with a bang, my legs would act like suspension springs. After about half an hour, the land behind me was vanishing fast – and so was my excitement about my first-ever trip in a speedboat. The waves were getting quite rough now and we were bouncing up and down like a trampoline. We’d started out speeding along at about thirty-three knots but now we were down to about twelve knots. I decided the best policy was just to keep my eyes shut and use my ears instead. I knew that when I heard the engine note change it meant the boat had come out of the water and the whole thing was airborne. That was my signal to hold on extra tight and brace myself for the landing.
‘I was concentrating really hard but one time, I don’t know, I must have just lost my focus for a second because I slipped. I just managed to grab the edge to stop myself going over. I was rolling all over the place and I was bawling like a baby until Syd stopped to have a look at what was going on. He switched on a torch and saw immediately that the main fuel tank had split. We couldn’t see the hole but we could see the fuel slowly leaking out. Naturally, I started to panic. After all, I didn’t have Syd’s experience – this was all new to me. But what really freaked me out was that Syd started to panic as well. He said we’d have to sit on the seats – even though it was more dangerous and made the boat less stable – and that we’d have to go as fast as possible to make sure we hit the shore before we ran out of fuel altogether. He reprogrammed the GPS so that we headed for the nearest bit of land rather than the intended landing site. If we could get close enough, he explained, Jack, the man he used to help unload the drugs at the other end, could always come out and get us in his speedboat, but if we ran out of fuel where we were, we’d have to call the coastguard and that would mean dumping seventy grand’s worth of drugs over the side.

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