A gang of drug dealers who flooded cocaine and cannabis into Worcestershire and Herefordshire have been sentenced to a total of 94 years and four months at crown court.

Paul Bailey of Redditch was sentenced to 20 years at Worcester Crown Court yesterday (Monday 31 March).

His sentence is the final one in a complex and lengthy investigation by the Regional Organised Crime Unit for the West Midlands Region (ROCUWM) called Operation Pyrogenic which has seen other gang members sentenced at earlier court appearances.

Six of them were convicted of conspiracy to supply 10 kilograms of and cocaine 20 kilograms of cannabis and were dealt with as follows: –

  • Paul Bailey, 56, of Jersey Close, Redditch was sentenced to 20 years.
  • Jamie Worrall, 38, of Sandicliffe Close, Kidderminster, was previously sentenced to 17 years on Wednesday 6 November.
  • Arron Adams, 39, of Boughton Avenue, Worcester was sentenced to 22 years on 6 November.
  • Adam Nicholls, 42, of Weyburn Close, Worcester was sentenced to 23 years on 6 November.
  • Nicola Everton, 37, of Hindlip, Worcester was sentenced to six years on 6 November.
  • Phillip Smith, 57, of Gregorys Bank, Worcester was sentenced to 6 years 4 months on Friday 8 November.
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Another accomplice – Shaun Carr, 39, of Woodmancote, Worcester was given a 10-month sentence, suspended for 12 months after being found guilty of money laundering on 6 November.

Operation Pyrogenic was a ROCUWM proactive operation into the large-scale supply of cocaine and cannabis into Worcestershire, Herefordshire and the West Midlands area.

The operation took place between April 2020 and July 2021 revealing the gang operated a large-scale middle market drugs supply chain and were involved in the sourcing, distribution and selling of drugs which reached as far as Lincolnshire and Devon.

This organised crime group used encrypted mobile phone devices on a platform based in France called ‘Encro-chat’ to organise the supply of cannabis and cocaine which were infiltrated and deciphered by the National Crime Agency (NCA).

Bailey, Adams, Nicholls, Worrall, Everton, and Smith used these devices to orchestrate the multi-kilo supply of cannabis and cocaine into the region. They continued to operate after the Encro-chat network had been infiltrated by police using other encrypted communication applications.

On July 9, 2020, Everton was arrested by police with a kilogram of cocaine in her vehicle on the M5 near junction 6. On January 6, 2021, police arrested Bailey, Adams, Nicholls and Smith at their home addresses.

During searches of the addresses, imagery was found to assist in the attribution of the Encro-chat handles. Nicholls foolishly sent an image of his computer with his reflection on it over the Encro-chat under one of the user handles.

On 27 October 2020, Carr was arrested by officers at junction 2 on the M5 with ÂŁ17,000 in a plastic shopping bag.

They found one of Nicholls’ fingerprints on this bag. Police seized numerous mobile phones after the conspirators had been arrested.

On Smith’s mobile phone, police found evidence of drug supply and conversations between him and other conspirators about the movement of drugs.

Carr, Smith, Bailey, Everton and Worrall all pleaded guilty prior to trial. After a three-week trial at Worcester Crown Court a jury took less than six hours of deliberation to find Adams and Nicholls guilty of the conspiracy on 6 November.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Cooke from ROCUWM, said: “This is a fantastic result following a complex investigation. The team have successfully taken a large number of drugs off the streets and put this group who caused misery in our communities behind bars for a very long time.

“Drugs ruin lives and poison communities and we remain dedicated to breaking supply lines through our region.

“These offenders are ruthless and think nothing of exploiting vulnerable people, putting them at risk of serious harm, while they sit back and count the money.

“These sentences send a strong message that drug dealers will be caught, and they face many years in prison.

“We will continue to strive to keep drugs off our streets and protect vulnerable people.”