A DAWN raid aimed to smash a drugs gang suspected of forcing up to 40 children to deal cannabis and cocaine in Kingsdown School.
Police arrested a 27-year-old man thought to be the ringleader of the Stratton drugs network. Officers found cannabis and dealing kit, including deal bags and scales.
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Sgt Nathan Perry, who planned the 7am raid, said: “We found the person we’re looking for, we’ve managed to safeguard the children who were at risk and we’ve found drugs.
“We all know about County Lines and the risks associated with that. The difficulty with this type of drugs operation is that it’s specifically targeting very young children in order to get them to deal drugs.
“Some of the information we’ve been passed is that children are not only being coerced into this activity, but they’re also being physically threatened. If they go to police or teachers they’ll be harmed.”
Police were said to have been alerted to the gang at Kingsdown School. A pair of older boys, both 16, are believed to have been supplying a network of up to 40 children in their mid-teens at the Swindon school.
It is suspected girls as young as 14 have been pestered for sex in exchange for cocaine.
A man, 27, was arrested during the morning raid on Cowleaze Walk, near the Meadowcroft Community Centre, on suspicion of being concerned in the supply of class B drugs and inciting a child to engage in sexual activity.
The raid came as Swindon police focused their sights on modern slavery. On Tuesday, officers visited car washes in Stratton and Penhill to check workers’ papers and raise awareness of the signs of forced labour.
Nationally, police have increasingly turned to modern slavery laws to target drug dealers who force children and vulnerable adults to peddle their product.
Sgt Perry said those convicted could expect sentences of up to 15 years imprisonment: “You’ve got children being exploited and young kids being forced to run the drugs. We will take it seriously.
“The sheer nature of the exploitation of these young people is unacceptable. If we don’t do something to stop that they’re potentially going to be at risk for the rest of their lives.
“Unfortunately, those children that are at risk now become the suspects of tomorrow and we lose them completely. They need that positive engagement and we’re not going to be able to do that until we remove their handlers, for want of a better word.”
If children start becoming more withdrawn, secretive about their possessions and start acquiring cash and expensive clothes without explanation, it could be a sign they are being exploited by the gangs.
Update: The 27-year-old has been released under investigation, Wiltshire Police said. He was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in the supply of class B drugs and inciting a child to engage in sexual activity.
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