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Dealer jailed for trafficking children in ‘county lines’ drug operation

Zakaria Mohammed is thought to have made £500 daily from ‘cynical’ exploitation

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Zakaria Mohammed

A drug dealer who trafficked three children including a teenage girl to use in a “county lines” crack and heroin selling ring has been jailed for 14 years after a landmark prosecution.

Birmingham-based Zakaria Mohammed, 21, recruited the vulnerable youngsters to extend his drugs network to Lincoln, but was caught after two missing 15-year-old boys were found in a squalid and freezing flat in January.

Mohammed, from Trinity Road, Aston, is thought to be the first drug dealer convicted in Britain for breaching the Modern Slavery Act by trafficking children.  One of his victims was a 14-year-old girl.

County lines gangs recruit children from cities and send them to provincial towns to sell drugs.

Police said Mohammed, who admitted four counts of possessing drugs with intent to supply and five counts of human trafficking, raked in £500 a day in profit by organising the sale of crack cocaine and heroin from premises in Lincoln, which were raided on January 25.

Although no drugs were found at the property in Yarborough Road, police recovered knives and cash, leading them to believe it was being used as a base to supply around 100 local addicts.

A surveillance operation identified a Seat Leon registered to Mohammed making regular trips from Birmingham, often accompanied by teenagers, to an address in Foster Street, Lincoln.

West Midlands Police seized the vehicle for having no insurance in February, discovering a phone used to run the drugs line – known as “Castro” – and clothing including school trousers and a school tie belonging to a missing child from Birmingham.

Cash found at an address linked to Zakaria Mohammed during the police inquiry into the trafficking of children. (West Midlands Police/PA)
Cash found at an address linked to Zakaria Mohammed (West Midlands Police/PA)

A drink bottle and a Ribena carton recovered from the Seat returned a DNA match to two other 15-year-old boys who had disappeared from the city.

Officers from Lincolnshire Police recorded video evidence of children passing drugs to punters – often completing deals every 10 or 15 minutes – and swooped on the flat in Foster Street on February 12.

Three 15-year-old boys, all reported as missing from Birmingham, were found inside the one-bed flat with two known class A drug users.

A total of 25 wraps of heroin and crack cocaine were recovered, plus cash and two so-called zombie knives.

Mohammed pleaded guilty after officers also recovered CCTV from Birmingham New Street station, showing him buying train tickets for two children to travel to Lincoln.

Both youngsters – a boy aged 15 and a 14-year-old girl who had been reported missing – were found when officers from Lincolnshire and West Midlands Police raided a property in Hermit Street, Lincoln, on April 6.

Drug dealing
Police surveillance footage showed youths dealing drugs, concealing wraps in their mouths, before the contraband changed hands. (West Midlands Police/PA)

Passing sentence at Birmingham Crown Court, Judge Nicholas Webb, said: “The fact is the children were being taken away for days or weeks, exposed to potential danger in a squalid environment.”

Addressing Mohammed, sat in the court dock in a grey tracksuit, on Thursday the judge added: “Your role was significant – you were a trusted lieutenant, a trusted driver who drove or took them (the children) by train.

“Others, more senior, would liaise with the children and arrange for you to meet them.

“You were told where to go and what to do and you were doing it to pay off a (drugs) debt.

“But your role was pivotal. Somebody had to be trusted to get the children and the drugs for supply in place, and that person was you.”

Mohammed, he added, had been part of a “lucrative enterprise” which had seen the children exploited, living in “squalid conditions” and away from their families, often out of contact, for lengthy periods.

Acknowledging there was no evidence the children were forced or threatened by Mohammed, Judge Webb added: “Your contribution was to exploit their vulnerability.”

Afterwards, Detective Constable Max Gebhard, of West Midlands Police, said: “The ‘Castro’ drugs line number was changed four times in a bid to avoid detection by the police.

“Each time a mass text message would be sent out to its scores of users alerting them to the new number on which to place orders – and when those orders came in Mohammed would contact the children to fulfil the deals.

“This is a hugely significant conviction for West Midlands Police and law enforcement as a whole across the UK.

“It shows that we can go after county lines offenders not just for drug supply but also under trafficking legislation due to them exploiting children.”

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