The Anglo-Albanian cocaine group in Birmingham sentenced to 165 years in prison

A British court has sentenced the Anglo-Albanian cocaine group in Birmingham to 165 years in prison, responsible for trading millions of pounds worth first class drugs. The structured criminal group of 12 people -- Albanian and English -- but led by a 33-year-old Albanian -- had extended the drug distribution network to [...]
The Oxford Court has sentenced the Albanian leader of a criminal drug distribution network to 25 years in prison.
33-year-old Erald Mema, who, according to the local press, had been living in England since 2003 to study, has been found guilty because earlier, 12 of his associates in this structured group, 10 men and 2 women, had pleaded guilty to cocaine supplies at a value of several million pounds, broadcast Tch.
In total, the sentence for members of this Anglo-Albanian group goes to 165 years of freedom for their criminal activity, including the first-class drug trade in central England, and the cities of Birmingham, Bristol, Oxfield and London.
One of the leaders of the group, the English man Khalad Wooddin, who served as a national co-ordinator for drug distribution, sentenced to 16 years in prison, was caught half a million pounds in cash while he lived a very luxurious life.
Condemning the leader of the group, Albanian Mema, who denied the charges, Judge Ross, addressed him by word; ” You are a rare case, you are the main man in this organised criminal operation. No one who reads newspapers or watches news on television has any doubt that a criminal enterprise like yours causes violence, even serious, involving weapons and knives”.
Films and surveys of meetings and phone conversations under operation “were shown during the trial process, starting three months ago. Stingray”
The British press has long discussed extending the criminal activity of Albanian drug groups from London to other parts of Britain, as in central England, as confirmed by this trial.











