Latest news with #OperationVenetic


Daily Mirror
4 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Inside Encrochat crime - how drug lords using secret app were caught
More than 200 murders have been stopped since the secret network EncroChat was busted by the National Crime Agency, a top investigator who worked on the major case says With its five-and-a-half-inch screen and homepage apps, it looked like just any other smartphone. But the give-away was the handset's £1,500 retail price, the £1,500-a-month 'line rental' – and the fact it wasn't for sale in any mobile phone shops. The device allowed users to connect to EncroChat – a secret network offering military-grade secrecy that allowed international criminal gangs to chat with apparent impunity. But five years ago today, police made a breakthrough in cracking the network, and British officers began a huge operation to nail the exposed gangsters. Today, the top investigator on the case tells how they believe busting the network helped stop up to 200 murders. And in the last five years, more than 200 hardened criminals have been jailed with sentences totalling 14,000 years. Thousands of people have been arrested, some £83million in ill-gotten gains have been recovered, 175 guns have been seized and eight tons of cocaine – the weight of an Asian elephant – have been taken off the streets. When French and Dutch experts cracked the code for the EncroChat network, Britain's National Crime Agency launched Operation Venetic. They went on to find kingpins brazenly swapping encrypted messages in supposed safety. Detectives, sworn to secrecy, worked around the clock to analyse mountains of data and spy on dangerous crooks. And while they were smashing the drugs gangs, National Crime Agency investigators gained an unprecedented insight into the lives of Britain's biggest criminals. One £45million plot was scuppered after drug lord Danny Brown, 57, shared a picture of his French Bulldog Bob with his partner's phone number on his tag. NCA investigators downloaded the snap and used it to identify Bob's owner. Meanwhile, Carl Stewart, 39, was jailed for 13 years after his fingerprints were analysed from a photo he shared of a block of M&S Stilton, earning him the moniker 'Cheese Man'. Wayne Johns, from the NCA, said: 'There was absolute trust in it [the phone] and that went to the messages. Literally pictures of your tea, Happy Birthday messages, pictures of themselves… 'Here I am in the garden'.' The selfies and messages sent via EncroChat helped police build a picture of who they were tracking and eventually helped to convict them. Other images show guns and even gold bars hoarded by the gangs who used EncroChat. The phones worked on a private network and were completely anonymous so downloaded data had to be matched to real people before arrests could be made. Users could pay extra to customise their phones and having a personalised username became a status symbol. Mr Johns, the senior investigating officer on Operation Venetic, said: 'People were looking for ones affiliated to football clubs or for ones, bizarrely, that attributed to Only Fools and Horses. There's some brilliant names there. You've got Ball-Sniffer and there was one, Terry F***ing Tibbs.' Users trusted the network so much that they discussed every detail of their lives, giving up vital information. Mr Johns added: 'One of my favourite stories – we call him Cheese Man – was a man from the North West who had a penchant for really nice cheese and he was sharing images of them. ''I've just bought this one and it's cost me…' whatever it's cost. On the picture, you can see the profile of his hand and his fingers. We're sat in a room just looking at him and laughing at the banality of what he's sharing. Then, one of the intel team said, 'That's his fingerprint'. And all of a sudden, it's like the light switch.' The team developed an algorithm to go through every picture looking for hands and dog collars. Mr Johns called these 'golden nuggets'. After the arrests started, criminal gangs continued using the phones, thinking it was safe to do so. 'What we did see was a whole series of people questioning absolutely everything except the phones,' Mr Johns said. 'They blamed everything except the device for being the reason the police were able to intervene and prevent somebody from being murdered.' The information shared via the phones will be used as evidence to jail British drug gangs for years to come. And among the data collected before EncroChat was shut down were intimate pictures. Mr Johns said: 'The work we did around identifying fingerprints in the data brought up other appendages that look a little bit like a finger. That gives you an example of the level of trust.' An estimated 50,000 devices were in use worldwide with 10,000 of those based in the UK. After months of negotiation and preparation with law enforcement on the continent, the call finally came announcing that the EncroChat hack was on. The NCA team had no idea how long they would be able to collect data for, so investigators worked night and day to make the most of it… during the pandemic. Mr Johns said: 'In February 2020, Covid is really starting to bite. Police are starting to struggle in terms of what they're being asked to do.' The NCA was the gateway for data from European partners and spread the information to regional crime agencies. Mr Johns added: 'We had to swear people to secrecy. If it was compromised, if we were responsible, we would lose access to the data and effectively be booted out of the group. We were a bit nervous, but everybody saw the opportunity.' Data was collected for 10 weeks over the summer of 2020. Mr Johns went on: 'We recovered 175 guns and over 3,500 rounds of ammunition – proper mass casualty weapons but they're not on the street any more. 'Around £83million of criminal proceeds were seized across the country and nearly eight tons of cocaine. Some 202 people have been convicted to date with 87% of defendants pleading guilty and a 94% conviction rate – at least 14,228 years of sentencing so far. 'We've still got over 500 defendants waiting to go through the courts and this material being relied on. We will always be grateful to our French and Dutch colleagues who were able to provide this capability. 'I fully expect I won't see anything like it again in my career. It's been inspiring. What you saw was a coming together of all of our capabilities behind a common aim. It has been described as the most impactful operation against serious organised crime ever undertaken.'


Daily Record
4 days ago
- Daily Record
Top cop on EncroChat case tells how 'busting the network might have helped stop 200 murders'
When French and Dutch experts cracked the code for the EncroChat network, Britain's National Crime Agency launched Operation Venetic. With its five-and-a-half-inch screen and homepage apps, it looked like just any other smartphone. But the giveaway was the handset's £1500 retail price, the £1500-a-month 'line rental' – and the fact it wasn't for sale in any mobile phone shop. The device allowed users to connect to EncroChat – a secret network offering military-grade secrecy that allowed international criminal gangs to chat with apparent impunity. But five years ago today, police made a breakthrough in cracking the network, and officers began a huge operation to nail the exposed gangsters. Today, the top investigator on the case tells how they believe busting the network helped stop up to 200 murders. And in the last five years, more than 200 hardened criminals have been jailed with sentences totalling 14,000 years. Thousands of people have been arrested, some £83million in ill-gotten gains has been recovered, 175 guns seized and eight tons of cocaine – the weight of an Asian elephant – taken off the streets. When French and Dutch experts cracked the code for the EncroChat network, Britain's National Crime Agency launched Operation Venetic. They went on to find kingpins brazenly swapping encrypted messages in supposed safety. Detectives, sworn to secrecy, worked around the clock to analyse mountains of data and spy on dangerous crooks. And while they were smashing the drugs gangs, National Crime Agency investigators gained an unprecedented insight into the lives of Britain's biggest criminals. One £45million plot was scuppered after drug lord Danny Brown, 57, shared a picture of his French Bulldog Bob with his partner's phone number on his tag. NCA investigators downloaded the snap and used it to identify Bob's owner. Meanwhile, Carl Stewart, 39, was jailed for 13 years after his fingerprints were analysed from a photo he shared of a block of M&S Stilton, earning him the moniker 'Cheese Man'. Wayne Johns, from the NCA, said: 'There was absolute trust in it [the phone] and that went to the messages. Literally pictures of your tea, happy birthday messages, pictures of themselves… 'Here I am in the garden'.' The selfies and messages sent via EncroChat helped police build a picture of who they were tracking and eventually helped to convict them. Other images show guns and even gold bars hoarded by the gangs who used EncroChat. The phones worked on a private network and were completely anonymous so downloaded data had to be matched to real people before arrests could be made. Users could pay extra to customise their phones and having a personalised username became a status symbol. Wayne, the senior investigating officer on Operation Venetic, said: 'People were looking for ones affiliated to football clubs or for ones, bizarrely, that attributed to Only Fools and Horses. 'There's some brilliant names there. You've got Ball-Sniffer and there was one, Terry F***ing Tibbs.' Users trusted the network so much that they discussed every detail of their lives, giving up vital information. Wayne added: 'One of my favourite stories – we call him Cheese Man – was a man from the north-west who had a penchant for really nice cheese and he was sharing images of them. ''I've just bought this one and it's cost me…' whatever it's cost. On the picture, you can see the profile of his hand and his fingers. We're sat in a room just looking at him and laughing at the banality of what he's sharing. 'Then, one of the intel team said, 'That's his fingerprint'. And all of a sudden, it's like the light switch.' The team developed an algorithm to go through every picture looking for hands and dog collars. Wayne called these 'golden nuggets'. After the arrests started, criminal gangs continued using the phones, thinking it was safe to do so. 'What we did see was a whole series of people questioning absolutely everything except the phones,' Wayne said. 'They blamed everything except the device for being the reason the police were able to intervene and prevent somebody from being murdered.' The information shared via the phones will be used as evidence to jail British drug gangs for years to come. Among the data collected before EncroChat was shut down were intimate pictures. Wayne said: 'The work we did around identifying fingerprints in the data brought up other appendages that look a little bit like a finger. 'That gives you an example of the level of trust.' An estimated 50,000 devices were in use worldwide, with 10,000 of them based in the UK. After months of negotiation and preparation with law enforcement on the continent, the call finally came announcing that the EncroChat hack was on. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. The NCA team had no idea how long they would be able to collect data for, so investigators worked night and day to make the most of it during the pandemic. Wayne said: 'In February 2020, Covid is really starting to bite. Police are starting to struggle in terms of what they're being asked to do.' The NCA was the gateway for data from European partners and spread the information to regional crime agencies. Wayne added: 'We had to swear people to secrecy. If it was compromised, if we were responsible, we would lose access to the data and effectively be booted out of the group. 'We were a bit nervous, but everybody saw the opportunity.' Data was collected for 10 weeks over the summer of 2020. Wayne went on: 'We recovered 175 guns and over 3500 rounds of ammunition – proper mass casualty weapons but they're not on the street any more. 'Around £83million of criminal proceeds were seized across the country and nearly eight tons of cocaine. Some 202 people have been convicted to date with 87 per cent of defendants pleading guilty and a 94 per cent conviction rate – at least 14,228 years of sentencing so far. 'We've still got over 500 defendants waiting to go through the courts and this material being relied on. We will always be grateful to our French and Dutch colleagues who were able to provide this capability. 'I fully expect I won't see anything like it again in my career. It's been inspiring. What you saw was a coming together of all of our capabilities behind a common aim. 'It has been described as the most impactful operation against serious organised crime ever undertaken.'


Daily Mail
10-07-2025
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Revealed: The EncroChat messages that got cocaine gang jailed for 65 years as they flooded Britain's streets with £81m of 'Rolex'-branded narcotics
The EncroChat messages that got a gang that smuggled £81milion worth of 'Rolex'-branded narcotics into Britain jailed for 65 years have been revealed. Redon Bushi, 32, from Brentford, west London, was found to be acting as the leader of a widespread cocaine-smuggling group over a number of years. Newly revealed messages sent by the gang leader indicated his plans to supply a minimum of 832kg of cocaine, with a street value of up to £81,640,000, across London and the rest of the UK. Meanwhile, images sent by Bushi also showed a large block of cocaine branded with the word 'Rolex' while another was printed with the numbers '039'. In the EuroChat correspondence one drug smuggler asks Bushi: 'Is it good product?' to which the kingpin responds: 'Yes, it looks good brother. It is not bad at all'. Bushi, who acted under the username 'Sealvermouth' then asks: 'Do you want me to send about 18 over there?'. The messages, revealed by police investigations into the smuggling operation, uncovered how the kingpin had been using encrypted communications platforms EncroChat and Signal to discuss his drug enterprise. Signal is similar to other secure messaging apps such as Telegram, whereas EncroChat was a communication service only accessible via modified 'EncroPhones' and primarily used by organised crime groups. In 2020, Operation Venetic - a joint effort between the UK, France and the Netherlands - infiltrated the platform, leading to thousands of later arrests. Bushi pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs, conspiracy to transfer criminal property and possessing criminal property at Kingston Crown Court. Yesterday, he was sentenced to 24 years and 10 months in prison. Bushi was only caught after Met detectives identified and arrested four other members of his gang by piecing together information from their EncroChat messages and hours of CCTV. In the messages, Bushi is shown to refer to his fellow gang member as 'brother', remarking: 'I have got about 25 pieces' (of narcotics). The gang boss had taken extra steps to protect his dodgy dealings, only providing the couriers with postcodes, times, and a vague description of the customer they would be dropping drugs to. In another message seen by police, Bushi asks an anonymous gang member for the 'password' in order to secure a deal. The gang member answers: 'The password is: cafe' before Bushi replies: 'Coffee, I said to him. Because he is not Albanian, he does not understand cafe'. Arline Sida (pictured), 23, from Amersham, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs on January 17, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was yesterday handed a sentence of 12 years and 9 months Kelvin Hoxha (pictured), 23, from Brentford, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs and driving while disqualified on October 26, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was sentenced to 11 years and 8 months on Wednesday Other tactics used in an attempt to go under the radar included fake identity cards, a van with sophisticated concealment and a camera monitoring the location where they stored the drugs. Despite his efforts, police managed to track down and arrest runner Ahmad Jabarkhill, 32, in June 2020 after stopping one of the vehicles belonging to Bushi's couriers and found him carrying nearly £700,000 in cash. Covert investigations and intelligence were then used to identify three more runners - Arline Sida, 23, Kelvin Hoxha, 23, and Luke Ferguson, 32. In August 2023, Sida and Hoxha were both arrested at an address in Brentford where they were found to be in possession of six kilograms of cocaine. Ferguson was then arrested at a 'safe house' in the same area and was found to be carrying 72kg of cocaine, worth an estimated street value of £6.24million. A manhunt was then launched for Bushi who was evading officers by jumping between different hotels and directing others to check cameras at various addresses for any police snooping around. He had also bought a new phone, different clothing, and was carrying over £3,000 in cash. The gang leader was located and arrested a few days later in Reading. Jabarkhill pleaded guilty to the possession of criminal property at Isleworth Crown Court on July 22, 2020, and was sentenced to two years and three months in jail on the same day. Sida, from Amersham, Buckinghamshire, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs on January 17, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was yesterday handed a sentence of 12 years and 9 months. Hoxha, from Brentford, west London, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs and driving while disqualified on October 26, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was sentenced to 11 years and 8 months on Wednesday. Signal is similar to other secure messaging apps such as Telegram, whereas EncroChat was a communication service only accessible via modified 'EncroPhones' and primarily used by organised crime groups Ferguson, from Shepherd's Bush, west London, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs on November 21, 2024, at Kingston Crown Court and was jailed for 14 years and 5 months. Detective Constable David Leitner, who led the investigation on behalf of the Met, said: 'This case demonstrates our relentlessness in pursuing organised crime, while utilising the unprecedented opportunity that Encrochat represent to its fullest effect. 'Bushi clearly believed that these messaging platforms protected him from law enforcement, but they only served to provide us the very evidence to convict him and his associates. 'This shows the Met's commitment to tackling offenders who are instrumental in supplying drugs to the streets of London.'


Daily Mail
10-07-2025
- Daily Mail
Gang who smuggled £81m of cocaine into Britain as they flooded the streets with class A drugs are jailed for 65 years - after police hacked into their EncroChat messages
A drug smuggling gang who flooded Britain's streets with £81million worth of cocaine have been jailed for a total of 65 years after police hacked into their EncroChat messages. Redon Bushi, 32, from Brentford, west London, was found to be acting as the leader of the group over a number of years. Investigations into his operation revealed the kingpin had been using encrypted communications platform EncroChat and Signal to discuss his drug enterprise. Signal is similar to other secure messaging apps such as Telegram, whereas EncroChat was a communication service only accessible via modified 'EncroPhones' and primarily used by organised crime groups. In 2020, Operation Venetic - a joint effort between the UK, France and the Netherlands - infiltrated the platform, leading to thousands of arrests since. Bushi's messages revealed he had conspired to supply a minimum of 832kg of cocaine, with a street value of up to £81,640,000, across London and the rest of the UK. The kingpin, who acted under the username 'Sealvermouth', pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs, conspiracy to transfer criminal property and possessing criminal property at Kingston Crown Court. Yesterday, he was sentenced to 24 years and 10 months in prison. Bushi was only caught after Met detectives identified and arrested four other members of his gang by piecing together information from their EncroChat messages and hours of CCTV. The gang boss had taken extra steps to protect his dodgy dealings, only providing the couriers with postcodes, times, and a vague description of the customer they would be dropping drugs to. Other tactics used in an attempt to go under the radar included fake identity cards, a van with sophisticated concealment and a camera monitoring the location where they stored the drugs. Despite his efforts, police managed to track down and arrest runner Ahmad Jabarkhill, 32, in June 2020 after stopping one of the vehicles belonging to Bushi's couriers and found him carrying nearly £700,000 in cash. Covert investigations and intelligence were then used to identify three more runners - Arline Sida, 23, Kelvin Hoxha, 23, and Luke Ferguson, 32. In August 2023, Sida and Hoxha were both arrested at an address in Brentford where they were found to be in possession of six kilograms of cocaine. Ferguson was then arrested at a 'safe house' in the same area and was found to be carrying 72kg of cocaine, worth an estimated street value of £6.24million. A manhunt was then launched for Bushi who was evading officers by jumping between different hotels and directing others to check cameras at various addresses for any police snooping around. He had also bought a new phone, different clothing, and was carrying over £3,000 in cash. The gang leader was located and arrested a few days later in Reading. Jabarkhill pleaded guilty to the possession of criminal property at Isleworth Crown Court on July 22, 2020, and was sentenced to two years and three months in jail on the same day. Sida, from Amersham, Buckinghamshire, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs on January 17, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was yesterday handed a sentence of 12 years and 9 months. Hoxha, from Brentford, west London, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs and driving while disqualified on October 26, 2024 at Kingston Crown Court and was sentenced to 11 years and 8 months on Wednesday. Ferguson, from Shepherd's Bush, west London, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A drugs on November 21, 2024, at Kingston Crown Court and was jailed for 14 years and 5 months. Detective Constable David Leitner, who led the investigation on behalf of the Met, said: 'This case demonstrates our relentlessness in pursuing organised crime, while utilising the unprecedented opportunity that Encrochat represent to its fullest effect. 'Bushi clearly believed that these messaging platforms protected him from law enforcement, but they only served to provide us the very evidence to convict him and his associates. 'This shows the Met's commitment to tackling offenders who are instrumental in supplying drugs to the streets of London.'


Sunday World
14-05-2025
- Sunday World
Video shows dramatic moment cops use chainsaw to break through drug dealer's door
Dramatic bodycam footage shows Asrar Rafiq with his hands above his head after police cut through his door in an operation involving firearms officers at a property in Aston The moment a drug dealer came face to face with a chainsaw as armed police broke through door has been caught on camera. The dramatic bodycam footage shows Asrar Rafiq with his hands above his head after police cut through his door in an operation involving firearms officers in June 2020 at a property in Aston. Rafiq was later sentenced to more than 18 years in prison following an international operation which had cracked the EncroChat messaging service used by organised criminals. The 35-year-old had boasted about the hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash which he made through drug deals, while listing various weapons including AK-47s and Uzis which he claimed he could source for other criminals. Asrar Rafiq Described as a leading member of the notorious Bordesley Green gang, Rafiq was one of 12 people given a gang injunction in 2014. But his criminality continued, and a major investigation by the Regional Organised Crime Unit for the West Midlands (ROCUWM) established that he used 13 different phone numbers in an effort to evade detection. CCTV caught him using his phones while working out a local gym. News in 90 Seconds - May 14th He was later caught when police managed to hack into the encrypted global communication service used exclusively by criminals on mobile phones. Criminals had been using the app to message each other in what they thought was a secure chat. There were 60,000 users worldwide and around 10,000 users in the UK who used it to coordinate and plan the distribution of illicit commodities, engage in money laundering and in plotting to kill rival criminals. However, unbeknown to users, the National Crime Agency (NCA) and the police monitored their every move in the aftermath of the cracking under the nationwide Operation Venetic. According to the NCA who played a key role in analysing the intercepted data resulting in thousands of arrests, Rafiq was one of the users of the app and went by the name 'Wisehorse'. He engaged in what he thought were secret conversations with other criminals to organise the supply of massive amounts of heroin and cocaine. Rafiq had tried to claim the messages were 'just bravado and that he was trying to big himself up to other drug dealers', said DCI Peter Cooke who described the claims as 'fanciful'. 'He was clearly a significant player in the criminal underworld of firearms and drug dealing, which causes so much misery on the streets of the West Midlands and beyond,' Cooke added. 'This result shows that while Operation Venetic was launched five years ago, the fallout for those involved in serious and organised crime continues to this day.' Rafiq eventually pleaded guilty to encouraging or assisting with the sourcing, advertising and sale of prohibited weapons and ammunition, and being concerned in the supply of cocaine and heroin. Rafiq, of no fixed address, was jailed for 18 years and six months at Birmingham Crown Court last Thursday, and was sentenced on the basis that he had or supplied 28kg of heroin and cocaine during a short period of just three months. DCI Peter Cooke added: 'This result shows that while Operation Venetic was launched five years ago, the fallout for those involved in serious and organised crime continues to this day.' 'The success is part of Operation Target, our 24/7 mission to disrupt and arrest those involved in serious and organised crime in the West Midlands. 'Those involved in guns, drugs, money laundering, exploitation are all in our sights.'