Coronavirus: Drug dealers ‘making fake NHS ID badges’ to move around during lockdown, report warns

Gang members are also dressing as joggers and doing ‘letterbox deliveries’, report finds

Lizzie Dearden
Home Affairs Correspondent
Thursday 07 May 2020 10:06 BST
Covid-19: Key questions on lifting lockdown restrictions

Drug dealers are making fake NHS ID badges to move around freely during the UK’s coronavirus lockdown, a report has revealed.

The National Centre for Gang Research (NCGR) found that members of “county lines” gangs were also dressing as joggers, posting drugs through letterboxes and doing “drive-by” sales to evade police detection.

There have been numerous reports of police officers asking key workers for identification, although official guidance says it is not required.

A report released on Thursday found that as shoppers were panic buying food, dealers were running bulk deals and selling “lockdown party packs” to capitalise on the restrictions.

“Covid-19 has brought swift changes in how drug gangs are doing business, with many dealers adhering to social distancing and safety measures,” said professor Simon Harding, director of the NCGR.

“Vehicles are being used more often to carry out deals arranged by phone, with products thrown from windows and money chucked on the back seat to keep items clean.”

He said the previous model of county lines dealing, which sees children used to transport drugs from urban hubs to smaller towns and rural areas, had been made “too risky”.

“Increasingly dealers are driving runners around, or hiring local people to do the job,” Prof Harding said.

“Street gangs are being forced to find new tactics, such as shifting grooming and recruitment online to social media. This means young people can become ensnared in dangerous gang activity from their phones while their families have no idea and that is a worry.”

The report found that street gangs were being forced to set up their own bases because coronavirus had made the process of “cuckooing”, where they take over a vulnerable person’s home, more difficult.

Life as a teenage drug dealer

It was released weeks after the National Crime Agency (NCA) warned that gangs were also dealing from supermarket car parks in an attempt to mix in with crowds.

“We know that some groups are finding it harder to transport their commodities and are adapting their methods,” director-general Lynne Owens said.

“Intelligence indicates that they are seeking to deal drugs in supermarket car parks, and to portray themselves as key workers to prevent being stopped by police.”

Ms Owens said some dealers were wearing hi-vis amid “concerns about closer police scrutiny” as fewer people are on the streets.

The global coronavirus pandemic has also made it more difficult for international organised crime groups to smuggle drugs into the UK.

The Border Force and NCA have announced several significant seizures of cocaine and other drugs in boats, vans and lorries trying to enter the UK.

Supply problems are driving up prices for users and some police officers have raised concern that “desperation” may cause an increase in theft and shoplifting.

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