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Tyrant gang boss ran slick crime ring and hid identity with ‘spoofing phones’

BySpotted UK

Feb 19, 2023

A tyrannical gang boss who dished out punishment beatings to underlings who crossed him used "spoofing phones" to try and stay one step ahead of the police.

Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry, 37, was the head of a Liverpool drugs network raking in dirty cash by dishing out heroin and crack-cocaine to drug users on the streets of Cardiff. The shaven-headed hardman lived in a city-centre apartment in Liverpool but had a network of lieutenants, couriers and street-dealers working for him.

Sabbagh-Parry had been in trouble for heroin trafficking in 2009, and did initially appear to steer clear of crime after his release from prison, running a seemingly honest car dealership in Ealing, London, between 2014 and 2017.

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However he sold up and returned to his native Liverpool, where he began running Class A and B drugs into the Welsh capital. His luck ran out in 2018, when a Merseyside Police operation began tracking his organised crime group as part of an investigation dubbed Operation Chicago.

Detectives discovered that Sabbagh-Parry was using so called "spoofing phones", which can generate random phone numbers to hide the user's identity and are popular in the criminal underworld.

In Liverpool Crown Court, Judge Louise Brandon said of Sabbagh-Parry: "The conspiracy was large, professional, sophisticated, well organised and planned and ultimately, largely successful. Great care was taken, particularly by you, to avoid detection by the police through the use of spoofing phones and the repeated changes of car and courier to transport the drugs.

Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry, 37, who was convicted of running a cross border drugs network

"You were the only one in possession of a spoofing phone and you had three during the conspiracy. The drugs sourced were adulterated by the group. The finding of commercial quantities of adulterants, some 1.08 kilos, at one of the groups’ safehouses at Croxteth Road and a drugs press at another safe house in Banner Street indicates that the organisation retained control of the process and effectively acted as its own wholesaler, providing adulterated drugs in dealer amounts to be sold to end users, thereby maximising its profits."

In a lengthy series of trials and sentencings hearings, the court heard Sabbagh-Parry and his "right hand man" Neil Christopher, from Dingle, were the top end of the conspiracy. In contrast taxi driver Amar Al-Soralmi, 31, was "placed" in the Welsh capital by Sabbagh-Parry and used to run the Cardiff end of the conspiracy, also on occasion acting as a courier ferrying cash and drugs between the two cities.

Al-Soralmi was the last defendant to face sentence after a lengthy series of trials and hearings, which had been further delayed by his decision to flee to Egypt after his initial arrest.

Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry, 37, who was convicted of running a cross border drugs network

What emerged was a picture of a man who found the pressure of the criminal life took its toll. Simon Parry, prosecuting, told Liverpool Crown Court: "By October 2018 there must have been some problems in the group as Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry travelled to Cardiff with another male who the prosecution say was placed down in Cardiff to oversee and supervise Amar Al-Soralmi.

"Further evidence of the problem came at about the end of October when the group were consistently unable to reach Al-Soralmi by phone. He had taken himself away from Cardiff.

"Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry was extremely keen to get hold of him, calling repeatedly and getting others to try and locate him as well. Al-Soralmi did not re-surface until November 9, 2018. He was collected from his girlfriend’s address in Widnes and taken to Liverpool.

"On this day Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry returned to Liverpool from Cardiff and the two men met in the Toxteth area. It is accepted by the prosecution that by now Al-Soralmi was in serious trouble with Sabbagh-Parry and the account he gives in his defence statement regarding a beating is accepted. That evening he had been seen at Whiston Hospital with injuries to his chest and upper back.

Neil Christopher, who was "right hand man" to feared gang boss Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry

"He gave a false explanation of martial arts training to the doctors. Therefore, with punishment inflicted, Al-Soralmi was sent back to Cardiff the following day."

The crime ring was brought down on November 20, when officers decided to step in and stopped a BMW car driven by Al-Soralmi, with fellow drug-dealer Ibrahim Mustafa in the passenger seat. Inside, 33 wraps of cannabis and a number of mobile phones were seized.

Police then raided the address Al-Soralmi was staying in on Clifton Street, Cardiff, where £1,460 in cash and knives were recovered. The search also revealed a set of scales bearing traces of cocaine, heroin and cannabis.

Amar Al-Soralmi, who was battered for trying to leave an organised crime group. He later fled to Egypt

Al-Soralmi and Mustafa were released pending further investigation, which gave Al-Soralmi the chance to flee the country. He did not fly back to the UK until July, 2022, although the court heard his return was voluntary and he made arrangements to hand himself in to the police.

Shabbagh-Parry, by this point, was already beginning a 19-year-prison sentence after a jury convicted him of conspiracy to supply heroin, cocaine and cannabis. The media were unable to report on his sentencing hearing, held on April 12 last year, due to reporting restrictions linked to other upcoming trials.

Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry, 37, who was jailed for 19 years for organising a sophisticated crime ring

The court found he was in control of the crime ring, despite Shabbagh-Parry suggesting his role was "not much higher" than 35-year-old Christopher.

On that day Judge Brandon told the organised crime boss: "It is overwhelmingly clear from the evidence that I have seen during the course of this and the previous trials that you organised and directed the movement of individuals and drugs on a daily basis, including Mr Christopher.

"It was you and not Mr Christopher who put Mr A-Soralmi back in line after he went off the radar. You were never far from the safehouses when drugs were about to move and it was you who was in contact with all the significant players when drugs were moving.

"I find that yours was the leading role for the purposes of the sentencing guidelines and that your role was above each other individual in the conspiracy. You were right at the top."

Others involved in the conspiracy included 49-year-old Alan Edwards, of Fairfield Street, Fairfield who provided the group with the use of a property on Croxteth Road to adulterate drugs for onward supply to Cardiff.

That safe house, and another on Banner Street, Picton, showed the group cut large quantities of drugs for supply by it's own dealers, effectively acting as "its own wholesaler".

Wadah Alwi, who worked for feared gang boss Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry

During the period the group were being watched by police there were 14 trips between Liverpool and Cardiff. One trip, resulted in a seizure of crack-cocaine and heroin totalling around 400g, which the court heard was probably a "typical amount" for each trip.

These are the sentences passed for those involved:

  • Ahmed Sabbagh-Parry was jailed for 19 years for supplying cocaine, heroin and cannabis
  • Neil Christopher was jailed for 15 years for supplying cocaine, heroin and cannabis
  • Alan Edwards was jailed for nine years for supplying cocaine, heroin and cannabis
  • Wadah Alwi was jailed for nine years for supplying cocaine, heroin and cannabis
  • Matthew Jennings was jailed for 16 months for supplying cocaine and cannabis
  • Usama Shamsan was handed 10 months in prison, suspended for 18 months, for supplying cannabis
  • Gamal Hamad was handed two years in prison suspended for two years for supplying cannabis
  • Ibrahim Mustafa was jailed for 30 months for supplying cannabis
  • Amar Al-Soralmi was jailed for 40 months for supplying cocaine, heroin and cannabis

Passing sentence, Judge Brandon told Sabbagh-Parry: "You played your part in bringing misery in the form of Class A drugs which you orchestrated the supply of. You then cynically reaped reward by causing suffering to countless lives, not just of those who take the drugs you supplied but on the wider community whose lives are blighted by those who commit crime to pay for your drugs.

"You did all this out of greed. It is selfishness beyond contemplation."

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