A MEMBER of a drugs gang which flooded Barrow with heroin and crack has been ordered to sell his diamond encrusted watch to pay for his crimes. PrinceWill Enaruba, 26, was part of a network of dealers which trafficked drugs from the South East to Barrow, via a headquarters in Coventry. When officers raided the base in Signals Drive, where Enaruba lived with his partner Shanice Knight, they found more than £1,500 cash and a Cartier Santos watch, estimated to be worth upwards of £11,000 when bought new. Enaruba claimed he had borrowed the watch from a family friend to wear to a wedding 11 months earlier.
PrinceWill Enaruba ordered to sell his diamond encrusted Cartier watch to pay for his crimes thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
JAILED: All the defendants jailed under Operation Horizon THEY were blasted by police for flooding the streets of Barrow with class A drugs and bringing untold misery to the town. But now after the conclusion of Operation Horizon police have brought 34 criminals to justice, seeing them jailed for a combined total of more than 100 years. A line was drawn under the operation, one of Cumbria Police s biggest ever, on Tuesday when Pricewill Enaruba, 26, became the last to face justice. The convictions were set in motion in 2019 when police raided around 20 homes in a bid to smash a wide network of organised drug dealing that made use of county lines , a crime network trafficking drugs using dedicated mobile phone lines.
1/1 SEX offenders, drug dealers and abusive partners are among the criminals banged up this year having been brought to justice. Courts hit dangerous and depraved offenders with the full weight of the law in 2020, protecting victims - and communities as a whole. Among the most notable convictions this year were those brought to justice under Operation Horizon, a large-scale police response to gangs flooding Barrow with crack cocaine and heroin using county lines. The two-year operation ended in November with the last of 33 offenders sentenced at Preston Crown Court. And that court was often the site where judges handed criminals their just deserts.