COUNTY LINES: Three men admitted county lines drug dealing, including from the Travelodge in Cathedral Square, at Worcester Crown Court THREE men dramatically changed their plea and admitted being involved in Class A drug dealing. Jaskaium Kharaud, 21, of Dorchester Way, Coventry, admitted conspiring with others to supply crack cocaine between July 12 and July 24, 2018 and a second count of conspiring with others to supply heroin between the same dates, at the start of the second day of the trial. Iraqli Balatayou, 18, of The Moorfield, Coventry, who was 15 at the time of the offences, also changed his plea to guilty on the counts when re-arraigned in front of the jury. And a third teenager, who can not be named for legal reasons, also admitted the charges.
Work continues on the Cathedral Square in Worcester City Centre. 27.11.17. THE trial of a man described as second in command of a county lines drug dealing operation in Worcester has begun. Jaskaium Kharaud, 21, of Dorchester Way, Coventry, stands accused of conspiring with others to supply crack cocaine between July 12 and July 24, 2018. He also is accused of the same offence, between the same dates, of conspiring with others to supply heroin. Kharaud was described by Andrew Baker, prosecuting, to be the lieutenant to another man, who was described as being head of the operation and who cannot be named for legal reasons.
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Amardip is known to be the daughter of Birmingham based award-winning Bhangra singer Malkit Singh MBE.
She performed a sex act on the pupil in an art room after sending an x-rated text message.
The pair later had sex in her car and home and on an industrial estate near the school, which cannot be identified. Amardip, from Streetly, West Mids, showered gifts on the teen and let him drive her car even though he did not have a licence. She also took her victim – who cannot be named for legal reasons – to a Birmingham hotel on his birthday, where they stayed all day drinking vodka.
A BLOOD-STAINED Worcester drug dealer was suspected of a stabbing but the blood may have come from his nose after snorting cocaine as his solicitor warned he could die if he went to jail. Robin Bayer told people he was involved in a stabbing in McDonald s but so far police have found no evidence that any such incident took place - and his own solicitor said the blood on his t-shirt may have come from his own nostrils after snorting the class A drug in Worcester. She pleaded with the judge not to send Bayer to prison where she argued that prisoners were locked up 23 and a half hours day in their cells due to Covid-19 restrictions and where there were more hardened drug individuals including County Lines drug dealers.