The Taits were arrested in April last year as part of the national Operation Venetic. As part of the investigation, searches were carried at properties connected to the family in Byker, Kenton and Cowgate and a haul of weapons, including a home-made hand grenade and Class A drugs worth in excess of £125,000, were recovered. Thomas Tait Snr was arrested following a search of his Kenton home where officers found a Glock pistol and two kilos of Cocaine. His son, Thomas Tait Jnr, was arrested shortly after showing up at the property. Later that evening, a further search was conducted at the home of Tait Snr’s mother- Anne-Marie Glendenning. A sports bag containing a hand grenade, a semi-automatic Stribog Carbine, a Sig Sauer pistol, a Glock pistol and approximately 300 rounds of ammunition was found inside a wardrobe in her Byker flat.
Newcastle crime family found with cocaine and arsenal of guns is jailed thenorthernecho.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thenorthernecho.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Anne-Marie Glendenning, 63, kept a machine gun, a hand grenade and a Glock pistol in her wardrobe, police have revealed
The 63-year-old mother of an untouchable crime family kept a machine gun, a hand grenade and a Glock pistol in her wardrobe, police revealed today as the entire family is jailed for weapons and drugs crimes.
Officers raided three properties in Newcastle where they found the illegal booty in a sweeping national crackdown on serious and organised crime.
Police uncovered a home-made hand grenade, a Stribog carbine machine pistol, three self-loading pistols and more than 300 rounds of ammunition at the homes of the Tait family in April.
Haul of weapons and drugs recovered from homes of untouchable Newcastle crime family
The investigation was part of Operation Venetic, the biggest nationally-coordinated crackdown on serious and organised crime the country has ever seen
Sign up for our regular
free newsletter for court stories sent straight to your inboxInvalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later.
Subscribe
When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Sometimes they’ll include recommendations for other related newsletters or services we offer. OurPrivacy Noticeexplains more about how we use your data, and your rights. You can unsubscribe at any time.