A gang who stole a fleet of
expensive, high-performance cars from some of London’s wealthiest
residents were caught out after posting pictures on Facebook, including
one showing a member eating a ‘cash’ sandwich.
Detectives
finally caught up with the them after one of the gang members posted a
picture of himself sat on the bonnet of a stolen black Range Rover on
Facebook.
That picture led
police to discover a number of other incriminating images on the social
network site and on the phones of the group, which showed them boasting
about their wealth.
They
showed the men sitting in the stolen cars, drinking champagne, wearing
Rolex and Cartier watches and posing with huge piles of £20 and £50
notes.
In one of the
pictures Conor Murphy, 19, is seen about to take a bite into a hundreds
of pounds worth of notes sandwiched between two slices of bread.
Police
also found video footage on their phones that showed them racing the
cars they’d stolen and bragging about what other motors they had their
eye on. Blackberry messages used by the gang to arrange burglaries were
also discovered.
Seven
of the men pleaded guilty to the burglaries earlier this year. Another
man, Rory Mason, 18, denied any involvement in the plot to steal the cars
but was found guilty by a jury last month.
Isleworth Crown Court heard how the men focused their attention on houses where valuable cars were kept.
Between
April and September last year they broke into homes in Notting Hill,
Kensington and Kensal Green and stole nine cars, as well as electrical
goods and jewellery.
Mark
Paltenghi, prosecuting, said: 'It seems quite plain from looking at the
evidence that the principal, but not sole aim, was to target houses
where valuable cars were kept. Car keys were stolen from the houses and the cars were driven away.'
Kalan
Williams, 20, described as the ‘principal conspirator’, pleaded guilty
to 11 of the burglaries. Footage from a police helicopter showing
Williams running away from officers and dropping the key to a stolen
Land Rover Discovery was used in court.
During
their investigation, detectives found a picture taken from Williams’
phone which showed him holding three sets of keys to three vehicles. Two
- a BMW and an Audi - were confirmed as having been stolen, while the
other was an unknown car.
Another
photograph found on Williams’ phone shows him sitting on a Porsche 911,
which police later discovered was stolen from a house in Stamford Brook
on July 26.
A BMW was
stolen from the same house that night and police discovered video
footage of Williams, Murphy, Niah George, 18, Akin Ford and Jonathan
Oriba, both 20, racing the cars around the streets of west London at
high speeds. The men were seen passing a phone between cars as the
filmed themselves.
he gang
were responsible for stealing a haul of cars worth hundreds of thousands
over the space of five months. These included a Porsche 911, Porsche
Caymen, Mercedes AMG C63, Land Rover Discovery, two BMW 6 series, Range
Rover Sport, Audi Q5 and a VW Golf.
The
white Mercedes was believed to be the gang’s ‘trophy car’. Many of the
photos seized by police showed the men posing beside the £100,000
high-performance motor.
Even
when the car was recovered by police and returned to its owner, the
brazen group, who had kept the key, tried again to steal it only to find
it had been reprogrammed. Their attempts were caught on CCTV and the
owner of the car was seen chasing the thieves away in his boxer shorts.
The men were arrested after a series of dawn raids as part of the intelligence-led Operation Decker. Mason,
of north Kensington, denied one count of conspiracy to commit a
dwelling house burglary but was found guilty after a week-long trial.
Kalan
Williamson, from Chelsea, Conor Murphy, 19, north Kensington, Niah
George, 18, from Hammersmith, Jonathan Oriba, 20, from Notting Hill,
Akil Ford, 20, from Clapham, Daniel Talbot, 23, from north Kensington
and Yassin Imlahi, 19, from Kensington, all pleaded guilty to the same
charge.
Kalan
Williamson was jailed for four years and eight months, Conor Murphy was
handed a four year detention for conspiracy and eight months for
dangerous driving. Jonathan Oriba was sentenced to four years detention, while Niah George got three years and 10 months.
Akil Ford, who had 24 previous convictions, got four years detention, while Daniel Talbot was jailed for four years. Yassin Imlahi got three years detention, as did Rory Mason, who was found guilty by a jury after denying his involvement.
'They posted
pictures of their loot on Facebook and sent messages to each other using
Blackberry Messenger planning their crimes. They were brazen about
their crimes but this eventually led to their downfall.
'These
were men who were wrapped up in their own world and driven by by greed
and the gangster lifestyle. If an opportunity arose, they would go for
it. They were going into properties regardless of people being in or
not. Since their arrest we have seen a 48 per cent decrease in
burglaries in the Kensington area.
'The sentences passed down today show this kind of crime is totally unacceptable.'
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