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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
John Hand

Watch moment specialist cops arrested senior Kinahan cartel lieutenant Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh

This is the moment specialist cops arrested senior Kinahan cartel lieutenant Thomas "Bomber" Kavanagh, who led a major drugs smuggling operation in the UK.

The UK's National Crime Agency pounced on the 54-year-old thug - caged for 21 years today - at Birmingham Airport in 2019 as he returned home from a holiday with his family in Mexico.

Kavanagh was mob boss Daniel Kinahan's main man in Britain and was the "figurehead" of an operation which brought €36million worth of cannabis and cocaine into the UK.

Ipswich Crown Court heard today that the narcotics were for the UK and Irish drug markets.

Dubliner Kavanagh lived with his family in a fortified mansion, complete with reinforced doors and bulletproof glass, in Tamworth, Staffordshire, from where he ran the criminal empire.

READ MORE: Kinahan cartel lieutenant Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh who led €36 million cocaine empire jailed for 21 years

When the NCA raided the property in January 2019, officers found numerous weapons, including an illegal stun gun for which he was eventually given a three-year jail sentence.

Officers also seized cash worth around €41,000 in various denominations, including sterling, euros and Emirati dirhams, which had been stuffed into drawers, bags and down the back of sofa cushions.

The gang he oversaw involved Dublin-born brothers-in-law Gary Vickery, 39, and Daniel Canning, 43.
Kavanagh, Canning and Vickery all admitted conspiring to import class A and B drugs, and money laundering, while Canning also admitted possessing a firearm and ammunition.

Kavanagh was sentenced to 21 years in prison, Canning was jailed for 19.5 years, and Vickery got a 20-year sentence.

NCA Deputy Director of Investigations Matt Horne said: “Kavanagh was a high ranking member of the Kinahan cartel, an organised crime group synonymous with acts of violence. He was their main man in the UK.

“Through their criminal connections overseas, his organisation was able to organise, import and distribute drugs worth many millions of pounds.

“These men considered themselves to be untouchable, but we were able to systematically dismantle the group and prove that this was not the case.”

The NCA’s investigation into Kavanagh’s network began in early 2016.
But it was the gardai who made a major breakthrough when they made a major seizure in Dublin in January 2017.

On that occasion, Irish investigators seized a "significant" amount of firearms and class A drugs as they targeted Declan "Mr Nobody" Brady.

But they also found documents relating to a UK Midlands-based freight and logistics firm linked to Canning, Vickery and a third Irish man named Martin Byrne.

Vickery, Canning and Byrne were all arrested by the NCA in October 2017 following the seizure of 15 kilos of cocaine and more than 220 kilos of cannabis, found inside a six-tonne industrial tarmac removal machine at Dover.

The drugs had been hidden inside the machine, which had a tracking device fitted and was due to be delivered to an industrial unit in Wolverhampton.

This led NCA officers to raid two industrial units linked to the gang, one in Wolverhampton and one in Wednesbury.

In the Wednesbury address investigators found the shell of an industrial transformer, which still had traces of cocaine inside, as well as a black holdall containing a handgun and ammunition.

Byrne’s DNA was found on the gun, and his fingerprints on the bag with was in.
Investigators also found boxes full of tracking devices, identical to the one found on the machine seized at Dover.

Officers raided Vickery’s rented property in Boundary Lane, Solihull, where they recovered five 25 kilo barrels of boric acid powder – often used as a cocaine cutting agent – a cash counting machine, £43,000 sterling and €200,000 cash.

Small amounts of cash and further phones and encrypted communications devices were found at Canning’s home in Dickens Heath.
Information on those devices showed Kavanagh was heading up the criminal enterprise, with messages between the group referring to him as “the Gaffer”. He was also in contact with criminal contacts in Europe to orchestrate shipments.

Kavanagh was arrested at Birmingham Airport as he returned to the UK on 12 January 2019.
Communications between the group also provided evidence that they had been involved in at least four more drug importations prior to the Dover seizure in October 2017, bringing the estimated street value of cocaine importations by the group up to £23.4 million.

Cannabis importations over the same period are estimated to have been worth around £6.4 million. Combined, it totals around €36m.
The trio pleaded guilty to the offences they were charged with in July 2020, though legal arguments, the Covid 19 pandemic and

Vickery’s extradition from Lanzarote delayed their eventual sentencing. Martin Byrne died of cancer in August 2018 before he could be charged.

Deputy Director Matt Horne added: "This investigation involved co-operation with An Garda Síochána in Ireland. We are determined to work together to target criminal networks impacting communities on both sides of the Irish sea.

“Our financial investigation into Kavanagh and his associates is ongoing, with a view to stripping them of any assets they have acquired through their criminality. This is not the end of our activity targeting this group.”

NCA officers have already obtained freezing orders on a number of high value items, including watches, bikes and jewellery, seized as proceeds of crime from Kavanagh’s Tamworth mansion, as well as the house itself. Vickery’s property in Spain is also subject to a restraining order.

Kate Anderson, Deputy Chief Crown Prosecutor of the CPS International Justice and Organised Crime Division, said: “This organised crime group imported millions of pounds worth of dangerous drugs into the country, concealing them in machinery in a bid to evade detection.

“They showed no regard for the communities they were putting at risk and pleaded guilty in the face of overwhelming evidence showing their part in this illicit operation.

“Cases like this demonstrate our commitment to disrupting organised criminal activity - and ensuring they face justice.”

Assistant Commissioner John O’Driscoll, who heads Organised and Serious Crime within An Garda Síochána, said: “The successful outcome to court proceedings in the UK today represents a very positive development in efforts being made by law enforcement authorities, at an international level, to tackle criminality engaged in by organised crime groups and networks that have an international dimension and who, through the sale of drugs and other crimes have a negative impact on communities across the globe.

"An Garda Síochána has forged a very powerful working relationship with the UK’s National Crime Agency, which is assisting in ensuring that communities in the UK and Ireland are better protected from organised crime”.

READ MORE: Criminals increasingly using cryptocurrency like Bitcoin to hide gains as garda agency cracks down

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