Turkish Mafia’s Deadly Grip On British Youth

What connects the Turkish underworld, a horrifying torture-murder, and a missing adolescent?

A brief report on a juvenile missing person appeared on a Sussex news website on April 15, 2021.

Dylan Weatherley was 17 at the time, 5 feet 6 inches tall, of medium build, and last seen wearing a hooded navy tracksuit with a yellow Nike logo, black Jordan One trainers, and a blue puffer jacket.

The article said: ‘He has links to Tottenham, Crawley and Brighton.’

Dylan appeared shortly after.

He was handed a referral order, which meant he would not be going to jail, after being found guilty of possessing Class A narcotics at East Hampshire Magistrates Court around this time.

He had clearly been involved in county lines drug dealing in those affluent parts of Sussex and Hampshire, with cocaine or heroin supplied by the Tottenham Turks.

In January 2022, The Argus website again reported that Dylan, still 17, had gone missing from ‘his home in Chichester.’

Sussex Police reported they were ‘concerned for his welfare.’

Again, Dylan turned up alive and well.

However, nine months later, in October 2022, he was a major player in Koray Alpergin’s kidnapping, torture, and murder back in north London.

His instructions originated from the Tottenham Turks, one of the two main organised criminal groups (OCGs) that have their origins in the north London Turkish and Kurdish population, which has fifty thousand members.

The Tottenham Turks’ arch-rivals are the Bombacilar (Turkish for Bombers), who hail from Hackney.

Together, the two OCGs control a large portion of the heroin market in Britain, and they have started branching out into other substances like cocaine lately.

Both supply narcotics, usually on credit, to county lines gangs who sell it in the home counties, the south coast, and further afield.

The Turkish gangs also act as ‘wholesalers’, selling drugs, especially heroin, to English, Scottish, and Welsh OCGs, who are the ‘retailers’ in cities like Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Newcastle, Glasgow, Cardiff, and Swansea.

There are a few instances of the Turkish gangs getting into disputes with other crews, like the Albanians, but they save their most bloodcurdling violence for each other.

Due to their involvement in drug trafficking and other illegal operations in the UK, the Tottenham Turks and the Hackney Bombacilar have accumulated hundreds of millions of pounds over the years.

Their money is easily laundered in legitimate businesses in London, like minicab businesses, barbers’ shops, kebab shops, and other small businesses, as well as through property investments in London and the home counties.

The people of this country don’t deserve any of this. The Conservatives failed and the present government won’t be doing any better, and I do fear for our future generations.

The criminal justice system is a farce, and our present administration is making matters worse by releasing violent offenders after just 40 percent of their sentences. As for foreign criminals, they should all be deported!

Immigration and the police force both need greater funding. Regarding deportations, we must be more powerful, enact harsher laws, and amend existing ones. If our government wants to deport these criminals but chooses not to, then we need to have the authority to do so. There is no legal defence in this case; an immigrant must be deported if they are found to have committed a crime or are suspected of committing one.

However, all of this would require a backbone, but Labour would rather attack pensioners.

Why don’t we send these Turkish offenders back to their home country to complete their sentences? It would certainly be more of a deterrent, less enjoyable for criminals, and less expensive for our British taxpayers.

Published by Angela Lloyd

My vision on life is pretty broad, therefore I like to address specific subjects that intrigue me. Therefore I really appreciate the world of politics, though I have no actual views on who I will vote for, that I will not tell you, so please do not ask! I am like an observation station when it comes to writing, and I simply take the news and make it my own. I have no expectations, I simply love to write, and I know this seems really odd, but I don't get paid for it, I really like what I do and since I am never under any pressure, I constantly find that I write much better, rather than being blanketed under masses of paperwork and articles that I am on a deadline to complete. The chances are, that whilst all other journalists are out there, ripping their hair out, attempting to get their articles completed, I'm simply rambling along at my convenience creating my perfect piece. I guess it must look pretty unpleasant to some of you that I work for nothing, perhaps even brutal. Perhaps I have an obvious disregard for authority, I have no idea, but I would sooner be working for myself, than under somebody else, excuse the pun! Small I maybe, but substantial I will become, eventually. My desk is the most chaotic mess, though surprisingly I know where everything is, and I think that I would be quite unsuited for a desk job. My views on matters vary and I am extremely open-minded to the stuff that I write about, but what I write about is the truth and getting it out there, because the people must be acquainted. Though I am quite entertained by what goes on in the world. My spotlight is mostly to do with politics, though I do write other material as well, but it's essentially politics that I am involved in, and I tend to concentrate my attention on that, however, information is essential. If you have information the possibilities are endless because you are only limited by your own imagination...

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started