Pubdate: Mon, 09 Apr 2007 Source: Hull Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2007 Northcliffe Newspapers Group Ltd Contact: http://www.thisishull.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1181 WARNING TO DRUG DEALERS We know who you are and we are coming to get you. That's the prosecutors' warning to drug dealers, as they continue to compile evidence against the city's pushers of misery. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) worked alongside Humberside Police during the recent Operation Midas raids. In one month, it resulted in 43 low-level drug dealers being arrested and sentenced to a total of 128 years in prison. Although raids were carried out over a five-day period, the investigation into each of the dealers goes back nine months to last summer, when undercover officers began gathering evidence and detailed files on class A drug dealers. And today senior prosecutors said files of detailed evidence were continually being complied on dealers across the city. They say this will allow them to carry out another successful series of raids, and again secure quick convictions in the courts. Humberside Chief Crown Prosecutor Nigel Cowgill said: "Operation Midas was the latest in a series of major operations that the CPS and Humberside Police have worked on together. "The first one of these is now over three years ago, Operation Hatch. "Since that time we have built on our experience with dealing with these cases and we have been working hard to ensure people who deal in drugs and create an atmosphere of misery for the population are effectively dealt with. "In this case my prosecutors worked closely with the police officers, staying late into the night in police stations to ensure the right people were charged with the right offences. "More than 80 people are now facing prosecutions as a result of this operation. I can assure the people of Humberside we will continue to work in this way." Operation Midas included a week of raids. Last week, cases were heard in Hull Crown Court over four days. The CPS worked with police to put together detailed individual cases, so offenders could be swiftly brought before the courts. CPS officials were based in police stations as officers brought in offenders following morning raids to ensure they were given immediate charging advice. Higher court advocate Jayne Bryant said: "Over four weeks prior to the raids we worked on all the files and looked at the evidence, so once all the arrests were made the cases could be brought before the courts quickly. "During the raids we worked until midnight to ensure the police had a prosecutor at the police station to advise them if they needed it. "We have worked from cradle to grave on this, from creating the original files to prosecuting the cases when they come to court.! Higher court advocate Mike Wrigglesworth said: "The police put in a lot of hard work and it paid dividends." Links Crown Prosecution Service www.cps.gov.uk Humberside Police www.humberside.police.uk - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath