Liverpool

Ex-Man City footballer, 25, found hiding £50k of drugs is jailed – after stash falls from underwear during cop search

A FORMER Manchester City footballer has been jailed after hiding his illegal drugs stash in his underwear.

Max Norman, 25, who says he played for Manchester City[1] and Tranmere Rovers[2], was caught three times in two months with banned substances[3].

Norman was a talented footballer before he got involved with drugs

3

Norman was a talented footballer before he got involved with drugsCredit: LinkedIN
Max Norman, 25, who was found hiding £50k of drugs has now been jailed

3

Max Norman, 25, who was found hiding £50k of drugs has now been jailedCredit: Merseyside Police

One of those times he had stashed the drugs in his underwear – only for them to fall out in front of police during a search[4].

On Monday afternoon, a judge at the Liverpool Crown Court[5] sent him down for four-and-a-half years after he earlier admitted drug possession charges[6].

His LinkedIn profile lists him as having been a youth player at City and Wigan Athletic before signing professionally with clubs including Tranmere, Morecambe and Turkish outfit Alanyaspor.

Merseyside police only searched Norman’s house after his second arrest, where they found heroin, cocaine, and crack cocaine worth more than £50,000 within an armchair.

CCTV footage was also said to have shown Norman at a drug house[7] where he would drop off a bag.

The first arrest came on September 7, 2021, when he was the passenger in a Vauxhall Vectra[8] which was pulled over on Crosby Road South, Seaforth, Liverpool.

He was arrested following a struggle, following which he was searched with the contraband falling out[9].

72 wraps of white powder, seven wraps of a brown substance and £246.55 in cash were found.

Most read in Sport

It amounted to 7.58g of crack cocaine and 1.1g of heroin worth a total of £770. 

Messages found on the devices also indicated that they had been used for dealing.

Norman claimed to officers he was “just a user”, but he was subsequently released.

In the second arrest on October 14, police discovered drugs, £180 cash and seized the phones of both men.

Then, on October 27, 2021, officers searched an address on Rumford Street in Liverpool city centre – where they found his stash.

His lawyer, Stuart McNally, said that his client had been a “very talented footballer who played at a high level both in the United Kingdom and Europe”.

McNally explained his actions on a brain injury he sustained in a car crash.

He said: “He is a highly intelligent young man, capable of achieving. He does appreciate that these are serious offences. The defendant knows the consequences.

“He has a supportive family. He has employment available. When he is released, there is some stability. The prison experience, for him, has been stark. It has been chastening.”

Norman also suffers from ADHD and Tourettes.


He had five previous convictions for nine offences.

BNNMB1 Liverpool Crown Court entrance straight on

3

BNNMB1 Liverpool Crown Court entrance straight onCredit: Alamy

References

  1. ^ Manchester City (www.thesun.ie)
  2. ^ Tranmere Rovers (www.thesun.ie)
  3. ^ banned substances (www.thesun.ie)
  4. ^ police during a search (www.thesun.ie)
  5. ^ Liverpool Crown Court (www.thesun.ie)
  6. ^ drug possession charges (www.thesun.ie)
  7. ^ drug house (www.thesun.ie)
  8. ^ Vauxhall Vectra (www.thesun.ie)
  9. ^ contraband falling out (www.thesun.ie)

Wigan men were key members of colossal £53m cocaine supply network, court hears

Crooks from the Wigan area played key criminal roles in a “truly massive” £53m cocaine supply plot which saw huge quantities of the drug transported across England, Wales and Scotland.

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276

Visit Shots! now[1]

Carlisle Crown Court was told how vast quantities of the illicit substance — generally shipped into the country from overseas into ports and then transported to the Greater Manchester and Liverpool areas — were distributed by criminal couriers to many towns and cities across the British mainland.

REWIND: 40 years of memories from Bickershaw CE Prmary School

[2]

Their destinations included Newcastle and also the south Lakes, where one of the plotters, 31-year-old Reece Barnes, of Elim Grove, of Bowness-on-Windermere, kept the cocaine in a lock-up near his home.

Carlisle Crown Court.Carlisle Crown Court.
Carlisle Crown Court.

“The quantities of drugs in the overall conspiracy in this case are truly massive,” prosecutor Tim Evans told a crown court jury. “The scope of the overall conspiracy is countrywide. It features Blackpool and the Fylde coast, it features Yorkshire, various places in the Midlands, South Wales and various parts of England, Wales and Scotland.

Evidence pointed to two main criminal players – Andrew Stephens, 41, of East Field Drive, Golborne, and 45-year-old Simon Buller, of Freshfield Avenue, Atherton – moving 232kg between them during an illegal enterprise which ran for almost 15 months, from March 1, 2022, and May 25 last year.

Other people had been involved in the movement of a further 70kg or 80kg, taking the total amount least the 300kg mark.

A total wholesale value of the haul was said to be in the region of £6m, with a police drug expert estimating the street value of cocaine transported during the overall criminal enterprise being somewhere between £35m and £53m.

The focus of detectives was first trained on Cumbria as multiple 1kg shipments were brought into Windermere and three men were arrested brought before Carlisle Crown Court.

The cocaine had been supplied to Barnes, who stored cocaine in the lock-up ahead of onward supply; with Cain Turner, 32, of no fixed address, involved as a “highly active courier”; and Stephen Stockall, 62, of Well Lane, Weaverham, Northwich in Cheshire, a dealer.

“Much of the evidence you will hear in this trial will be to do with the movement of drugs into Windermere,” said Mr Evans.

“Once the police get the first two or three (people) in this case, they can then look at phones, they look at webs of contact that spread out from this, starting in Windermere. It spread out countrywide and blew up massively, quantity-wise.”

Cane Turner; Anthony Warhurst, 58, of Knowsley Street, Leigh; Thomas Whittaker, 45, of Brierfield, Digmoor, Skelmersdale; and Michael Evans, 36, of no fixed address; all seemed to operate as couriers of the drug in “very significant quantities”, said the prosecutor.

A ninth man, Daryll Preston, 36, of Hampson Street, Atherton, had acted as a middle man.

All nine, jurors heard, have admitted conspiring to supply the class A controlled drug.

A 10th man, 33-year-old Scott Owen, of Salisbury Way, Tyldesley, denies that he played any part in the conspiracy. Evidence, said Mr Evans, showed he had been in contact and socialised with some of those who had admitted their guilt.

“Was this defendant (Owen) also playing an active role in the conspiracy?” Mr Evans asked jurors. “He says not. He is having his trial. You decide that.

“You don’t hold against him the fact that other people have pleaded guilty. You know there is a conspiracy. You still have to decide whether he is part of it as well.”

After Mr Evans’ opening of the case concludes today, the jury will begin hearing evidence.

Proceeding

References

  1. ^ Visit Shots! now (www.shotstv.com)
  2. ^