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Trowbridge addict dealer handed four-year jail sentence


A drug dealer from Trowbridge caught with thousands of pounds worth of heroin and crack cocaine has been jailed for four years.

Christopher Mounty, 27, formerly of Bramley Lane and Silverthorne Barton, was found in possession of lists of customers, as well as knuckle dusters and handcuffs, when police searched his home last summer.

Rachel Marshall, prosecuting, told Swindon Crown Court on Wednesday how officers stopped Mounty on June 22, because he was a known user.

He was searched and found to have bags containing white rocks and a brown powder, as well as a pipe used for smoking crack.

When the drugs were weighed, it amounted to 26.35 grams of crack cocaine which has a street value of £2,365 and 9.93 grams of heroin worth £800.

Mounty admitted two charges of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply.

He initially denied the allegations, but changed his plea on the first morning of trial, before a jury could be sworn in.

Alex Daymond, defending, said his client realised he faced a lengthy jail term but said there was an element of coercion in him drug dealing.

He said his client had been an addict for a long time and had been put under pressure by other dealers to get involved in selling the drugs.

“He says he has expressed his desire to rid himself of this habit,” he said. “In Mr Mounty’s case it is not desire, he knows full well the damage it is doing to him, rather it is a lack of equipment and skills to distance himself from his lifestyle and associates. It is a fairly depressing picture all round.”

Judge David Ticehurst said: “What is clear is you are a young man with a considerable addiction to drugs.

“As has been said on your behalf if you carry on in this way you will spend longer and longer in custody.

“Whether or not you were dealing these drugs under pressure or not matters not a jot.

“If you chose to inhabit the world of drugs you are going to involve yourself with thoroughly unpleasant people.”

He also found he profited from his crime by £2,365 and ordered him to repay £460, all his available assets, within six months or face a further 14 days in prison.

Mounty was given his last chance by a judge in February last year when he was sentenced for his part in a staged newsagent robbery.

He and Debby Jones, 50, who worked behind the counter at Southwick News, cooked up a hoax raid, where he went into the shop with a knife and pretended to rob her of £500 from the till.

Judge Douglas Field imposed an 18-month community order with a drug rehabilitation requirement at the time.


Comments(6)

onthesofa says...
10:49am Fri 12 Mar 10

Well lets hope a jail term this time will teach him a lesson as mr fields rehabilitation programme not surprisingly failed to give him a wake up call on his behavior,one less dealer off the streets who may of tried to get any of our kids into drugs one day.

Rella says...
9:50am Sat 13 Mar 10

Dont forget this is someones child also, this is an addiction like any other and hopefully this time this young man will get the help he needs.

Chesus says...
1:59pm Sat 13 Mar 10

Governments having been fighting a 'war on drugs' since the early 1920s and the problems are now far worse. The only way to address the issue is by legalising all drugs now.Crime commited to buy them would cease overnight and deaths from unpredictable contents would stop. Mr Mountys £3000 worth of drugs would have been worthless to him.

onthesofa says...
3:46pm Sat 13 Mar 10

What a dumb thing to say,more people would be inclined to try drugs if they were legalised and there would be more deaths from these legal substances.All these poor people out there who have lost family members after they tried drugs would be disgusted with this comment too,do you do drugs yourself as your brain must be pickled to make such a stupid comment.There should be tougher sentences for those caught with drugs as well.Far too many second chances,fines,commun
ity orders being given to dealers giving them the freedom to carry on dealing.They are an addiction just like alcohlol and fags so shall we make them free too,cost the nhs even more money because more people will get sick from the effects of alcohol,fags and drugs.Do you know how much time is taken up week after week for the emergency services and hospital staff on these self inflicted problems,make it free and the only people being seen in hospitals will be these people because there will be no free time for the people who need and deserve help when they are ill through no fault of their own.

Chesus says...
6:54pm Sat 13 Mar 10

"more people would be inclined to try drugs if they were legalised"
.
WRONG! There was no drug problem at all in the UK until they were banned.

cynical old anarchist says...
10:57am Mon 22 Mar 10

In 1971, there were between 600, and 2000 Heroin addicts in the UK. Ten years later, there were Tens of thousands, and now, there are an estimated million users of heroin. And the figure goes up every year. So obviously, prohibition is not working. So lets go for damage limitation, and legalise it all. Crime would go down by at least 70%, prisons would be virtually empty, leaving more room to lock up proper wrong uns, who are a danger to us all. Police would then have more time to concentrate on proper crime, and we could dispense with the hated CCTV Cameras everywhere.


Christopher Mounty Christopher Mounty

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