Dog handler takes on West Midlands gangs using ‘James Bond’ tech

Sasha DonoghueWest Midlands

Mark Radford Photography Stuart Philips has short gray hair and is wearing navy blue security-type clothing and a black padded vest. He is holding a lead with a black Labrador-type dog attached. They are walking along a country lane with a police van and a large brick building behind them.Mark Radford Photography

Stuart Philips runs his own canine detection company

A dog handler helping police to sniff out illegal drugs and cigarettes believes criminals in the West Midlands are using “James Bond-style” technology to avoid capture.

Stuart Philips runs a canine detection company, and three of his dogs took part in a raid this month where £50,000 worth of illicit goods were found in Walsall.

Police have become more reliant on his services, he said, as gangs use sophisticated methods to hide them.

“Often they are referred to as James Bond-style concealments. It’s routine and very common,” he said.

“The products will be sold from dodgy shops.

“The level of sophistication they use to hide the illegal tobacco and cigarettes is that sophisticated (the police) can’t find it without dogs.”

Mark Radford Photography A brown Cocker Spaniel-style dog is sitting surrounded by cardboard boxes with cannisters on top and black plastic bags.Mark Radford Photography

A sniffer dog with some of the seized illegal goods

The haul in Walsall included 60,000 illegal cigarettes, rolling tobacco and 70 nitrous oxide canisters, known as laughing gas. It came as police and trading standards officers targeted five locations in the town on October 9.

Leading the charge was sniffer dog Griff, along with his canine friends Bran and Cooper.

At one premises, the trio found cigarettes in the ceiling as well as stuffed in a box hidden under toys and crisps.

Further investigations are thought to be planned to crack down on similar illegal operations.

Mark Radford Photography Stuart Philips has short gray hair and is wearing navy blue security-type clothing and a black padded vest. He is holding a lead with a brown and white cocker spaniel attached. They are sitting with a pile of cardboard boxes behind them. A police officer and another person wearing a gray coat are nearby.Mark Radford Photography

Police call on Stuart Philips’ canine detection services to help officers during their raids

Mr Philips, from Pembrokeshire, said it was all in a day’s work and described it as an “amazing job”.

“The one thing I would like people to know, that when people are buying cheap cigarettes, they are not just buying a product,” he said.

“The proceeds of what they are buying are linked to other crime and other criminality. It’s not just about a packet of cheap cigarettes.”

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