Two drug dealers have been jailed after being caught with thousands of pounds worth of cocaine in Harrogate.
Angel Angelov and Tsonko Peev, both 25 and from Leeds, were sent to prison after pleading guilty to possessing Class A drugs with intent to supply.
On the afternoon of November 10 last year, officers from North Yorkshire Police’s Operation Expedite team, which tackles county lines drug dealing, stopped a vehicle on its way to Harrogate from Leeds.
The driver, Angelov, was searched, and found with 26 bags of cocaine in a mint tin and a lock knife.

Some of the cocaine seized by North Yorkshire Police.
As the investigation continued, officers stopped another vehicle on Leeds Road in Harrogate on December 5. Inside were Angelov and Peev.
This time, Angelov was found with 20 bags of cocaine hidden in the lining of his coat, and a further 11 bags were found hidden by the handbrake.
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Both were charged and pleaded guilty at York Crown Court yesterday (February 7) to the offences.
Angelov was sentenced to five years and three months in prison. Meanwhile, Peev was jailed for two years and three months.
PC George Frost, from the Operation Expedite team, said:
Teen arrested on cocaine charge after car overturns in Ripon“Following a swift investigation, two drug dealers have been taken off the streets of Harrogate, along with thousands of pounds worth of Class A drugs.
“Dealers like Angelov and Peev seek to exploit the vulnerabilities of users and their addictions for their own selfish financial gain. The effects of drug dealing and drug use are felt far and wide, leading to violence, anti-social behaviour and acquisitive crime.
“I hope the people of Harrogate and wider North Yorkshire feel reassured by the result of the investigation and the jail sentences. We are committed to protecting the vulnerable in our communities, and are working night and day to keep drug dealers out of the area.”
A man has been arrested on suspicion of supplying Class A drugs after officers came across a crashed car in Ripon.
Shortly after 3pm yesterday, North Yorkshire Police officers on patrol near Lark Lane in Ripon located a red VW Golf car that had been involved in a collision and was on its roof.
A police statement today said:
“One of the occupants made off from the scene. Following a search of the area, officers located a large quantity of suspected cannabis and cocaine.
“The other occupant, a 19-year-old local man, was arrested on suspicion of possession with intent to supply a Class A drug. He has since been released on bail while enquiries continue.”
Anyone with any information about the incident is asked to contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, quoting reference number 12230015627.

Police closed the road while the incident took place.
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Arrest warrant issued for suspected Harrogate cocaine dealer
A warrant has been issued for the arrest of a suspected cocaine dealer from Harrogate.
Yasin Hussain, 30, of Leadhall Crescent, failed to appear before Harrogate Magistrates Court on November 3, 2022, charged with two counts of possession with intent to supply a class A drug.
He is also wanted by West Yorkshire Police after he failed to appear at court for motoring offences.
North Yorkshire Police has appealed to the public for any information on his whereabouts.
A police statement added:
“Extensive police enquiries are ongoing to trace Hussain in both the Harrogate and Leeds area, including Harehills, Gipton, Roundhay and Armley where he is known to have links.
“Checks are taking place with the Border Force as it is known he travelled outside the UK in recent months before returning.
“Officers are also continuing to liaise with Hussain’s solicitor with a request to hand himself in.
“Anyone with information about Hussain’s whereabouts or possible sightings of him, please make an online report via the North Yorkshire Police website or call 101, option 1, and speak to the force control room.
“If you would prefer to remain anonymous, call Crimestoppers on 0800 555111.
“Please quote reference number 12220195320 when providing details.”
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Three arrested after dozens of bags of cocaine found in Harrogate
Two men and a woman have been arrested after police stopped two cars and found dozens of bags of cocaine in the Harrogate area.
North Yorkshire Police said today two different vehicles were searched.
As well as suspected cocaine, a lock knife was also found in one of the cars and the driver was banned from driving.
A man in his 20s has been charged with possessing a blade and driving while disqualified. He was also arrested on suspicion of possession with intent to supply class-A drugs.
A woman, also in her 20s was also arrested on suspicion of class-A drug offences.
A second man in the other vehicle, who is in his 20s, was also arrested on suspicion of possessing class-A drugs.
All were bailed following the drug arrests on Thursday to allow the substances to be inspected by a laboratory as part of police investigations.
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Boy, 16, caught with 110 wraps of heroin and cocaine in Harrogate’s Library Gardens
A man from Bradford has been jailed for 30 months after pleading guilty to supplying Class A drugs in Harrogate’s Library Gardens.
Shaoib Shafiq, 20, and a 16-year-old boy who cannot be named for legal reasons, were stopped on September 26, 2020, after reports of drug dealing.
The 16-year-old had 110 wraps of heroin and crack cocaine hidden in his underwear and Shafiq had a Nokia burner-style mobile phone with a pre-pay SIM card that was used as the drugs line.
The pair were sentenced at York Crown Court on Wednesday.
Shafiq was jailed for 30 months and the boy was handed a community order, unpaid work and a rehabilitation requirement.
Shafiq and the teenager travelled to Harrogate from Bradford together and were in regular contact several days before their arrest.
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PC Chris Dyson said:
Arrests in Harrogate and Ripon as police target drug dealing“Drug dealing has a hugely damaging effect on communities and destroys lives.
“These two individuals thought they could come into North Yorkshire and deal Class A drugs, but we showed them different.
“We work hard to target those who insist on bringing misery to communities and we will not stop making sure those who commit this type of crime are brought to the courts.”
North Yorkshire Police has arrested 27 people during a national week of action to tackle county lines drug dealing.
County lines involves drug dealers from larger cities dealing drugs in smaller towns, often exploiting vulnerable people in the process.
It’s been a constant problem in Harrogate and Ripon with gangs from West Yorkshire targeting the towns.
The national week of action, between October 3 and 9, was coordinated by the National County Lines Coordination Centre.
Harrogate Arrests
On Monday, officers arrested a 33-year man in Harrogate who was suspected to be delivering drugs from his vehicle. He was found to be in possession of approximately £1,500 worth of cannabis and approximately £500 of cash.
On Friday, officers suspected that a drug deal had just been conducted in a vehicle in the Jennyfields area of Harrogate. One man was arrested, but the passenger managed to flee from the police. After a chase and extensive area search, officers successfully detained and arrested a 48-year-old man on suspicion of supplying a class-A drug – suspected to be heroin.
Later that night officers arrested a 31-year -old man from Manchester on Wetherby Road in Harrogate. He was suspected to be in the area dealing drugs. Officers conducted a search of the man and his vehicle and located approximately 30 individual packets of suspected cocaine.
Officers said across North Yorkshire it had arrested 27 people on suspicion of drugs offences. Two bladed weapons were recovered as well as over £5,000 in cash and £10,000 in what is suspected drugs. It also made 60 welfare visits to vulnerable people
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The force’s operation expedite team, which is responsible for tackling county lines, was on the streets stopping people and vehicles that are linked to the supply of drugs. The force said Harrogate’s Neighbourhood Policing Team as well as licensing officers from North Yorkshire County Council were also involved.
Specialist dogs were used to disrupt the supply of drugs linked to the night time economy in Harrogate and Ripon.
Detective Chief Inspector Andrew Simpson who supported the coordinated the week said:
“Although this is a fantastic set of results from the last seven days, it’s important to stress that this is very much business as usual for North Yorkshire Police.
“Out teams are out and about conducting warrants and intercepting the supply of drugs, week in week out.
“Drug use has serious implications on people’s health and impacts on the quality of life for communities.
“We will not tolerate the use of drugs in our county. I would urge anyone with information about drug dealing in their community to call us on 101, we treat every piece of information as important.”
Look out for the signs:
Cuckooing is the term given when drug dealers take over the home of a vulnerable person and use it at a base to sell and store drugs, often using violence and intimidation to achieve this.
Cuckooing victims are often drug users themselves, or people who are vulnerable due to a mental or physical disability, their age or lifestyle, such as sex workers and single mothers.
Signs of cuckooing to look out for include
- Increased callers at a property at all times of the day or night
- Increase in cars pulling up for short periods of time
- Different accents at a property
- Antisocial behaviour at a property
- Not seeing the resident for long periods of time
- Drug-related rubbish – small plastic bags, syringes
- Windows covered or curtains closed for long periods
- Unexplained or untreated injuries
Children are groomed and exploited to deal drugs on behalf of organised criminals. These are the signs to look out for:
- Persistently going missing from school or home and / or being found out-of-area
- Unexplained money, clothes, or mobile phones
- Excessive receipt of texts / phone calls
- Relationships with controlling / older individuals or groups
- Leaving home / care without explanation
- Suspicion of physical assault / unexplained injuries
- Carrying weapons
- Significant decline in school results / performance
- Gang association or isolation from peers or social networks
- Self-harm or significant changes in emotional well-being
- Travelling long distances on public transport – is it term time? Should they be in school? Are they paying high cost fares with cash?
Police Advice:
Anyone with concerns about county lines is asked to speak to their local police on 101 or call 999 in an emergency.
If you’d rather stay anonymous you can call the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
If you are a young person who is worried about being involved in county lines, or knows someone who is, you can speak to an adult and let them know how you feel.
You can also contact www.fearless.org who allow you to pass on information about crime anonymously.
You can also contact Childline on 0800 1111 – they are a private and confidential service where you can talk to counsellors about anything that is worrying you.
Police seize suspected cocaine in Ripon house raidA man and a woman have been arrested on suspicion of possessing cocaine following a drugs raid by North Yorkshire Police.
Police used a warrant to enter a house in Ripon and seized a large quantity of powder, believed to be cocaine.
According to officers, a number of other items including scales, mobile phones and cash, were also seized during the operation in the south of the city on Friday.
A local man and woman, both in their 20s, were arrested on suspicion of possessing class-A drugs with intent to supply and taken into custody.
They were interviewed and have been released under investigation to allow further enquiries to be carried out, including forensic tests of the substances.
Inspector Penny Taylor said:
“Information from communities is vital to help us tackle drug offending, and I’d urge anyone who has information about drug activity to share it with us.
“All reports are taken seriously and could help us make a real difference in your community.”
Anyone with information about drug dealing in their community can contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, and select option 1 to speak to the force control room.
You can also contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 and the charity will share the information with North Yorkshire Police.
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Cocaine dealer jailed for ‘peddling misery’ in Harrogate
A cocaine dealer who “peddled misery” in Harrogate has been jailed for nearly three years after being snared by an undercover cop posing as a drug addict.
Jack Milner, 25, bragged to the officer that he was “making a good wage” from his trade but he was being played from the outset, York Crown Court heard.
Milner supplied cocaine to the plain-clothed officer on three separate occasions in December 2019, said prosecutor David Povall.
Mr Povall added:
“The officer was part of a wider operation focusing on county lines (drug networks) and it appears the defendant has crossed their sights.”
He said although Milner wasn’t involved “in that level of criminality”, he was working with others to supply the Class A drug.
The undercover officer, who used a pseudonym, was introduced to Milner on December 9 when he was supplied with cocaine.
The following day, the officer called Milner to arrange another deal and he was “again supplied with (cocaine)”.
On the third day, the officer rang the same number and spoke to a different man who supplied him some wraps of heroin and cocaine.
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The court heard that Milner only supplied cocaine and was not involved in the dealing of heroin. However, the officer later saw Milner with this “second man…giving him permission to supply the officer with a further wrap”.
Milner, of Harehills Lane, Leeds, was duly arrested and found with a “burner” phone – a cheap, pre-paid mobile which criminals often use to evade detection.
He initially denied any involvement in Class A drug-dealing and maintained his innocence until the day of trial in June, when he finally admitted supplying cocaine.
Living on the streets
Nick Cartmell, mitigating, said Milner was living on the streets with his girlfriend at the time and had pneumonia.
He said although Milner clearly made a “quite significant” financial gain, it was simply to buy his “next McDonald’s (meal)…and not going hungry”.
Mr Cartmell added:
“He was a fool and he has a penalty to pay.
“The defendant appears to have been operating a telephone number for the supply of drugs with others and been directly involved in handing them over to addicts.”
He said that Milner stood to make a “significant financial gain” although the amount was unknown.
Judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, told Milner:
“You were peddling misery on the streets and…that is very serious.
“You said to the undercover officer that you were being paid a good wage for what you were doing. In my book, peddling Class A drugs is so serious that there has to be an immediate prison sentence because there has to be a recognition of deterrence for others.
“You were out and about distributing this filth on the streets. Who know how many lives you wrecked?”
Milner was jailed for two years and nine months. He will serve half of that sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Three men charged following Harrogate drugs bustThree men were charged last night following a police operation targeting suspected cocaine dealers in Harrogate.
Four men were arrested on Thursday when officers seized suspected cocaine, bulking agent, cannabis, cash, mobile phones and drugs paraphernalia.
It followed an investigation by North Yorkshire Police’s organised crime unit into a gang suspected of bringing cocaine and cannabis into Harrogate and the surrounding area.
The arrested men included one aged 22, from London, one aged 34 from Portsmouth, and two aged 37 and 40 from Harrogate.
The police today said three of the four men have been charged with supplying cocaine and cannabis.
The 22-year-old was also charged with assault of a police officer and the 37-year-old was also charged with two counts of assault of a police officer.
The three men will appear at York Magistrates’ Court today.
The fourth man, aged 40, has been released on conditional bail.
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Yesterday, Detective Inspector Fionna McEwan, of North Yorkshire Police’s organised crime unit, said:
“The latest action follows six months of painstaking information gathering behind the scenes.
“This work is not always visible but I can assure local people that we continue to work hard to disrupt organised crime and relentlessly pursue those believed to be involved.”
Positive drugs test for man stopped by police in Harrogate
A motorist whose driving caused concern to a member of the public was arrested by police in Harrogate after giving a positive drugs test.
The member of the public has been praised by North Yorkshire Police for contacting them about the way in which the vehicle was being driven.
In a Facebook post, which included a photograph of the the roadside wipe test kit that had been used, police said:
“The driver, a man in his 20s, gave this positive reading for cocaine and white powder was located during a search of the vehicle.
“He was arrested and a blood sample has been obtained which will be sent off for analysis.”

The motorist was stopped by police after a member of the public raised concerns about the standard of his driving
Police added:
“The consequences could have been much more serious – so a huge thank you to the person who called us.
“We always say if you are concerned about someone’s driving, call us and in this case, earlier this week, a motorist was stopped by one of our officers after a member of the public contacted us concerned about the standard of their driving in Harrogate.”
The government warns motorists about use of drugs and driving, saying:
“It’s illegal to drive if either:
- you’re unfit to do so because you’re on legal or illegal drugs
- you have certain levels of illegal drugs in your blood (even if they have not affected your driving)
“Legal drugs are prescription or over-the-counter medicines. If you’re taking them and not sure if you should drive, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or healthcare professional.
“The police can stop you and make you do a ‘field impairment assessment’ if they think you’re on drugs. This is a series of tests, for example asking you to walk in a straight line. They can also use a roadside drug kit to screen for cannabis and cocaine.
“If they think you’re unfit to drive because of taking drugs, you’ll be arrested and will have to take a blood or urine test at a police station.
“You could be charged with a crime if the test shows you’ve taken drugs..
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