Seven members of a notorious London gang have been sentenced to a total of 116 years for conspiring a gun plot to try and shoot rival rapper.
The Harrow Road Boys (HRB) bought firearms in a bid to harm drill star and Digga D as part of a gang war that left three people dead and brought communities to their knees.
The group attempted to hunt down the controversial artist, who was part of the Ladbroke Grove–based CGM (Cherish God More) gang, as part of a tit–for–tat postcode war in west London in 2022 and 2023.
The feud began when a member of Harrow Road Boys, which also flooded the streets of west London with drugs, was shot for entering the rival gang’s territory.
Two other killings were to follow, one of which involved the brother of a high ranking member of HRB, after which seven members of the gang were tasked with finding Digga D and harming him in revenge, Kingston Crown Court was told.
On Wednesday they were jailed for more than 100 years after pleading guilty to firearms and drugs offences, with the judge labelling them a ‘blight on their own community’.
A fellow member of the group and rapper, Marvin William Bailey – better known by his stage name of Fredo – was also named as a conspirator in the trial. However, he failed to appear, with the court being told he is believed to be living abroad.
Digga D, real name Rhys Herbert, 25, was jailed for almost four years in January for supplying 45kg of cannabis after he was arrested during an Instagram livestream. His rap songs and videos glorifying violence and goading rivals have seen him dubbed ‘London’s most hated rapper’ due to his long list of enemies.
Prosecutor Ian McLoughlin KC told the court that the first killing took place in July 2020, when Billy McCullagh, known as Billy da Kid, ‘was shot dead by rival gang members in Harlesden’.
Just a month later Jeffrey Wegbe, a 26–year–old known as Gucci, was also shot dead in Kilburn.
Mr McLoughlin said his death was ‘glorified’ in a video for a drill rap song called ‘Roll Up’ released by Jayvon Tison, who is also known as Lil Dotz and is a member of the Harrow Road Boys.
The lyrics of the song referred to ‘taking a dead person’s ashes and making them into a roll–up (cigarette) as a sign of disrespect’, he said.
Less than two years later in July 2022 Tison’s 26–year–old brother Daneche was killed after being shot in the heart outside a block of flats in west Kilburn.
Following this Tison ‘lead the search’ for Digga D, and sent a list of rival gang members to target, the court heard.
The 24–year–old, who had an added status in the gang due to being a ‘successful recording artist in his own right’, also abused a woman to store a firearm in one of his music videos.
Snapchat correspondence showed the gang members discussing holding and financing the firearms, where they said they no longer required ‘a deeme’ (a female) to store the firearm.
Eventually their £500–a–month ‘lock’, a name for an individual storing the weapons was recovered by police, and a week later there was a fatal shooting on August 23, 2022, the court was told.
Mr McLoughlin, said the seven defendants intended to ’cause significant harm’ as they attempted to hunt Digga D, who is a part of the CGM gang, down.
He described it as a ‘high culpability’ case, demonstrated by weapons seized by police being replaced by the defendants.
The members of the Harrow Road Boys gang – Jayvon Tison, Kylann Grannum, Mustafa Abdalla, Romello Briggs–Leon, Harry Crump, Yasin Abdulla and Herman Yikalo – pleaded guilty to conspiracy to posses a firearm with intent endanger life between July and November 2022.
Abraham Safo Frimpong was found not guilty of the charge, but was found guilty of contravening the Prisons Act, by smuggling phones behind bars.
At the sentencing hearing on Wednesday, a community impact statement from police constable, David Hammond, told how the gang wreaked havoc on the ward ‘and beyond’.
The Harrow Road Boys gang had a massive impact on the local community, the court heard, with a ‘high level’ of drug dealing and serious violence in the area.
Children were recruited by the gang to expand the drug dealing operation outside of the capital, with offences by the Harrow Road Boys leaving the community in fear of ‘when the next attack will be.’
The gang felt they were ‘above the law’ the court was told, with people afraid to leave their homes and one local even abandoning their tenancy out of fear.
On August 2023, crew showed ‘complete disregard’ for bail conditions set to prevent further offending and threw a party in the middle of Harrow Road.
‘Gang violence has been a ward priority for several years. This is without a doubt the issue that concerns my residents the most,’ the statement from the officer read.
‘The hardest thing I have had to do is to deal with families who have lost their children to gang violence.
He added that gang violence ‘destroy[s] the lives of entire families in split seconds,’ and that the network ‘need[s] to be broken before another person is killed.’
Police found two guns in a bag in a service cupboard next to a flat on the Mozart estate on October 24, 2022. They were forensically linked to Tison and Grannum.
The prosecutor said the police also searched a flat in a tower block in Vauxhall on November 10, 2022 and and found a loaded gun hidden behind a panel in a roof void.
‘The lead offence, conspiracy to possess a firearm with intent to endanger life, is aggravated by the fact that the weapons were replaced when police found them,’ said Mr McLoughlin.
‘The gang used locks to keep the guns safe. There was a discharge of one firearm, and a firearm recovered was used to shoot at a group of CGM gang members in 2022.’
He said they also hoped to gun down Digga D with the weapon.
It was also heard that the gang smuggled in mobile phones into prisons across London by using drones.
The handsets were used behind bars by prisoners to order illicit substances and tobaccos, which were also flown in via drone.
Crump was also found guilty of possession with the intent to supply cocaine on February 28, 2023, after 16.3g of the drug were found on a table his table, as well as messages indicative of selling cocaine found on his phone.
Mustafa Abdalla pleaded guilty to possession with intent to supply a controlled drug after 580g cannabis was seized from his home address in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea on February 28, 2023.
Yasin Abdulla was also found guilty of possessing with the intent to supply of class a drug after nine grams of heroin were recovered from his address in Westminster on the same day last year.
The drugs were thrown into a neighbouring balcony, with messages concerning drug dealing also recovered from his phone, the court was told.
Judge Marcus Tregilgas–Davey said the HRB gang was ‘involved in a long running and deadly rivalry with CGM including ‘a long series of shootings and violent reprisals.’
He added: ‘The rivalry was further fuelled by tension between prominent members of the HRB CGM gangs, Fredo, and Digga D.
‘One of the guns used by the HRB gang had been discharged.
‘The firearm was recovered by police on a beach three days later.
‘The gang used a woman to the store the firearm. A conversation recovered in a Snapchat group chat also showed how the gang discussed buying a lock for the gun.
‘There were fatal shootings throughout 2022 in the Harrow area, and at the same time, there were videos of the CGM gang taunting their rivals and claiming responsibility for the violent attacks.
‘The HRB gang actively searching for Digga D in what in my view was clearly going to be a hit involving a firearm after they learnt about his whereabouts in a music video in central London.
‘There was significant planning. There was the use of a female to move the firearm around, and a youth to store the firearm and ammunition at an address in Harrow.
‘It is also clear that there were significant discussions about sourcing locks for the guns on Snapchat.
‘The gang posed a high risk due to the firearms, but there was also a high risk of disorder, as a hit on Digga D would have inevitably led to repercussions from CGM.’
The judge added that the defendants were ‘immersed in gang culture and violence’ adding:
‘You were living in the shadows of civilised society.’
‘Not one of you have shed an ounce of remorse for what you have done,’ he said.
‘The truth is that you as members of the HRB are a blight on your own community.’
Tison of Westminster, Mustafa Abdallah of Kensington and Chelsea, Briggs–Leon of Westminster, Yasin Abdulla of Kensington and Chelsea, Yikalo of Westmintser, and Grannum of no fixed address were sentenced to 17 years behind bars for conspiring to contravene the Prisons Act by supplying phones to people in jail, with the sentences running concurrently
Crump of Westminster jailed for 14 years for conspiracy to possess firearms with intent to endanger life, while Safo Frimpong received a two year custodial sentence, Westminster, was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment for conspiracy to contravene the Prisons Act.
Mitigating for Tison, Mr Alphege Bell said the 24–year–old suffered from PTSD and had been impacted by the deaths of family members, including his older brother and only remaining sibling, who was shot dead on the street.
They asked the court to be ‘merciful’ due to his ‘sad’ background.
Representing Mustafa Abdalla, Mr Jeremy Rosenberg said the 31–year–old was a ‘working man’ who was married with two children, with the eldest being diagnosed with non-verbal autism.
He told the court Abdalla had a ‘unique’ and ‘special bond’ with his son and was his ‘primary carer’
He added Abdalla was the one who was able to calm him down, which was sometimes difficult due to the child’s learning difficulties.
His younger child was born while he was in remand and as such they have nor met. Mr Rosenberg added: ‘It is the children who will suffer the most.’
Mitigating for Briggs Leon, Mr Andrew Frymann said the 29–year–old was a father to a two–year–old girl and had also been a primary carer for his mother, who is undergoing cancer treatment.
Representing Yasin Abdulla, Mr Anthony Barraclough argued the defendant was ‘remarkably quiet’ in regards to correspondence when events of significance, such as the tracking of Digga D and shooting, took place.
Mr Barraclough added that Abdulla ‘had to fend for himself’ when his parents separated from a young age.
Mr Paul Mylvaganam, mitigating for Yikalo, said the 31–year–old didn’t fit ‘the profile of a career criminal’, adding that he had been a ‘good son’, who supported his mentally unwell brother as well as his sister and parents.
Mitigating for Grannun, Mr John Fitzgerald said as the eldest of five, ‘life was extremely tough for him and his mother’.
He argued the now 28–year–old was previously ‘vulnerable’ to gangs, as at the age of 14 there wasn’t a guarantee supper would be ‘on the table every day of the week’.
Representing Crump, Ms Jemma Levinson argued the 24–year–old was ‘significantly’ younger than his co–conspirators.
She added that his age was a ‘significant factor’ in him being drawn to certain activity and individuals.
Mitigating for Safo Frimpong, Ms Puneet Grewal contested the 31–year–old had been impacted by a psychological condition and the ill health of his mother.
She added the defendant had been sectioned under the Mental Health Act following his mother’s death.
He then sought closeness with those who he grew up with after his loss according to doctors, she added. He was also diagnosed with anxiety.
It was also heard how he had lost his place at university as he struggled to cope, which was compounded by instability with housing.
She argued he had a lack of involvement with the Snapchat group and was trying to change his life in Portsmouth while on bail.
Detective Sergeant Cassie Hazell, who led the investigation, said: ‘This trial has brought to light the true nature of criminal gangs intent on bringing violence, intimidation and lawlessness to this city’s streets.
‘This gang thought they were acting above the law and obtained lethal weapons they planned to use in attacks against rival factions.
‘Officers were able to pick their plan apart through months of tireless investigation, including the identification of high-ranking gang members, the analysis of more than 100 phones and tackling the suspects of crime head on. We’re treating organised crime gangs like terrorists, employing similar tactics to disrupt their activity.
‘That eight men have now been taken off the streets is a testament to how officers are taking the fight to organised crime networks.
‘But we cannot do this alone. If you are aware of criminal activity in your area, please contact police on 101 or anonymously through Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.’