Lanarkshire gang jailed for assault and robbery

Four men who led police on a high-speed car and helicopter chase after carrying out a £10,000 jewellery raid on a house in Lanarkshire have been sentenced to a total of six years and eight months in prison.

Author: Natalie GoodwinPublished 1st Feb 2023

Four men who led police on a high-speed car and helicopter chase after carrying out a £10,000 jewellery raid on a house in Lanarkshire have been sentenced to a total of six years and eight months in prison.

26 year-old Lawrence Connor and James Loveridge, 37, James Loveridge junior, 18, and a 17-year-old male targeted family homes.

They were sentenced at Hamilton Sheriff Court after pleading guilty in December to breaking into a house in Bellshill during a daylight robbery and stealing gold jewellery worth £10,000 and £1000 in cash.

The convictions were aggravated by the gang’s connections to serious organised crime.

Connor, a prisoner, was handed a three-jail sentence, Loveridge senior, also a prisoner, was jailed for two years and his son, of Rochdale, Lancashire, was sent to a Young Offenders Institution for 20 months.

The fourth member of the gang was given a 300-hour community payback order.

Prosecutors had told the court how neighbours spotted a black BMW driving past the house in mid-morning last March.

They then alerted police after seeing three males running from the property with a bag and fleeing in the car.

Officers later spotted the vehicle in Hamilton being driven in a “dangerous and reckless” manner.

At one point, the BMW went through a red light and was being driven on the wrong side of Strathaven Road in Hamilton.

During the chase, the Police Air Support Helicopter Unit was deployed, and the vehicle identified and followed.

It eventually came to rest in the town’s Burnside Lane whereby five men fled the vehicle and ran in different directions.

The four accused were all quickly apprehended nearby at different locations.

The court was told that the accused were part of a nationwide network of gangs that targeted households believed to be keeping high grade gold and jewellery at home as well as a high percentage of business cash.

Connor was also convicted of being part of a five-man gang who carried out a separate robbery at a house in Houston, Renfrewshire, and assaulting a couple in February 2022, while armed with a screwdriver.

Les Brown, Procurator Fiscal for South Strathclyde, welcomed the sentences and warned the fight to detect and disrupt criminal gangs is ongoing.

She said: “These convictions and the sentence should send a strong message to others involved in this kind of criminal behaviour and demonstrates the ability of police and prosecutors to investigate and prosecute serious and organised crime of this nature.

“The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service will continue working with the police and other agencies as a member of Scotland’s Serious and Organised Crime Taskforce to ensure that these crimes are detected and those responsible prosecuted using all measures at our disposal.”

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