Man who tried to flood Parklife with nearly 40,000 ecstasy tablets is jailed

Jian Huang had a make-shift lab inside his home in Moston

Jian Huang
Author: Nathan MarshPublished 23rd Jan 2024
Last updated 23rd Jan 2024

A man from Moston's been jailed after it's believed he tried to flood Parklife festival with almost 40 thousand ecstasy tablets.

Jian Huang, aged 44, was sentenced to 9 years at Manchester Crown Court yesterday (Monday 23 January 2024) after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing.

Approximately 38,500 ecstasy tablets were seized by officers. A property was being used as a makeshift 'lab', with the drug in various stages of preparation.

Some were suspended in liquid, some drying and thousands in tablets. It is believed they were being prepped for sale, likely bound for Parklife Festival due to when they were recovered.

A makeshift drugs lab was found in a padlocked bedroom in Jian Huang's home

On Wednesday 19 April 2023, PC's attended a concern for welfare at an address on Arran Street, Moston, which had been reported via email to GMP anonymously. It was reported that an argument could be heard coming from inside and a women and children could be heard shouting.

Police attended and despite such little information available to them at the scene, officers conducted several house-to-house enquiries.

Huang was acting extremely evasive in regards to questions relating to his female partner and children, raising concerns for their welfare.

Upstairs bedrooms inside the address were found padlocked, but when Huang said he had no keys to these rooms, entry was forced to the internal bedroom doors, and an extremely large amount of class A drugs, a tablet production machine and associated equipment was located inside the address.

Detective Constable Heather Gore, of COM North’s Challenger organised crime team, said:

"This case is a great example of how much we rely on the public to report crime to us - trust your instincts and we will root out criminality together.

"Response officers did an outstanding job in bringing Huang to justice. It looked like Huang was preparing to sell these drugs which would have likely ended up at festivals such as Parklife, so seizing such a huge quantity was a significant result.

"The address appeared to be a laboratory for converting ecstasy from its liquid form, to a pressed tablet.

"There was approximately 38,500 ecstasy tablets, 7kgs of unpressed ecstasy, and 10 litres containing methylamphetamine. The tablets alone have a street value of approximately £385,000."

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