Communities across Cornwall are being urged to come forward and report any drug-related activity to help build an intelligence-rich picture as part of a regional campaign to disrupt county lines gangs.
The Operation Scorpion intensification campaign will be taking place across the South West, with exact locations and timings being withheld.
Op Scorpion, now in its sixth iteration since inception, harnesses the collective powers of the region to disrupt drug-related crime and ensure young people and their families are warned about the dangers of exploitation and provided with guidance on how to spot the signs.
Police and crime commissioners from Wiltshire, Devon and Cornwall, Dorset, Gloucestershire and Avon and Somerset have agreed with their respective chief constables that their forces, supported by the South West Regional Organised Crime unit (SWROCU), would combine operational powers to tackle cross-border drugs supply, drug-related crime and associated anti-social behaviour as part of this campaign.
Information and intelligence from the public is a key tool to enabling Devon & Cornwall Police to focus operational activity on those involved in county lines drugs gangs who ply drugs in our communities and target vulnerable people.
County lines is where drugs are transported across the country, usually by children or vulnerable people who are coerced by gangs.
Police and Crime Commissioner for Devon & Cornwall Alison Hernandez said: “Information from the community led to a huge drugs growing operation being shut down in the last round of Operation Scorpion.
“I am now working relentlessly with police and crime commissioners from around the South West, and their respective forces, to ensure that more dealing operations can be driven out of our villages, towns and cities by police working hand in hand with local people.”
Assistant Chief Constable Steve Parker, of Devon & Cornwall Police, added: “We are committed to disrupting gangs who infiltrate our counties to ply drugs and target the most vulnerable members of our communities. Our disruption activity is centred on the intelligence and information we have about those individuals involved in drug supply and our communities are a key part of this information gathering process.
“I would like to thank the public for the information they have previously provided and would like to reassure them that it is all collated to help us understand what is taking place. Please continue to contact us with information and report any concerns you may have, whether in relation to drug-related activity, vulnerable people being exploited or any other suspicious activity in their areas.”