A man who’s cannabis lab blew up and killed a man and seven-year-old boy in the explosion has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.
Reece Galbraith set up a drug lab in the flat in Benwell, Newcastle, creating cannabis concentrates and turning those products into edibles.
But the highly dangerous process of using butane gas to process the class B drug caused a major explosion which ripped through the building in the early hours of October 16.
The blast caused about £3.7million worth of damage when it wrecked the building, leaving families homeless and killing seven-year-old Archie York as he slept as well as Galbraith’s friend and collaborator Jason ‘Jay’ Laws, 35.
Six people were taken to hospital ‘with varying injuries’ after the blast, with several others evacuated from their homes. Two flats ‘suffered the main brunt of the explosion’ but four more were also badly affected by the explosion.
Archie lived in the flat above the cannabis factory with his parents Katherine Errington and Robbie York and his baby brother Finley.
Archie was killed in the blast as he slept (Picture: NNP)
He was asleep on the sofa with his dad when the blast ripped through the flat.
Katherine was pulled out of the rubble by Robbie, who also found seven-week-old Finley covered in dust but ‘astonishingly unharmed’ in the wreckage.
In a heartbreaking impact statement read at Newcastle crown court, Archie’s mum Katherine shouted ‘you killed my son’ at Galbraith, adding: ‘On October 16, 2024, my entire world was shattered.
‘Everything about that night was normal until it became the worst moment of my life.
‘I woke up terrified, my flat had been blow apart, I didn’t know where my children were or if they were alive.
‘When I came around all I could do was scream Robbie’s name and try to move the bricks.
‘I only managed to move one foot out of the rubble so Robbie could identify where I was.
‘This was your choice Reece Galbraith. You brought butane gas canisters into a building where families lived.
‘You ran a drug operation under the floor where my children slept. You killed my son. No sentence will ever bring our boy back.’
Archie’s parents paid tribute to their son’s ‘cheeky smile’ (Picture: NNP)
Speaking after Archie’s death, his mum said: ‘As a parent and as a mother you try your best to keep your children safe, and that was took out of my hands.
‘When they are in the house, that’s supposed to be the safest place.’
The couple paid tribute to their son, saying his ‘cheeky smile’ will ‘live on’ in his younger brother Finley.
‘Archie was not only our son but our best friend,’ they said.
‘He lit up every room he went in, whether that was with his cheeky smile he was known for or some of his cheeky words.
‘We are so broken as a family, but Archie will live on in his baby brother Finley who is the spitting image of him.
‘He might have been small but he had a heart of gold, everyone loved him.’
The huge blast sent six people to hospital and left several people homeless (Picture: Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)
Galbraith, 33, was ‘lucky not to be killed’ in the blast. He was placed in a coma for a week and was in hospital for a month, and still doesn’t have full use of his arms due to the burns he received.
Police had stopped Galbraith’s car last April and found drugs in the vehicle. After searching his home they found moulds to make cannabis sweets, but he was released pending further investigation.
Northumbria Police launched a major inquiry after the devastating explosion, and after analysing his phone they found 80 messages related to the sale of cannabis sweets.
Police also found evidence that he was dealing in cannabis and cannabis sweets ‘full-time’ with Laws from at least November 2023.
Galbraith initially pleaded not guilty but has since admitted the charges (Picture: NNP)
There were 100 butane gas canisters found in the flat, and Galbraith’s fingerprints were found on drug processing equipment inside the destroyed flat.
Galbraith was using the gas to create cannabis concentrates, known as ‘shatter’ or ‘butane honey oil’, before turning them into ‘gummies’.
But this process is highly dangerous because butane is highly flammable.
Prosecutor David Brooke KC explained: ‘When the liquid butane gas escapes, the odourless gas sinks towards the ground because it is heavier than air, and can accumulate in a confined space such as a flat.
‘It is dangerous even to store butane bottles inside let alone use the liquid gas in a process like this. The liquid gas will expand a nominal 230 times as it becomes gas.
‘Ignition makes the gas expand by a further factor of eight. The failure and ignition of a single bottle of butane would have been too much for the size of the living room in the property.’
Jason Laws was also killed in the blast (Picture: NNP)
After the initial blast destroyed six out of 12 flats in the block, a ‘fierce fire’ spread through the rest of the building and caused so much damage the entire block has since been demolished.
Richard Wright KC, defending, told the court Galbraith did not set out to harm anyone, adding: ‘We acknowledge there will only be in this case a significant custodial sentence, it will be a custodial sentence that will punish him for what he has done.
‘He understands he killed Archie and Jason.
‘Whatever else he may be or whatever else he may have done, he is genuinely sorry for his role and the consequences of his actions, that is a genuinely held position.’
Jailing Galbraith, judge Mr Justice Cotter said: ‘Archie York was just a seven-year-old with a wonderful and exciting life ahead of him.
‘His parents have so movingly explained, their world was shattered on October 16 when their flat was blown apart and they woke up buried under the rubble, dazed, bleeding and terrified to realise their precious son had been lost.
‘Violet Close was a close-knit, multi-racial community with many families that was literally blown apart as a result of your illegal activities in their midst, regardless of the clear risks to others.
‘You bear responsibility for all this loss and destruction.’
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This is the moment drug smuggling gang members Abubakr Khawar, Sean Montgomery and Daniel Marshall were arrested in a police raid
An organised criminal gang which smuggled millions of pounds worth of cannabis from the US into south Wales through the post have been jailed.
The operation was led by 28-year-old Abubakr Khawar from the Riverside area of Cardiff, who was sentenced to eight years at the city’s crown court on Wednesday.
Prosecutor Roger Griffiths described the 11-strong gang’s operation as “drug importation and supply on an industrial scale”.
Border Force intercepted 327kg (721 lb) of the drug with a street value of £11m, but the court was told at least 58 consignments did get through.
Khawar was seen in videos with 0.45kg (1lb) packs of cannabis, known as “cali packs” – being split ready for 3.5g street deals.
The court was told Khawar received instructions from a man known as Adam Z in the US who was orchestrating the operation, sending the drugs from seven different US states including California, New Jersey, Colorado and Ohio.
Some of the drugs were sent from the US in packages marked as Yankee Candles.
The court heard the gang was making a profit of between £3,000 and £10,000 per day.
The gang’s second in command Mohammed Nural Hussain, 29, from Cardiff was sentenced to six years in prison.
Athena
The group’s ringleader Abubakr Khawar was sentenced to eight years behind bars
Cardiff Crown Court judge Eugene Egan said he was instrumental to the storage of the drugs in a stash house in the Riverside area of the Welsh capital and the distribution chain.
He said Hussain played a significant role in the organisation, ensuring the “cogs in the machine worked”, collecting and storing the drugs.
The court was told he was financially motivated by the need to clear debts.
When he was arrested, £7,000 in cash was found in his house.
Gang members who were sent packages through the post also received significant sentences.
Judge Egan said: “It is too simplistic to say ‘all I did was receive a small amount of cannabis through the post’.
“This was a well-run, well-organised and extremely profitable business.”
The court heard 8kg (17.6lb) of drugs with a street value of £164,000 was intercepted before it could be delivered to Soloman Bertram, 36, from Cardiff, who was sentenced to 22 months in jail.
He was recruited by his girlfriend and fellow gang member Sophie Jones.
Judge Egan told the father of six: “You could have told her no, but greed got the better of you.
“You thought this was easy money. That must look foolish now.”
South Wales Police
Kyle Solowyk, Daniel Marshall and Abubakr Khawar had all previously pleaded guilty to three charges
Getty Images
Gang members who were sent packages through the post received significant sentences
The court was told Sophie Jones also persuaded her own brother Keiran Jones, 29 to get involved.
About £277,000 of cannabis destined for his address in Cardiff was stopped by detectives.
Jailing him for 26 months, the judge said: “You became involved at the bidding of your sister Sophie Jones.
“You had a drug problem.”
Sophie Jones, 32 will be sentenced next month.
Steven Munroe, 45, from Cardiff, had five packages sent to his home, but only one arrived, the other four were halted by detectives.
He was jailed for 32 months.
The court was told about 2kg (4.4lb) of cannabis sent to two addresses used by Kyle Solowyk, 29 from Barry, Vale of Glamorgan. He was sentenced to 34 months in prison.
He refused to provide the PIN for his phone when he was arrested and had a previous conviction for robbery in 2015.
He had spent nine years in a young offenders institution.
Described as a trusted member of the gang, Sean Montgomery was sent by ringleader Abubakr Khawar to a Royal Mail sorting office at Holton Road in Barry to track down 10 missing parcels of drugs representing a loss of £60,000.
South Wales Police
Sean Montgomery, Steven Munroe, Mohammed Nurul Hussain and Abdu Husain were found guilty of smuggling cannabis labelled as “Yankee Candles”
The court heard Khawar and his US supplier Adam Z were becoming increasingly irritated by the number of parcels disappearing.
They had in fact been intercepted by the police and Border Force officers.
Sean Montgomery took photos of himself sitting in his car with cannabis valued at around £20,000 on his lap.
Jailing him for three years and six months Judge Egan said: “You were showing off about your drug dealing.
“The decision to take the photograph is not so sensible now.”
He also had previous convictions for the possession and supply of category A drugs diamorphine and crack cocaine.
Andrew Pethers, 36, from St Mellons in Cardiff, was also described as a trusted gang member who played a key part in the supply chain, updating the leader about the distribution of the drugs.
A 3.2kg (7.05lb) shipment of high grade cannabis was also intercepted before it could reach his home. He was jailed for three years.
Fellow gang member Daniel Marshall, 40, from Merthyr Tydfil, a father of two teenagers with a gambling addiction, was jailed for 32 months.
Abdu Husain, 28 from Cardiff was described as being “trusted and instrumental in the supply chain”, and as being particularly aware of law enforcement tactics.
He was jailed for six years.
South Wales Police
Sophie Jones, Andrew Pethers, Keiran Jones and Solomon Bertram had all previously pleaded guilty to three charges
The full list of all 11 defendants:
Abubakr Khawar, aged 28, of Despenser Street, Riverside, Cardiff
Daniel Marshall, aged 40, of Perrott Street, Treharris, Merthyr Tydfil
Andrew Pethers, aged 36, of Drawlings Close, St Melons, Cardiff
Sophie Jones, aged 32, of Cwrt Sanqhuar, Splott, Cardiff
Kyle Solowyk, aged 29, of Elizabeth Avenue, Barry
Keiran Jones, aged 28, of Pendwyallt Road, Whitchurch, Cardiff
Solomon Bertram, aged 36, of Malvern Drive, Llanishen, Cardiff
Mohammed Nurul Hussain, aged 28, of Ninian Park Road, Riverside, Cardiff