David Ungi | ARMED Category-A Prisoner Convoy Arrives At HMP Strangeways - Merseyside Police

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  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2024
  • This video shows an Armed Category-A Prisoner Convoy for Gangster David Ungi arriving at HMP Manchester (Strangeways) from Liverpool Crown Court.
    The Prisoner van was escorted by Merseyside Police Armed Unit’s to make sure the transportation is smooth and safe.
    The Trial was meant to be four weeks, but instead ended on Friday 16th February 2024, after David Ungi was found not guilty for a drug offence. He is being kept at HMP Manchester (Strangeways) due to his drug and firearm convictions, the firearm offence was committed in Spain. The drug offence was him supplying drugs, and then his cousin supplied drugs to an undercover police officer during a covert policing operation.
    BlueLightSpotters
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    Copyright: @BlueLightSpotters
    ___________________________________________________________________________
    Filmed: Thursday 15th February (2024)

Комментарии • 9

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 2 месяца назад +1

    21st Century British Policing.

  • @troywales983
    @troywales983 3 месяца назад

    bring back the good old days of strangeways , it was good family viewing ,

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 2 месяца назад +1

    Action Stations.

  • @saraprva4172
    @saraprva4172 3 месяца назад

    Police Mini ?? That is G.a.F.

  • @trevorbryan9268
    @trevorbryan9268 3 месяца назад +2

    They finally got him the biggest gangster of London sadik khan 😅

  • @harmoneyreilly4225
    @harmoneyreilly4225 3 месяца назад

    Lets this be a lesson to all who want to do drugs this may end up being you,stop destroying lifs

  • @Bond2025
    @Bond2025 3 месяца назад

    He probably wasn't in that van! They are often moved earlier or later in the day or held in police stations until being moved without all that for show.
    You will find they often go in a plain car or van, sometimes even vehicles that were bought at auctions with stickers still on, for example, how many BT vans or builders vans do you see with a cage in the back! North Wales used to have builders vans and horse boxes with speed cameras in the back, there is a whole unit for covert vehicles. Iceland home delivery vans were used at one point for surveillance as no one thought anything of seeing one parked overnight, it could have been a worker.
    What you see is all for show as there is another team watching for anyone getting too close. Police go to lots of funerals too, just to see who turns up and catch a few wanted criminals, the same for weddings. If there is a plan to help with an escape, it would not be during a convoy - it would more likely be from a building, lots of people about meaning it's harder to follow them. Escapes from convoys are much lower than those were someone runs off or is "allowed" to escape in return for payment or through fear of threats.
    For a low level drug dealer, who would want to break them free?

    • @MrHabushi
      @MrHabushi 3 месяца назад +2

      You're overthinking it, they don't deploy all those resources as a rouse. These types of transfers are done overtly to enable them to move quickly and to discourage any potential attacks. Believe it or not, the vast majority of the time things are exactly as they seem.

  • @Edddddddddie
    @Edddddddddie Месяц назад

    He’s a grass