Bristol drug dealer trafficked children into the South West

Tai Makessa
Tai Makessa -Credit:Avon and Somerset Police


A Bristol man has been jailed for drugs and modern slavery offences after being involved in trafficking teenage children from Luton to the South West to deal class A drugs. Tai Makessa, 24, of Hepburn Road in St Pauls, was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison following the offences.

Investigating officers from Avon and Somerset Police discovered teenagers were being trafficked with the purpose of dealing drugs between April 2022 and March 2023. Makessa was involved in taking them to addresses for them to supply drugs.

The officers discovered that two teenage children had been trafficked from Luton to the South West to deal drugs. One teenage adult was also trafficked from one part of the South West to another.

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Makessa pleaded guilty to two counts of being concerned in the supply of crack cocaine and heroin, and one count of arranging or facilitating travel of another person with a view to exploit them. He appeared at Bristol Crown Court last Thursday (April 18) and was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison.

Makessa was also handed a five-year Slavery and Trafficking Prevention Order. He will be the subject of a Proceeds of Crimes (POCA) hearing.

A second man was charged and subsequently jailed for being involved in drug supply as part of the police investigation. Mohammed Sillah, aged 34 of Kings Meadow, in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, appeared alongside Makessa on the same day.

Tai Makessa
Tai Makessa -Credit:Avon and Somerset Police

He had previously been found guilty at a trial in October last year at Gloucester Crown Court of two counts of being concerned in the supply of class A drugs (crack cocaine and heroin) and for being in possession of criminal property and cannabis. Sillah was sentenced to four years and nine months in prison and will also be the subject of a POCA hearing.

A third offender, Harvey Worthington, aged 24 of no fixed address, was sentenced at Bristol Crown Court in August last year as part of the investigation. He was handed a 22-month-long prison sentence which has been suspended for two years.

The sentence comes after he pleaded guilty to two counts of being concerned in the supply of class A drugs (heroin and crack cocaine) and two counts of possession with intent to supply crack cocaine and heroin.

Mohammed Sillah
Mohammed Sillah

DI Angela Burtonwood, from the County Lines Team in Op Remedy, said: “This has been a long, detailed investigation and I praise the hard work carried out by the County Lines Team to bring these men to justice. Drugs, and the crimes associated with them, have a significant impact on individuals, their families and the wider communities.

“We hope that this result provides reassurance to the community that we are dedicated in our effort to crack down on the plight of drug dealing in our area. The County Lines Team continues to target adults who use children and vulnerable people to traffic drugs across the country.”