The teen whose promising life came crashing down when police looked inside his JD Sports bag

Sonny Daley
-Credit: (Image: Merseyside Police)


A teenager's promising life came crashing down around him when police officers found him hiding in a bush and discovered a loaded firearm in his JD Sports bag. Sonny Daley was caught with the converted blank firing gun when he was out dealing heroin and crack cocaine in a park.

He was allegedly put to work in the drugs trade after racking up a cannabis debt. A judge today told the former junior boxer and community volunteer it was a "terrible shame" he had "fallen so far".

Liverpool Crown Court heard on Tuesday that police were on patrol in Grant Gardens, Everton, on the afternoon of July 25 this year when they spotted Daley with a JD Sports bag over his shoulder. The 18-year-old, of Tordelow Close, in Everton, "appeared to be dealing to drug addicts", and officers attempted to stop him as a result.

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But Derek Jones, prosecuting, described how he instead "discarded" some of the illicit substances in his possession and ran off towards Everton Road. Daley then continued onto Bright Street before turning down an alleyway leading to Churton Court, where PCs "heard rustling from a bush" and discovered the defendant's hiding place.

His bag was also located nearby along further wraps of drugs. When officers looked inside, they "immediately noted what appeared to be a firearm", alongside £890 in cash.

A total of 31 wraps of crack cocaine worth an estimated £660, 44 wraps of cocaine valued at £880 and 22 wraps of heroin with a street value of around £440 were seized. Daley told officers at the scene the weapon was "fake" but, when analysed, it was found to be a converted Turkish-manufactured blank-firing pistol which was successfully test fired.

It was also loaded with four bullets which had themselves been converted from blanks. However, the gun was not linked to any previous shootings. Upon being told that Daley had no previous convictions, Judge Simon Medland KC told defence counsel Lloyd Morgan: "Your client is 18 and of previous good character. What a terrible shame."

Mr Morgan replied: "I don't think the word tragedy is over egging the pudding. He is a young man, I am sure your honour will acknowledge from references, who not only had a lot of promise in society but had already contributed a lot to organisations with which he was involved, including an amateur boxing club and Everton youth community - where he received member of the year a couple of years previously. To have fallen from a young man of such promise illustrates some underlying problems in the community."

The judge added: "It is infinitely depressing. Some people seem to think that dealing drugs is glamourous. It is not. It destroys people's lives. Guns in particular are an absolute menace."

Mr Morgan continued: "He is utterly ashamed. He did ask me to express his shame and regret over his involvement. He knows he has not only let himself and his family down, but he recognises the ills that this perpetuates on society.

"He was at college looking at working on the railways. He was heavily involved in amateur boxing. He stopped at 15 and sadly began using cannabis and incurred a debt. It is that which led to the commission of this offence. Pressure was applied on him to deal drugs and carry a firearm which he believed was a fake.

"Since he has been in Altcourse on remand, he has not wasted his time. He is employed as a wing cleaner. He wishes to try and reengage with getting a job on the railways upon his discharge from prison. The family support is here. They will continue to offer their support to Mr Daley, recognising that this is a good person who has fallen foul of criminality but is not a lost cause."

Daley admitted possession of a prohibited firearm, possession of ammunition without a certificate, possession of heroin and crack cocaine with intent to supply and possession of criminal property. Appearing via video link to HMP Altcourse wearing a blue Under Armour t-shirt, he was jailed for five years and four months.

Sentencing, Judge Medland said: "It is of great sadness that a young man of promise and previous good character and with a good family and social support should have fallen so far down as to be behaving in this way. Any person who thinks that drugs are somehow glamourous should be very swiftly disavowed of that.

"Drugs destroy people's lives. They corrode society, they break up families and they do nothing but harm. You are a living example of that. Despite the many advantages you have had in life, and your promise as a young boxer, you began taking cannabis. That brought you into contact with serious criminals who then put you to work.

"By working as you were, you were helping to perpetuate the cycle of depravity and despair which drugs bring to people's lives. You were doing so while armed with a working pistol which was loaded.

"You may have thought it was still a blank firing pistol but, by the time you had it, the original colouring had been painted over in black and it was loaded with four bullets and it worked. This is very serious criminal offending, even for a young man of previous good character."