Liverpool City Council welcomes the sentencing of a group of graffiti vandals who caused an estimated £2million pounds of damage to hundreds of properties and the rail network.
Eight individuals, including one with a First Class fine arts degree, have been sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court receiving a combined total of nine years and one month in suspended jail sentences, and 1,200 hours of community work, for committing criminal damage and conspiracy to commit criminal damage.
The City Council had worked alongside the British Transport Police, Merseyside Police, Network Rail and Merseyrail to find the perpetrators, in the city’s biggest anti-graffiti investigation, dubbed Operation Doodle.
The group, which included three other individuals – two who were previously sentenced for a combined total of six years and 10 months and the other to be sentenced next month – had been defacing buildings and structures on an industrial scale since at least 2016, using a number of tags.
The vandals had even tagged prominent buildings such as the Marina Dalglish Cancer Centre and a multiple number of listed buildings such as Liverpool Magistrates Court, the former ABC Cinema, the walls around Liverpool Cathedral and even a police station on Copperas Hill in the city centre.
The crew also indiscriminately daubed railway stations, trains, children’s play equipment, vehicles, bins, street columns, CCTV poles, walls, parking meters, roller shutters, bridges, phone boxes, and cash machines.
On at least one occasion some of the members walked down Bold Street in the city centre with a diamond cutter and cut names into the windows on the Tesco shop.
The City Council has already spent more than £100,000 cleaning up many of the largest tags; if every tag had been removed it would have cost in the region of £1million, with a further £1million of estimated cost to the rail network.
Kyle Smith, 30, of Ribble Street, Birkenhead and Aiden Williams, 32, of Cleveland Street, Birkenhead were the first to be prosecuted, in 2020, after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit criminal damage. Their vandalism to trains cost Merseyrail almost £180,000 to clean.
The pair have since been convicted again for conspiracy to commit criminal damage as well as for a host of breaches of their 10 year Criminal Behaviour Orders. Having originally been given a 12 month suspended jail sentence, Mr Smith has subsequently been sent to prison for 42 months. Mr Williams, originally jailed for 16 months, was convicted again for 36 months.
The eight individuals who were sentenced today are:
George Dimech, 30, of Canterbury House, London, pled guilty to conspiracy to commit criminal damage . He will be sentenced on December 11th.
Cllr Laura Robertson-Collins, Liverpool City Council’s Cabinet Member for Neighbourhoods, said: “These graffiti vandals have scarred Liverpool. This is not street-art. This is mindless vandalism. And the cost to the public purse to clean it up has been astronomical.
“I welcome the sentencing and I’d like to thank our Neighbourhood Enforcement officers who have worked tirelessly with British Transport Police, Merseyside Police and Merseyrail on Operation Doodle.
“It’s going to take years for us to eventually remove every piece of tagging but I hope this case serves as a warning for anyone thinking of doing something similar.
“These vandals thought they could get away it with. They didn’t. We won’t tolerate tagging in Liverpool and we’ll take every step possible to prosecute those who deface public and private property.”