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He's in the dog house! How drug dealer ran ecstasy empire from his nan's SHED with pill making equipment stashed in garden of her Essex home - and she had no idea

A.Davis43 min ago
At first glance, it looks like any normal garden shed.

But this unassuming wooden shack, ironically labelled the 'dog house', is where 31-year-old drug dealer Frankie Lee Watkinson ran his ecstasy empire from.

Set in the garden of his grandmother's house in Thurrock, Essex, he used her shed as a makeshift drug den without her knowledge, with police recovering bags of suspected MDMA and pill-making machinery.

Following a lengthy investigation by Essex Police, the criminal has now been sent to the actual 'dog house' after receiving a five-year sentence at Basildon Crown Court.

Images released by the police force show a pill press machine covered in fresh, loose powder which was recovered from the shed.

Also found in the grubby drug lab was a heart pill press used to brand ecstasy pills, as well as powder-covered gloves and loose pills.

The force's Serious Organised Crime Unit had for long been building a case against Watkinson in relation to intelligence gathered over suspected Class A drug supply.

And in January this year, a warrant was executed at his grandmother's address in Thurrock, where the makeshift drug lab was uncovered.

Watkinson was already in custody at the time of the search at his grandmother's address, having been arrested at a petrol station in Orsett.

A search of his grandmother's loft also revealed a small safe that had been hidden in the joist beam.

When officers removed the safe to the police station and opened it with a key seized from Watkinson at the time of his arrest, they uncovered 108g of cocaine in a Tesco food bag.

It was valued at up to £8,600.

When taken into custody, Watkinson gave his address as a caravan at a site in Clacton.

A suspected drug dealer customer list and 15 mobile phones were seized when officers carried out a search of the caravan.

Questioned by police, Watkinson denied producing the Class A drugs. He insisted he helped friends with removals and takes leftover items to boot sale.

He tried to claim the equipment found in his grandmother's shed would be those unsold items, and he further denied being involved in the supply of cocaine.

But faced with the clear evidence against him, he later admitted production of MDMA and being concerned in the supply of cocaine.

Appearing at Basildon Crown Court on November 6, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment.

Detective Inspector Yoni Adler, of the Serious Organised Crime Unit, said: 'The judge in this case found Watkinson's exploitation of his grandmother's property to supply and produce drugs was a clear aggravating factor.

'This case shows the depths to which organised Class A drug dealers will sink to facilitate their harmful trade.

'He showed little concern for the fallout of his offending on his wider family.

'The reality of ecstasy isn't glamourous.

'It is drug dealers like Watkinson, operating out of grubby, makeshift manufacturing labs, who choose what to cut the MDMA with.

'By their own reckless metrics, they decide the potency and authenticity of the pills they create.

'You can never be sure of what you are taking. It is a very real danger.

'The supply of ecstasy and cocaine also fuels wider offending in Essex and we know our role in stamping out the trade in these substances will help us drive down crime across our county.'

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