![]() ![]() Inevitably, the organised crime gang were not too happy with this and acted ruthlessly. But he instead stole the gang's graft phone and drugs, turning it into his own operation. Hodgin, of Manor Road in Liscard, had originally been put to work by an organised crime group to pay off a debt. The dealer was out on licence when he became involved in peddling class A drugs. He then received further time behind bars in February 2021 having been caught with drugs, a phone and a "couple of weapons" in his prison cell. ![]() ![]() Liverpool Crown Court heard this week that Hodgin had been making some progress at the team thanks to guidance from Everton in the Community, and by the time he had been released the coronavirus pandemic had struck and the "opportunity no longer existed" with the charity. The schoolboy gained a rap sheet featuring offences including theft, criminal damage, assault and breaching his ASBO and was first jailed in 2019 for possession of a bladed article in a public place. But the orders did not prevent them from breaking the law, Alfie receiving his first criminal conviction at the age of 13. Meanwhile, the elder sibling was said to have caused a "litany of trouble" and was "accused of being part of a gang that threw missiles at vehicles and hurled abuse at vulnerable people". The two youths were "believed to be part of a gang involved in a series of incidents in the north end" of Birkenhead. Only a month earlier, his older brother John - then aged 14 - had also received an ASBO. The primary school pupil was also ordered not to associate with a group of friends in public.Īlfie Hodgin, of Manor Road in Liscard, was taken to hospital after suffering "significant" injuries (Image: Merseyside Police) Put in place for a period of two years, the order banned him from "causing harassment, alarm or distress to members the public" and required him to leave shops and businesses when asked to do so by staff. READ MORE: Ukrainian refugee forced to return home after her host ends their affair In December 2014, when he was only 10, Hodgin was handed an ASBO at Wirral Magistrates' Court after "terrorising the community". ![]() The ECHO revealed how the now 18-year-old's involvement in the criminal justice system began at an alarmingly young age. This "retribution" came after he had stolen drugs and a graft phone from a county lines ring which he had previously been working for. As a result, he was stabbed 27 times with a machete.Īlfie Hodgin was locked up on Wednesday after being caught with more than £2,000 of heroin and crack cocaine while "slumped on the floor covered in blood" following the vicious attack. A 10-year-old boy who was dubbed "one of the youngest people ever to receive an anti-social behaviour order" later became a teenage drugs gang boss. ![]()
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