'Prolific' drug-dealing grandad pulled by police twice in a week
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Craig Baines, who has already served sentences for dealing Class A drugs, was stopped twice by officers in Pontefract and found to be carrying hundreds of pounds worth of high-grade cannabis each time and nearly £1,500 in cash.
Appearing at Leeds Crown Court, Baines admitted two counts of intending to supply Class B drugs, and possession of criminal property - the money.
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Hide AdProsecutor Joe Culley said that police first pulled Baines over on July 24 last year on Grove Lea Walk in Pontefract. Searching the Vauxhall car they found around 39 grammes of 'skunk' cannabis and more than £1,053 in cash.
The 42-year-old told police he got 5oz of the drug from a friend, smoked some himself but planned to sell the rest to family and friends.
However, he was then stopped again behind the wheel of a Citroen on August 2 on Churchbalk Lane - close to where he was stopped previously.
This time officers found 20 grammes of the high-grade cannabis, and £404 in cash. They found weighing scales and a dealer's list.
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Hide AdThis time he told police he owed money to a man and was selling around 5oz of cannabis a week to help pay off his debt.
The court was told that Baines, a father of two and grandfather of three, had six convictions for 20 offences, including drug dealing.
A probation report suggested that Baines felt he was forced to deal drugs by a man he owed money to, but had refused to go back to selling Class A drugs.
Mitigating, Imran Khan said that Baines, of Westbourne Road, Pontefract, had been "candid and frank" and "chose to tell the truth".
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Hide AdBut the judge, Recorder Dafydd Enoch QC said: "He shows no commitment to staying out of trouble at all.
"He is a prolific cannabis dealer. Getting a job would have been the best way to pay off a debt."
Jailing Baines for 12 months, he told him: "You were a Class A drug dealer for a long time and been to prison several times.
"When you came out it was time to make some choices, but despite the fact you had been to prison, you carried on drug dealing.
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Hide Ad"There's no reason why you could not have gone to the police, or moved out of the area or taken steps.
"There's no reason why you could not have got a job. Forced you were not.
"Your luck is running out, if you keep doing this you will keep ending up back in prison."