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POLICE ALSO UNCOVERED IMAGES OF BULLET CASINGS WHICH HAD BEEN ARRANGED TO FORM THE WORDS 'F*** DINGLE RATS' 08:03, 21 Apr 2025 A "stupid" drug trafficker who posed for a
picture while armed with a shotgun and spelled his initials using ammunition "fell back into his old ways". Joshua Caldwell was linked to a major drugs conspiracy after police
discovered pictures of firearms on a seized phone, including one image showing an antique French pistol beside several bullet casings which had been arranged to form the "chilling"
words: "F*** Dingle rats." The investigation saw Merseyside Police recover heroin and cocaine worth nearly £120,000, as well as several guns. The "stupid" gang member
has now been sent back to prison to serve the remainder of his 15-year sentence after he was caught with cocaine in his underwear while out on licence, at which stage police officers also
seized a Rolex watch from his girlfriend's wrist. Liverpool Crown Court heard last week that police were passing Caldwell's home on Harrismith Road in Fazakerley at around 3.30pm
on March 2 this year when he was seen entering a Vauxhall car. The 34-year-old was said to have been "nervous" when subsequently approached by officers, who were also unable to
establish the ownership of the vehicle. Article continues below Derek Jones, prosecuting, described how this led to a search of his address, which saw four "golf ball sized"
packages of cocaine and £2,035 in cash recovered from the bedrooms. PCs also noticed a Rolex on his partner's wrist, which Caldwell stated he had purchased for her. This led to the
watch, which was valued at around £4,000, also being seized. The defendant subsequently volunteered further bags of drugs and a mobile phone from inside his underwear following his arrest.
Caldwell remained silent under interview other than telling detectives that the money was "a gift from his birthday", which fell two days later. His criminal record shows two
previous convictions for four offences, receiving two years in a young offenders' institute in 2009 for possession of heroin and crack cocaine with intent to supply and 15 years in 2016
for conspiracy to supply class A drugs and conspiracy to possess a firearm. The ECHO previously reported that the latter sentence came in relation to an investigation which commenced during
the summer of 2014 after a handgun was produced during an argument at the Park Cafe on Elmswood Road in Aigburth. This saw one of Caldwell's associates brandish the firearm while
members of the public, including a child, were present and warn: "This is my f***ing patch." A flat belonging to another of his co-accused on Woodlands Road in Mossley Hill was
then raided in August that year, with officers recovering a quantity of high purity heroin as well as cocaine and adulterants. An antique St Etienne ordnance revolver, dating back to around
1886, was meanwhile found inside a Nike bag, with a sawn-off Beretta shotgun being discovered underneath the floorboards and a quantity of bullets seized from inside a box on a desk. A third
co-defendant was arrested at a nearby address in possession of a Remington pistol and a phone containing alarming images which warned of threats to the gang’s rivals, as well as picture of
three weapons which were not recovered. Caldwell was meanwhile arrested in January 2015 with two Blackberry mobile phones which contained further incriminating photographs. One showed the
then 24-year-old holding the Beretta shotgun before it had been sawn-off. Michael Scholes, appearing for the prosecution on this occasion, described how he was identified as being the person
shown in the picture due to his "very distinctively shaped eyebrows". Having been released on bail, Caldwell was again arrested at his then home on Lowbridge Court in Garston in
August of that year as police recovered £15,150 in cash, a set of scales, tick lists and drug paraphernalia. His own counsel maintained that he was not the "Mr Big" of the plot as
a leading figure in such a conspiracy would not be so "bloody stupid" as to be pictured holding a gun. Caldwell has since been recalled on licence in relation to this sentence, and
is not due for release until 2030 as a result. Peter White, defending, told the court during his latest appearance: "Quite simply, he tells me that he was released approximately two
years ago. He has initially done very well. "He entered into a steady relationship. He has assisted with her personal responsibilities and cared for her grandmother. He has engaged with
mental health services. He tells me that he has had a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, stemming from incidents while he was in custody. "He accepts, quite simply, that he
fell back into his old ways and got drawn back into this circle. He holds his hands up to that. He can only apologise. They had plans to start a family together. His future looks somewhat
bleak, given he potentially has another five years left on licence. "He does have an unattractive record. There does appear to be another side to him, however. He has, at least
partially, demonstrated that he can stay out of trouble. There are significant gaps in his offending." Caldwell admitted possession of cocaine with intent to supply and two counts of
possession of criminal property. Appearing via video link to HMP Altcourse, he was jailed for 2,035 days on Tuesday. Article continues below This is the minimum seven-year sentence for a
third drug trafficking offence minus credit of 20 per cent for a guilty plea. Sentencing, Recorder Richard Pratt KC said: "This was by no means the first time you have been involved in
the supply of drugs. "It is a point of regret, needless to say, that the severe sentence you received in 2016 did not have the lasting effect it ought to have had upon you. Having lost
a good proportion of your 20s, you are now, inevitably, going to have to spend a fair bit of time in your 30s in prison, which, I am sure you appreciate more than anybody, is a waste of your
life."