{"id":87188,"date":"2023-10-31T14:14:59","date_gmt":"2023-10-31T14:14:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritytidings.com\/?p=87188"},"modified":"2023-10-31T14:14:59","modified_gmt":"2023-10-31T14:14:59","slug":"i-was-a-gangster-from-the-toughest-estate-in-britain-i-slept-with-a-machete-under-my-bed-now-the-violence-haunts-me-the-sun","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritytidings.com\/world-news\/i-was-a-gangster-from-the-toughest-estate-in-britain-i-slept-with-a-machete-under-my-bed-now-the-violence-haunts-me-the-sun\/","title":{"rendered":"I was a gangster from the toughest estate in Britain \u2013 I slept with a machete under my bed\u2026 now the violence haunts me | The Sun"},"content":{"rendered":"
A FORMER gang enforcer who grew up on one the country's most notorious housing estates is now haunted by the violence he inflicted on his victims.<\/p>\n
Stu Otten,46, grew up on the Netherton Park estate in Merseyside, which was nicknamed 'Dodge' by locals in the 1980s and 90s. <\/p>\n
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The estate was one of many blighted by crime when heroin and then cocaine swept across Merseyside during an era of high unemployment and recession. <\/p>\n
Stu said he saw his first heroin needle aged just five and grew up surrounded by drug addicts known as "zombies." In the 90s the estate became associated with a notorious drug gang. <\/p>\n
After years of bullying and emotional issues, Stu joined a local mixed martial arts club to boost his self-confidence. But tragically this ushered the teenager into world of criminality.<\/p>\n
Stu claims to have worked as an enforcer for a drug gang, and described forcing his way into homes to attack debtors in front of crying children. <\/p>\n
The Merseyside man said he had a machete under his bed for protection and routinely used hammers and knives when enforcing drug debts. <\/p>\n
He said: "By 18 I had been to cities across the UK for these guys. I learned how to use a knife and a baseball bat.<\/p>\n
"I could kick a door in cleanly and make a quick getaway. I wasn\u2019t the biggest or the toughest but I had no \u201coff\u201d switch, I\u2019d do
what they needed from me.<\/p>\n
"When I\u2019d beat people up, I just saw it as work. I\u2019d say to myself, \u201cI\u2019ll finish this meeting then it\u2019s onto the next meeting.\u201d It\u2019s just what my life was like.<\/p>\n
<\/picture>CASH IN <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>THERE FOR YOU <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>MAYA DRAMA <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>READY TO SERVE <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n "You hear a lot about County Lines now, it isn\u2019t new. I was involved in County Lines 25 years ago before it had a name. <\/p>\n "I was recruited to the gang when I was 18 and had no idea what I was doing. I took drugs to people and the violence followed."<\/p>\n Stu, now a reformed character, travelled the UK delivering violence to individuals who owed his gang drug money. <\/p>\n Armed with a knife and a baseball bat, he claims that he had "no off switch" and would do anything his bosses asked of him. <\/p>\n Stu worked as a doorman in Liverpool's clubland during an era when nightclubs were linked to drugs and crime. <\/p>\n After years of violence and crime Stu decided to turn his life around, and signed up for a course at Liverpool John Moores University. <\/p>\n He then moved to Sheffield to start a new life for himself and get away from Liverpool's gang scene. <\/p>\n He said: "I deeply regret the harm I\u2019ve caused. During counselling I\u2019ve had to come face to face with my demons again to acknowledge what I did.<\/p>\n "The stuff we did was horrendous and \u2013 for a long time \u2013 it would keep me up at night. I\u2019d wake up drenched in sweat thinking of the violence. The worst memories were about the families affected by what I did."<\/p>\n Stu now works at the anti-slavery charity Causeway where he tried to dissuade young people from becoming involved in crime and gangs.<\/p>\nCash payment worth \u00a3300 landing in bank accounts from TODAY – exact code to spot<\/h3>\n
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