A CLYDEBANK man was one of the leaders of a gang caught with drugs worth almost £650,000, a court has heard.

Kieran Adams, 28, ran the business along with 31-year-old Stephen Kelly, the High Court in Glasgow was told this week.

The court was told the seven-strong gang planned to flood the streets of Inverness with the illegal substances.

Adams and Glasgow man Kelly admitted being involved in the supply of cocaine, heroin and Etizolam between November 2018 and March this year, along with 28-year-old Drumchapel man Sean Gordon.

Two more men from Glasgow – Donald Dunbar, 61, and 25-year-old Kenneth MacKenzie – pleaded guilty to the same charge, as did 51-year-old Karen Reynolds, also from Glasgow, and Danielle Finlay, 30, from Hamilton.

The charges were aggravated by a connection with serious organised crime.

Prosecutor Richard Goddard QC told the court: "This case relates to the large scale distribution of drugs to the Inverness area.

“The source of the drugs was Glasgow.”

The court heard that Adams and Kelly ran the business and used MacKenzie, Dunbar, Finlay and Gordon as couriers.

The gang used Reynolds’ flat in Glasgow to store the drugs.

Mr Goddard said: “Adams and Kelly possessed bulk quantities that they would supply to couriers for forward distribution under their direction.

“Both Kelly and Adams were found in possession of significant quantities of controlled drugs.

"The aggravation of a connection to serious organised crime in the case of the accused, other than Kelly and Adams, is to reflect that the various accused agreed to become involved in the supply of controlled drugs, a crime committed with the intention of obtaining a material benefit.”

The court heard that MacKenzie, Dunbar, Gordon and Finlay were caught following tip-offs to the police. There was also undercover surveillance on members of the gang.

Finlay's Honda Civic car was stopped by police at Drumnadrochit, Inverness-shire, on January 16.

Finlay, an administrative assistant with Argyll and Bute Council, was asked if there were any drugs in the car.

She replied: “What's in the car is a long time in jail.”

Drugs with a maximum street value of £151,040 were found in a rucksack on her front passenger seat.

MacKenzie was arrested at Inverness railway station on November 20, 2018, and cocaine and heroin was found in his holdall with a maximum street value of £78,320.

Dunbar was stopped at the car park at the Travelodge motorway services area in Stirling on December 12,last year.

A search of his Peugeot revealed cocaine with a maximum street value of £51,500 and heroin with a maximum street value of £66,400.

Gordon was stopped on the A9 at Tomatin, Inverness on February 5. He had cocaine and heroin with a maximum street value of £99,560 hidden under the boot liner of his Renault Megane.

Adams and Kelly were the subject of undercover surveillance.

Adams was detained outside a hotel in Inverness on February 6. He had £8,300 of cocaine on him and Etizolam pills worth £56,183 were found in a nearby cottage he had been using.

Kelly was caught in Argyle Street, Glasgow, on March 7 with a rucksack containing cocaine and heroin with a street value of £30,290.

A search of Reynolds' flat, whichs he had just left, revealed thousands of Etizolam pills with a street value of £105,700 hidden under the bed. Police also found £2,300 worth of cocaine.

As police were searching the flat, Adams turned up.

He fled when he saw the police and, while running, snapped a SIM card in half and threw a mobile phone to the ground.

All seven were remanded in custody and will be sentenced next month.

The total amount of drugs seized by the police had a maximum street value of £649,593.