Sean O’Neill, Crime Editor
Win luxury hampers plus Waitrose vouchers & guidebooks
Sean Lynch lived in a £1 million house on a private gated estate in Surrey. Ricky Johnson led an itinerant lifestyle on caravan parks in Gloucestershire and Worcestershire.
Both were career criminals earning large amounts of money by breaking the law and both were jailed this week.
Lynch, 46, was sentenced to 18 years for his role in running a drugs gang dealing in Class A, B and C drugs - cocaine, amphetamines and cannabis.
Drugs with a street value of £600,000 were seized when police raided a terrace house in Tooting, southwest London, where Lynch was a regular visitor.
Almost all the cocaine was found packaged in pellets that had been swallowed and smuggled into the country by human drug “mules”.
Knuckledusters and flick knives were found at the house in Tooting and in the master bedroom at Lynch’s home, a large detached house in Warlingham, Surrey.
That property has been seized under the Proceeds of Crime Act along with Lynch’s collection of cars and vehicles. These included a Rolls-Royce, a £170,000 Aston Martin, a Ferrari, a Mercedes convertible, a BMW and a Range Rover. He also owned an American police motorcycle and a liveried American police patrol car.
“Lynch was clearly the leader of the gang,” said Detective Inspector Pete Fulton, of Surrey Police.
“A financial investigation could not identify any visible form of legitimate income or investments sufficient to maintain such a lifestyle.”
Jailing Lynch at Kingston Crown Court on Wednesday, Judge John Crocker, told him: “I am quite sure you were the organiser, the man who kept very much in the background.”
Two other members of Lynch’s gang, Stephen Voller, 56, and David Warwick, 34, were jailed for 14 and 12 years respectively. A confiscation hearing to decide if Lynch will be stripped of his assets permanently will be held in December.
Compared with Lynch’s drug trafficking, the criminal activity of the Johnson gang looks more like old-fashioned villainy.
However, the family firm, which had been involved in crime for 20 years, put a large amount of time into planning and executing some of the most audacious domestic robberies in Britain. Some art experts have estimated the value of the items stolen by the Johnsons – Ricky, his sons Chad and Albi and two other relatives – at £80 million.
At Ramsbury Manor, Wiltshire, the home of the property developer Harry Hyams, they made off with art and antiques valued at £23 million, including furniture, porcelain and clocks. Mr Hyams fell 49 places in The Sunday Times Rich List after the burglary.
The Johnsons also had extensive contacts, including crooked dealers in the art world, who were prepared to buy the proceeds of their raids and spirit them out of Britain to overseas collectors.
Despite its members appearing in court regularly, the gypsy gang was not cracked until five police forces combined to form a special task force.
Charles Dupplin, an art expert at the specialist insurer Hiscox, said: “A case like this is incredibly rare. The Johnsons are a very hardened bunch and were well organised and seemed utterly disregarding of the law.”
The likes of Lynch and Johnson pale in comparison, however, with men such as Terry Adams, whose organisation dominated the London underworld for years. Adams, now in prison, was an avid consumer of stolen art and antiques. When police raided his home in Mill Hill, North London, in 2003 they found a collection of etchings, furniture and vases.
Adams was jailed for seven years in March 2007 after pleading guilty to laundering £1 million of his multimillion-pound criminal fortune. He and his brothers Tommy and Patsy ran a criminal empire based on loan sharking, protection rackets and money laundering in the Hatton Garden gem district of Central London. Adams was convicted after a 21-month investigation during which listening devices were planted in his home.
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles


Overseas contacts and local business information

A treasure trove of baubles, booty and stylish quests

Dubrovnik, the Dalmatian Coast and Montenegro
2007
£47,995
2008
£42,945
06/2006
£40,850
Great car insurance deals online
£33,000
Macmillan Cancer Support
Central/South West
£50k
NHS
Nationwide
£
£30k OTE
Meltwater News
Nationwide
circa £70k
Central Office of Information
London
5% below developer pre-launch price!
Luxury Appts, beautiful gardens w/ Thames views
Great Homes Available on a shared Ownership Basis
Great Investment, River Views
Visit the ‘entertainment capital of the world’
at great sale prices!
Christmas Cruises
From only £995pp
APTs East Coast now from only
£2425pp.
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
"The Johnsons are a very hardened bunch and were well organised and seemed utterly disregarding of the law. It seems to me that the police are too stupid, too politically correct or too cowardly to nail known criminals for good. We all suffer from those who laugh at the law and proper authority.
Geoffrey Woollard, Cambridge, England