A man has been sentenced during a vehicle stop in Clapham for carrying a samauri-style knife.
Terrel Doyley, 23, from Lambeth, was sentenced on Tuesday (29 June) to six months' imprisonment for possession of a bladed weapon and an additional day imprisonment for possession of cannabis.
This comes after he pleaded guilty to both counts on Friday, 28 May.
The court heard that on 12 November 2020, at around 4:10hrs, officers from the Violent Crime Task Force had cause to stop a vehicle that Doyley was travelling in along Clapham Common Southside towards Balham.
Upon the vehicle being stopped, the rear passenger door flew open and Doyley ran from the police.
Officers chased him until he was detained on Lynette Avenue. Doyley was searched and was found to have cannabis in his coat.
During a search of the route Doyley had taken, a member of the public informed police he had dropped something along the way and a Samurai-style sword was discovered on Cavendish Road.
He was charged and remanded to Croydon Magistrates' Court on 13 November 2020 where he pleaded guilty to possession of a Class B drug (cannabis), and not guilty to possession of a bladed article.
Doyley was served evidence forensically linking him to the knife and consequently entered a guilty plea on both counts.
The proactive search was part of Operation Sceptre, a national week tackling violent crime.
Detective Constable James Preston, said:
"The sentencing reflects a dedicated investigation undertaken by the Central South BCU and the Violent Crime Task Force, and highlights the impact of using police resources and tactics to remove deadly weapons from the streets. The offences Doyley has pleaded guilty to have a serious impact on violence in our communities, and of course there is an inextricable link between drugs and violent crime. Our work is vital to taking dangerous offenders off the streets.
"At the time of his arrest, Doyley was subject to a gang injunction, preventing him from possessing a bladed article or offensive weapon alongside other requirements such as avoiding contact with certain areas and named people.
"The extensive list echoes his violent and intimidating behaviour, recognised by the courts as being a legitimate and necessary way to limit the impact of his actions. This compounds the offences he has pleaded guilty to and evidences the necessity for police to use all the resources at our fingertips to prevent high harm and repeat offenders from making decisions which cost lives.”
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