Drive-by shooting highlights how a Doncaster community is being “terrorised” by gangs

A judge has highlighted how a Doncaster community is being “terrorised” by gangs after a young man was killed in a drive-by shooting.
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Sheffield Crown Court heard heard how driver Jack Parkes, gunman Taylor Meanley, and passengers Joe Anderton and Arlind Nika were in a Jaguar car on Wath Road, Mexborough, on January 11, with a shotgun when Lewis Williams was shot in the head and neck and died.

Stephen Wood QC, prosecuting, told the sentencing hearing on October 29 they had been looking for 20 year-old Lewis Williams, of Rotherham, because he was a member of a rival gang in Doncaster and Mexborough.

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Mr Woods added Meanley received an Instagram message after the shooting which stated, “Heard one of the Hudz rinsed one of the PSB boys”, followed by an emoji of a smiley face crying with laughter.

Pictured are the many floral tributes that were laid in honour of deceased drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams who was killed on Wath Road, in Mexborough.Pictured are the many floral tributes that were laid in honour of deceased drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams who was killed on Wath Road, in Mexborough.
Pictured are the many floral tributes that were laid in honour of deceased drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams who was killed on Wath Road, in Mexborough.

Judge Jeremy Richardson QC, who described Lewis Williams’s death as a “gangland execution” said a community is being “terrorised” by gangs with guns and the sooner they are put out of existence the better it will be for society.

He said: “There is a vast amount of social deprivation and social degradation. This feeds into gangs which is having a very bad effect on the local community.”

Judge Richardson added Chief Superintendent Melanie Palin has stated these gangs are involving themselves, almost certainly, in drug-related violence.

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He added: “It’s a significant local problem in that area and it’s having a detrimental effect on the local community, particularly gun crime is having an effect on the local community.”

Pictured is drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams, of Rotherham, who died aged 20 after he was murdered on Wath Road, in Mexborough.Pictured is drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams, of Rotherham, who died aged 20 after he was murdered on Wath Road, in Mexborough.
Pictured is drive-by shooting victim Lewis Williams, of Rotherham, who died aged 20 after he was murdered on Wath Road, in Mexborough.

Judge Richardson said deprived youths are becoming attracted to gangs.

Mr Wood said the mothers of Meanley and Parkes had been subjected to attacks which drove these defendants to seek revenge on the gang they held responsible.

Barrister Adam Kane, representing Tayloy Meanley, said South Yorkshire Police and Doncaster council knew Meanley’s mother had been subject to an escalating campaign of violence by an organised crime gang called the Pitsmoor Shotta Boys.

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Mr Kane added Meanley’s mother had her windows smashed, her car torched and she was in her hallway when her front door was smashed by someone firing a shotgun.

Pictured is Taylor Meanley, aged 17, of of Beech Crescent, Mexborough, who was found guilty of the murder of Lewis Williams and of possessing a firearm with intent to endanger life. He also admitted assaulting a teenager and damaging property.Pictured is Taylor Meanley, aged 17, of of Beech Crescent, Mexborough, who was found guilty of the murder of Lewis Williams and of possessing a firearm with intent to endanger life. He also admitted assaulting a teenager and damaging property.
Pictured is Taylor Meanley, aged 17, of of Beech Crescent, Mexborough, who was found guilty of the murder of Lewis Williams and of possessing a firearm with intent to endanger life. He also admitted assaulting a teenager and damaging property.

He said Taylor Meanley had been placed on an “at risk register” by the authorities because it was suspected he was being targeted by gangs.

Judge Richardson told a packed public gallery with some wearing Justice for Lewis t-shirts: “It must be made very clear that those who indulge in this form of exceptionally serious violence must expect, and will recieve, very substantial sentences of imprisonment when they are convicted of crimes.”

A trial jury found Meanley, who fired the shotgun, and driver Parkes both guilty of murder and they also found Nika and Anderton guilty of manslaughter.

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Meanley, aged 17, of Beech Crescent, Mexborough, Parkes, aged 21, of Arnold Crescent, Mexborough, Nika, aged 16, of Spelman Street, London, and Anderton, aged 18, of Jubilee Road, Wheatley, Doncaster, were also found guilty of possessing a firearm with intent to endanger life.

Judge Richardson imposed life custodial sentences for Meanley and Parkes and they must both serve a minimum term of 27 years, and Anderton and Nika were each sentenced to 12 years of detention.