Having been subject to an attempted machete attack at his partner’s home, Liam McElvaney rounded up a group of associates, including Wayne Narey and Jayden Woodley.
Teesside Crown Court heard the 23-year-old sourced a shotgun before the gang turned up at the home of his rival’s father, who was blasted in the abdomen with the shotgun.
A judge heard how McElvaney hid under a child’s bed when a gang of armed men turned up at his girlfriend’s home and threatened her and her child hours before the revenge attack.
Rachael Landin, prosecuting, said bad blood had been boiling between McElvaney and the victim’s son for several weeks before the brutal shooting took place.
Three men have been sentenced following a shooting in Richmond Court, Grangetown, Middlesbrough (Image: TERRY BLACKBURN)
“The victim was shot and severely injured while in the kitchen of his home,” she said.
“He had been lured there by a knock at the door or window.
“The shot was fired from a shotgun through a window next to the back door, breaking the glass before hitting the victim in the abdomen.”
She said the victim’s life was saved due to expert medical attention when he underwent surgery on his bowel and gall bladder.
Liam McElvaney (Image: Cleveland Police)
The victim was in intensive care for eight days and in hospital for five weeks before being released.
She said: “The shooting was the culmination of a feud between McElvaney and the victim’s son.”
The court heard McElvaney’s sister had raised concerns about the mounting tension between the pair and the potential targeting of family members just weeks before the shooting.
Miss Landin said: “A gang had attended McElvaney’s girlfriend’s home, forcing entry and attacking the girlfriend and her property.
“The intended target had been McElvaney, who during that incident, hid himself under a sleeping child’s bed.”
The barrister said that within minutes McElvaney had put in motion plans for the revenge attack and rounded up Narey and Woodley along with two other unnamed people.
Wayne Narey (Image: Cleveland Police)
The gang fled the scene and the weapon was never recovered by police.
Days after the shooting, McElvaney posted on Snapchat that he had shot the victim following the attempt to attack him at his girlfriend’s home.
Following his remand in prison, McElvaney was heard singing a rap over the phone boasting about pulling out the shotgun and shooting the victim.
McElvaney admitted causing grievous bodily harm with intent after initially facing an attempted murder charge following the shooting on Richmond Court, Grangetown, on April 1, 2024, and a charge of possession of firearm with intent to endanger life.
The 23-year-old also admitted a charge of attempting to pervert the course of justice by trying to offer the victim cash in a desperate bid to avoid prosecution.
While 19-year-old Narey and 18-year-old Woodley, who travelled to Teesside from his home in West Auckland, pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm, a shotgun, with the intent to endanger life.
Jayden Woodley (Image: Cleveland Police)
Narey also pleaded guilty to a further charge of attempting to possess a firearm on March 2, 2024 – a slam-gun which was never recovered.
Jonathan Walker, representing McElvaney, said his client had no previous conviction for similar offences on his record.
He said: “The incident at the house of his partner prompted this defendant’s reaction.
“Five to seven men barged into the house with machetes […] while he sought sanctuary underneath the bed.”
Fiona Lamb, representing Narey, was not the lead offender in the case. She said: “He went along, he should not have gone along and he entirely accepts that and what he did.”
And Nicci Horton, representing Woodley, said her client was only 16 at the time of the shooting.
She said: “He was feeling very emotional, it was clearly a difficult time for him and his mother.”
Judge Francis Laird KC, the Recorder of Middlesbrough, told McElvaney that the shooting was a result of a ‘bitter and violent feud’.
“You fired the shotgun through the kitchen window directly at the victim,” he said. “The shot went through the pane of glass and stuck the victim in the midriff.
“The three of you, and two others, then made off.”
McElvaney, of Pennywell House, Hylton Road, Sunderland but originally from the Middlesbrough area, was sentenced to 16 years and six months for all offences with an extended four years on licence.
Narey, of Bruce Avenue, Middlesbrough, was sentenced to nine years for both offences.
Woodley, of Front Street, West Auckland, was sentenced to six years and three months.
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