A court heard how both siblings were running their own illegal operations
A man has joined his older brother in prison after being convicted of the same offence. Both Ryan Tucker and Nathan Tucker were running their own cocaine dealing operations from the family home in Port Talbot, and were both sourcing their supplies from Merseyside.
A judge at Swansea Crown Court told Ryan Tucker that as he approaches his 30th year he needs to decide whether he is going to continue to offending or turn his life around.
Nathan Tucker is already serving a six year and nine month sentence after police found a kilo block of coke on top of his wardrobe which had been sent ‘special delivery’ from Merseyside.
Georgia Donohue, prosecuting, told the court that on August 29, 2024, police operating in Port Talbot town centre saw what they believed to be a “drugs exchange” taking place on Gwyn Terrace.
She said one of the males – subsequently identified as the defendant’s brother Nathan Tucker – was then seen to run to a nearby property.
As a result of what they had seen, officers decided to search the house and they arrested Nathan Tucker. While officers were in the middle of the search the defendant Ryan Tucker returned to the Tucker family home.
What officers found during the search of the property was detailed in October 2024 when Nathan Tucker was sentenced to six years and eight months in prison for being concerned in the supply of cocaine.
On that occasion the court heard officers found a machete behind a sofa in the living room, tubs of benzocaine – a common cutting or mixing agent used in drug deals – sets of weighing scales, and a parcel on top of a wardrobe containing a one-kilo block of compressed cocaine which had arrived in Port Talbot the previous day sent Special Delivery from Liverpool.
Miss Donohue said it was the prosecution case Ryan Tucker had his own drug supply operation which was separate from his brother’s.
The court heard that on September 7 police returned to the Tucker family home to arrest Ryan Tucker, and seized his phone and £3,125 in cash. The defendant refused to reveal the PIN for the phone, and said the money officers found was from the sale of cars.
Tucker answered “no comment” to all questions asked and was released under investigation. For the latest court stories sign up to our crime newsletter
The court heard that despite Tucker’s refusal to reveal his PIN, officers were able to gain access to the device and found messages relating to the supply of cocaine and amphetamine in a range of deal sizes over the previous 12 months.
In some of the messages Tucker referred to selling cocaine on behalf of Scousers and to owning the Merseysiders money.
The prosecutor said police encountered Tucker again on Boxing Day last year police when they received reports of a crashed and damaged VW Golf in Port Talbot. When officers arrived they found Tucker at the wheel of the vehicle “covered in cocaine”.
A search of the car uncovered almost 40g of cocaine and almost 100g of cannabis. Tucker was taken to hospital and subsequently placed in a medically induced coma for a period.
The court heard that the 27-year-old defendant’s phone was seized and officers found multiple Snapchat conversations between Tucker and others about the buying and selling of cocaine and cannabis.
Ryan Tucker, of Gwyn Terrace, Port Talbot, had previously pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of cocaine, amphetamine and cannabis when he appeared in the dock for sentencing. He has 23 previous convictions for 56 offences including violence, driving matters, acquisitive offending, and possession of cannabis.
Caitlin Brazel, for Tucker, said it was clear from her conference with the defendant that “he now appreciates the enormity of what he had done” and understands he is facing a significant custodial sentence. She said Tucker had a “rather unstable upbringing” and said after the loss of a brother in 2020 his life went on a “downward spiral” which saw him “battling nightmares, addiction, and mental health issues”.
Judge Geraint Walters said the evidence showed Tucker had been involved in distributing drugs for a Liverpool gang “in a not insignificant way” and that after being arrested and released under investigation had returned to dealing.
The judge told Tucker that as he approaches his 30th year he needed to decide whether he was going to continue being “a nuisance” or was going to to try to turn his life around. He said the defendant could “put his follies of youth and offending” behind him or could continue on the path he was on, and said if he chose the latter course he may turn around one day and find his life has passed him by with little positive to show for it.
With discounts for his guilty pleas Tucker was sentenced to five years in prison. He will serve up to half the sentence in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community.




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