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It was all very “normal”, in the beginning. A normal family – two parents, two kids, a boy and a girl – in a normal town, in the northeast of England. Harriet and Tom were navigating all the normal parts of parenting teenagers coming of age when it began; changing schools, changing friends, the onset of social media. They lived in a six-bedroom, three-storey house; work was good and life was ticking along. Then, slowly at first, everything started to change.
The signs were subtle. Ben’s transition to secondary school had been relatively smooth but, as all teenagers do, he was testing boundaries occasionally. “He started sneaking out a bit,” Harriet explains – their bedroom was at the top of the house, “so we didn’t necessarily hear everything downstairs.” It had never been a problem in the past.
“But then I started to realise he was going missing. He’d say he was in his friend’s garage, and we’d make him come home right away. That happened quite regularly at the start. Then our daughter started telling us £20 had gone from her desk, things like that. To be honest we just assumed she’d lost it – we couldn’t imagine he’d be taking money. As time went on, I started to put these things together.”
At just 13, Ben had been recruited into a criminal gang selling drugs on county lines (dangerous drug networks). It’s a form of modern slavery – victims, mostly under-18s, are picked and primed, exploited and then trapped in violent networks, unable to free themselves.
In 2023 more than 7,000 children in the UK were referred to the National Referral Mechanism for exploitation; 42 per cent of those were referred for child criminal exploitation. This, says children’s charity Barnado’s, is just the tip of the iceberg. Many children go unidentified. In fact, a “conservative estimate” approximates that 27,000 children are thought to be at high risk of exploitation by criminal gangs.
“For a while, it just looked like bad behaviour,” Harriet explains. She and Tom are withholding their names to protect themselves and Ben, whose name has also been changed. Ben was becoming known to the police for anti-social behaviour, and “his whole demeanour changed”. When they found that he’d been buying cannabis at 12, they took him to the police station to scare him. “I was distraught,” Harriet explains. But it wasn’t the deterrent she hoped for.
Police strip-searched him in the family home, and found drugs and a burner phone containing county lines contacts. Ben now owed the money for drugs and was a liability to the gang. He was subject to a “debt bondage” from the gang for the value of what was confiscated, and now had to work for them for free.
They moved to what they deemed “an even nicer area, but it just got worse. Because, it doesn’t matter where you go, it seems to be everywhere. If they’re involved, if they make that initial link, it’s everywhere. Things went from bad to worse. At one point, I genuinely feared he might die.”
“In the media, this happens to children – boys, mostly – from deprived backgrounds,” Sarah Pritchard, consultant social worker and trainer from Barnardo’s explains. “But Tom and Harriet’s story is far from unique. It’s just not widely covered or spoken about. They’re a middle-class family, with middle-class jobs, in a middle-class, affluent area. Poverty wasn’t a driver. This is exactly the point: exploitation is indiscriminate.”
In primary school, Ben had been creative and popular – “he was always involved in the girls’ drama,” Harriet laughs. “If a girl was crying, he’d be in the toilets making sure that they were OK. The teachers loved him, the kids loved him. He was quirky. We worried about that before he went to secondary school, whether his creative streak would mean he was bullied. This was the last thing we expected.”
The complicated truth is that, as Pritchard explains, these are now qualities that appeal to criminal gangs. “There’s a real power at play here,” she says. “These qualities that Ben had – that he was a loyal friend, that he’s going to stick around – these are what exploiters [look for]. He was preyed upon – because he was raised on social media – he was out being a child, doing what children at that age do. Gang members will seek out and target this. They targeted all these characteristics and made them useful for them.”
“It was a very hard time,” Tom explains. “I felt pretty hopeless. When it escalated, when Ben was around 16, we were hardly getting any sleep. We were calling the police every time he went out, which was what we were told to do – to report him as a missing person. He would always come back, maybe around midnight. But then we’d have to stay up for the police who would arrive at about 3am, then I’d go out to work again soon after.”
Tom is visibly emotional recalling that time. “I just feel sad,” he says. “I felt like I’d lost him. We had been close, really close – like most father-son relationships, I suppose. He used to apologise to me before he went out. He knew I was upset, but he still had to go out.”
Inevitably, it strained Tom and Harriet’s relationship. There were no “hard signs” that you might expect from seeing this type of crime play out on TV or in films, they explain.
“You think that looks like him becoming violent towards you, which he never did,” explains Harriet, or “wearing gold chains or new trainers. He was never violent. Most of the time he would be silent in the house. There was nothing you could say to him to make him open up or just talk. Then, yes, he used to apologise. He would say, ‘I’m sorry, I have to go’. It was heartbreaking.”
Pritchard explains that, often, eventually kids are threatened with violence coming back into the family home if they don’t comply. By then Ben was disappearing to work in a “cuckoo’d property” – a flat that the gang had taken over from a vulnerable person in order to sell, supply or store drugs. Harrowingly, they would often drop Ben off there, unaware of the danger he was in once inside.
Things started to unravel when Ben was eventually arrested and searched in the family home, where they found his burner phone full of county lines contacts. Social workers got involved and Harriet and Tom accessed life-saving information and support from charity Ivisons Trust (what was then called PACE – Parents Against Child Exploitation). When Ben was 16, he was facing jail. Things came to a head.
One night when they picked him up late at night, he broke down in the back of the car. But Ben went “from one extreme to the other”. After he confessed what had been happening, he began having panic attacks, and Harriet and Tom became worried that he was contemplating suicide.
“He locked himself in his room and wouldn’t come out. If we had to go somewhere we’d have to invite family to watch him as we were worried he’d hurt himself.”
Thankfully, Ben was helped by services, who worked hard to build a trusted and safe relationship with him. More than 18 months on, he’s completely turned his life around. “It’s such a joy, I can’t tell you,” Harriet explains.
“He’s totally focussed on his fitness, he’s got an apprenticeship in mechatronics, he wants to work in renewable energy. He’s a bright kid. Our relationship now is brilliant. He wants to come everywhere with us. It’s almost like he’s a bit too perfect,” she laughs.
Tom says their outlook on parenting has also changed. “I’m ashamed to say that, before it happened to us, I might have looked at some of those children involved in anti-social behaviour like Ben was and thought, that must be because of something at home.”
“We did everything that parents are supposed to do,” Harriet adds. “One of the biggest things is that we never in a million years thought our parenting wouldn’t be enough, and it wasn’t even coming close. No amount of parenting or love was enough during that moment in our lives.”
They’re now getting on with their lives together – a chance that Harriet is grateful to have. “We’re so relieved it’s over,” she says. “We know how lucky we are to get to see our son grow up. The tragic reality is that most others aren’t so fortunate.”
If you’re worried about yours or someone else’s child, contact Barnado’s or the Ivison Trust for support