Liverpool gangland enforcer guilty of acid attack and plots to blind victims

‘Deli Mob’ gangster charged £6,000 to commit an acid attack and £10,000 to blind someone.
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A gangland enforcer from Liverpool has been convicted of launching a horrifying acid attack on a victim in St Helens and plotting to blind other targets.

Jonathan Gordon, 34, from Kirkdale, charged £6,000 to commit an acid attack and £10,000 to blind someone.

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A member of Liverpool’s ‘Deli Mob’ gang and a convicted drug dealer, he took instructions from an unidentified boss of an organised crime group (OCG) on the encrypted comms platform EncroChat.

Gordon nearly blinded one man in St Helens after throwing a container of acid in his face and was also involved in two street shootings in Liverpool.

Jonathan Gordon will be back in court for sentencing in June. Image: NCAJonathan Gordon will be back in court for sentencing in June. Image: NCA
Jonathan Gordon will be back in court for sentencing in June. Image: NCA

He planned further acid attacks in Blackpool and Warrington and organised the drive-by shooting of another man’s house.

“Jonathan Gordon is an extremely dangerous offender. His actions were exceptionally wicked, he thought nothing of blinding victims for money,” said National Crime Agency operations manager Ben Rutter.

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“He brought a really high level of harm to the streets as an enforcer for his OCG and it is lucky no one was killed in his chaotic and reckless use of firearms.”

At Liverpool Crown Court on Thursday, Gordon was found guilty of three counts of conspiracy to commit grievous bodily harm; two counts of possessing a firearm with intent to endanger life, and one count of conspiracy to possess a firearm with intent to endanger life.

He will return to court on June 15 to be sentenced.

Acid attack in St Helens

On April 14, 2019, the first victim left his house in Milton Street, St Helens, to get a charger from his car.

Gordon, who used the handle Valuedbridge on EncroChat, was waiting for him and threw a container of acid in his face.

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The victim was temporarily blinded but regained his sight months later after medical treatment.

During an identity parade, he picked out Gordon, who is from Kirkdale, but of no fixed abode, as his attacker.

Encrypted messages on EncroChat - a now defunct message system used by criminals - showed Gordon was taking instructions from the unidentified crime boss.

Blackpool and Warrington acid attacks

The crime boss and Gordon planned a second acid attack on a man in Blackpool – with the paymaster declaring the victim “needs a good litre on him” – and a third attack on a man in Warrington.

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The Blackpool attack was cancelled because it was planned to happen during the first lockdown when the roads were empty and the offenders were worried about police spotting their stolen car.

On April 6, 2020, Gordon and accomplices Dylan Johnston, 27, and Stephen Wissett, 28, drove a stolen Ford Fiesta to Birtles Road, Warrington, and planned to throw acid on a man who lived at the property.

An acid canister and Steyr M 9 handguns from EncroChat message. Image: NCAAn acid canister and Steyr M 9 handguns from EncroChat message. Image: NCA
An acid canister and Steyr M 9 handguns from EncroChat message. Image: NCA

Spotting the house had CCTV they abandoned the attack and decided to return the next day in disguise.

Police close in on gangster

But the next day, April 7, while in Liverpool, the three offenders were approached by patrol officers. Gordon, Johnston and Wissett ran off but the car was seized and the attack prevented.

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Forensic examination found Wissett’s DNA on a Lucozade bottle, the steering wheel and a pair of gloves. Johnston’s DNA was on another pair of gloves.

The crime boss was undeterred by the failed bid on 7 April and wanted Gordon to go back to Birtles Road and “double the dose” and “cook” the intended victim with acid.

But National Crime Agency investigators – working with Merseyside Police, Cheshire Police and the North West Regional Organised Crime Unit - discovered through EncroChat messages that a grenade had previously been left in the front garden of the house in Birtles Road, Warrington.

Using the EncroChat intelligence, NCA officers organised for the bomb squad to conduct a controlled explosion on the grenade on 14 April.

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Because of this, the OCG paused the acid attack because it was obvious law enforcement had become involved.

Gordon still discussed the planned acid attack, telling his boss: “He getting blinded, bro.”

Street gunfights in Liverpool

EncroChat messages also showed Gordon had been involved in a street gunfight on 24 January 2020 with an unknown man.

Evidence showed Gordon’s mobile phone was in Wilburn Street, Liverpool, around midnight, and Gordon also sent his boss a message saying he “let off a clip in the street”.

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Officers who attended the scene found a kicked open front door to a house with Gordon’s DNA on it and on the handle of the back door.

Messages also showed that Gordon was involved in another gun fight with an unknown attacker on 25 May 2020.

At 11.45pm the man approached Gordon on an e-bike and they exchanged fire – a bullet from Gordon’s Grand Power handgun went through the bedroom window of an elderly couple’s house in Carisbrooke Road, Liverpool.

In the aftermath Gordon told his boss on EncroChat that he had lost his Grand Power gun – and sent him an image of a newspaper story about the shooting.

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His hand was visible in the picture and a finger print expert compared his palm with the palm in the photo and said both were Gordon’s.

Drive-by shooting

Gordon was also involved in a plot to shoot up a property in Reaper Close, Warrington, on 20 March 2020.

He and accomplice Johnston organised a team to blast the windows of the house in a drive-by shooting.

Phone records linked the two men calling each other in the minutes after the attack. Forensics proved the bullets came from the same gun involved in the Wilburn Street shooting.

Gordan and accomplices in court

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On Thursday, Gordon and Johnston were found guilty by a jury at Liverpool Crown Court.

Wissett, of Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, but no fixed abode, had already admitted conspiracy to commit GBH – he was part of the team planning to throw acid in a victim’s face.

The trio will return to court on 15 June to be sentenced.

Stephen Wissett and Dylan Johnston. Image: NCAStephen Wissett and Dylan Johnston. Image: NCA
Stephen Wissett and Dylan Johnston. Image: NCA

Judge David Aubrey said Gordon’s ruthlessness knew no bounds.

Ben Rutter, NCA operations manager, said: “I pay testimony to the victim in this case and thank him for his bravery and support in helping us bring Jonathan Gordon to justice.

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“The victim suffered life changing injuries and the physical and mental toll of his attack cannot be overstated.

“I commend investigating officers from the National Crime Agency, Merseyside Police and Cheshire Police. This was a long, complex investigation spanning a number of years and the officers worked tirelessly to ensure the evidence gathered left the jury in no doubt about Gordon’s guilt.”

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