TURF WAR

Sinister rise of ultra-violent ‘Armed Response’ gang becoming modern-day Peaky Blinders and ‘baiting’ rivals on YouTube

One rapper dodged a stabbing after his attacker slipped before he managed to make a daring escape through a fire exit

A CHILLING gang war has exploded in the UK where brutal underworld figures are fast becoming the modern-day Peaky Blinders.

A notorious underworld crew called Armed Response is bringing bloodshed to Birmingham's streets - just as the savage criminal gang did decades ago.

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Rapper Reial Phillips received 27 years in prison in 2015 for his involvement in violence in the city
The Armed Response splinter gang in Birmingham has killed one boy and left another paralysed
The barrel of the slam gun used to shoot the 13-year-old boy can be seen in this CCTV footage released by policeCredit: SWNS

The gang formed in the 2010s, with police nabbing a 20-year-old rapper in 2016 who had been baiting his rivals and “gloried in the shootings” through drill music videos on YouTube.

"When we come round in that truck, them boys there they dash," rapper 'Lynch' says in one video, describing an attack on another group.

Lynch, real name Reial Phillips, was initially jailed for 27 years in 2016 for his role in the 2015 shootings, but later had his sentence cut to 20 years.

Armed Response's colour is understood to be red and their turf is on the west side of the A34, a city they share with the infamous Peaker Blinder gang.

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Just like the real-life Peaky Blinders, Armed Response uses extreme indiscriminate violence toward other gangs and even civilians on their turf as they seek to control the drug trade.

They are a splinter group of the black Brummie gang Burger Bar Boys, a 1980's crew who controlled the crack cocaine trade in the West Midlands and have now become the subject of a BBC podcast.

The increase in gang violence in the city has mirrored its other problems, with cuts to social services over the last decade and the Labour-run council going bankrupt earlier this year.

In 2015, the city of a thousand trades was ravaged by a series of shootings fueled by the rise in drill music, .

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The war left eight people with gunshot wounds, including a 16-year-old boy who was shot in the back outside a barbecue party.

And in 2017, the Burger Bar Boys and the Johnson Crew were in a landmark ruling.

One gang member, Louis Clarke, 19, was jailed for life last week after an innocent 13-year-old boy was shot in the spine, leaving him permanently paralysed.

The gangster was the fourth jailed for the 2021 shooting.

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Another of the foursome, Tafique Thomas, had pulled the trigger on the homemade 'slam gun' shotgun after the gang had chased the youngster through an underpass.

The slam gun looks like two pieces of metal pipe, one short and one long, but when used properly the makeshift gun can be just as deadly.

They don’t have a trigger and instead work by a barrel being inserted into the main barrel connected to the butt. A shotgun cartridge is then inserted into the floating barrel which is pulled back sharply forcing the cartridge onto a firing pan.

The boy was only chased and shot because he had walked into the gang's territory on his way to get food with friends.

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A third member then rapped about the shooting in a video released online in the subsequent days and appeared to express regret the boy survived.

"Hands on my head, now I'm f****** stressed, when I heard my man ain't in a casket," Zidann Edwards rapped.

The victim's mother labeled Clarke and the other gangsters "cowards" for the callous crime against her son.

Armed Response marked an evolution in the Birmingham criminal underworld concurrent with the popularisation of drill music from the south side of Chicago in the early 2010s.

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