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THE (EX) BIGGEST HEROIN DEALER IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD


INTERVIEW BY GRAHAM JOHNSON, PHOTO BY STUART GRIFFITHS


By the time Suleyman Ergun was 21 years old, he was the world’s most prolific and powerful seller of smack. Known throughout the junkie and police communities as the North London Turk, Ergun and his gang flooded Britain and Europe with heroin for five years.

For his pains, the former factory worker got mansions filled with cash and unlimited underworld cachet. At the height of his powers he was a multimillionaire and his favorite tipple was a bottle of champagne with eight grams of cocaine dumped into it. Today, he is almost penniless and lives with his mum. He’s 39. What happened?
 

Vice: Tell me a fond memory of your drug-dealing days.

Suleyman Ergun:
There’s nothing like the feeling you get when you’ve got 100 kilos of heroin in the trunk of your car. Just to be near it, to smell it. Driving along at 120 mph in France somewhere and thinking: “I know what I’ve got in the car.” Police stopping beside you. A gun under my seat. Wouldn’t think twice about shooting them. Taking the risk. At the end of the day that’s why I became a drug dealer. Not the money or the power, but the buzz.

Did you serve an underworld apprenticeship?

At 15 I was an errand boy working in the Turkish rag trade in North London. I was earning £70 a week. At 17, I started selling coke, E, and pot, and I was earning £1,000 a week. Then I muled a couple of kilos of coke direct from Colombia and sold it in the clubs, along with tablets. Someone tried to rob me in the toilets of the Camden Palace once—I shot him in the leg.

How does one go from selling coke in a bathroom in Camden to being the king of all heroin in Europe?

Me, my former brother-in-law Yilmaz Kaya, and an Istanbul babas [godfather] named the Vulcan founded the Turkish Connection—that’s a network that smuggles heroin from Afghanistan across Turkey into Europe. Up until the early 90s, Turks had been bringing it in piecemeal. An immigrant would bring in ten keys, sell it, buy a shop in Green Lane and pack it in. We were the first to start bringing it in 100-kilo loads. Stack ’em high, sell ’em cheap….

It’s that simple, eh?

No, that’s only the supply. On the demand side, we bypassed all the usual gangsters and crime families in London. We fucked the Adams family off when they asked us to serve up to them. Instead, we sent it all to one distributor in Liverpool who sold the lot. 

What was your role?

I was hands-on. The gear was driven from Istanbul to Paris in, say, a coach load of Turkish folk dancers. I coordinated the handover to the Scousers in France.

Then I’d drive up to Liverpool a few days later and come back with black bin bags full of cash—£140,000 one week, £100,000 the next, £68,000 the next, £150,000 the next, and so on. Then I’d count it, stack it, and box it in cereal packets and send it back to Turkey using a former Turkish Army colonel disguised as a bone-china collector as a courier.

After a while, we rolled out the same system across Europe—Spain, Italy, Holland, and Germany. We dealt with the Mafia, all of that. At one point we could afford to buy our own oil tanker.

Where did it all go wrong?

One of our workers was having an affair with a woman who was a police informant. He got nicked. Customs put us under surveillance for a year, and then bingo. The whole thing got walloped in July ’93.

What was the upshot?

Fourteen years, nine months. The gang got 123 years between them.

Did that teach you a lesson?

Did it fuck. I started dealing in prison within two days, trading heroin and coke for phone cards, food, tobacco. In September 1995 I used heroin for the first time, out of boredom and curiosity. It felt lovely and warm, like somebody putting an electric blanket over you. But the best thing about it, and this is why the jails are full of heroin, is that it makes time go by very quick. Twenty hours on heroin is like two hours normal. I got out ten years later and I didn’t know I done the bird [prison time].

How did you get your heroin in jail?

Before I got nicked, I had five kilos of pure heroin straight from Turkey buried along with two Berettas, an Uzi, and four shotguns at St. Pancras graveyard in North London. Every week I’d phone a girl up and use the word “brandy,” which was code for brown—heroin—and she would go and get it. She dug up the stash and shaved off some, and then it was given to a second girl who had a boyfriend in my prison. It was wrapped in a condom and nylon sheeting, shaped up proper like a dildo. She stuck it up her cunt. On the visit, they’d snuggle up close, and her boyfriend would put his hand slyly down her knickers, get it, and then stick it up his arse. Back in my cell, he’d get 60 grams and I’d get 60 grams.

Didn’t the prison wardens ever find out?

I had the DST—Dedicated Search Team—permanently on my case. They even used to take apart my batteries in the radio. But they never found gear in my cell because I used to hide it in my vegetable plot. I hollowed out an onion and put the gear inside and buried it. When the stalk wilted, I just taped a fresh one on. Take three grams out a day. Sell half a gram for my phone cards and that, and smoke the rest. Sometimes I would put it up my arse wrapped in tape so if the screws made me squat during a search, it wouldn’t fall out.

Couldn’t anyone smell you smoking it?

As long as you’re not causing trouble, cutting people over deals, and fighting, then the screws turn a blind eye. They know you’re on it because your pupils are like tiny pinholes and you start scratching and go red and raw. But the authorities let it go because if you stop the heroin it causes murders and they can’t handle that. Withdrawal symptoms. Kicking doors. Drugs will never be stamped out in jail.

How many bent screws did you know?

About six all over. They approached me because I was rich. I never ate prison food. They brought me in Marks and Spencer salads. In one prison the screw brought me in four ounces of weed, half a carrier bag full of phone cards, half a bag of tobacco, a TV, a phone, and two bottles of brandy, every week, for £500 a week, plus the bill for the food. He’d wink and say: “Your box is under your bed.” Then I’d pay another inmate to look after it. If you don’t have money, you have nothing.

I suppose when you got out of prison in 2003 you gave up drugs?

No, it got much worse. I discovered crack cocaine. The world had changed so much. I couldn’t cross the road—it was too fast. I used to see people talking to themselves on their hands-free and think they were off their heads.

What’s crack like?

It’s great. It blew my fucking head off. Over the next four years I blew half a million pounds on it. Sold my flat. My jewelry. Spent the few hundred grand I had stashed away.

What was the lowest point?

My mate robbed a rock off my table. I dragged him into the kitchen and chopped his little finger off with a knife on a chopping board. Then I flushed it down the toilet.

Some people would say that it was natural justice—that you were being punished for selling heroin by becoming a drug addict.

An eye for an eye. I’d created thousands and thousands of addicts. My past had caught up with me. I got depressed and then I took more crack and heroin to stop thinking. 

How did you finally get off drugs?

I went for treatment in Turkey twice. A detox where they put you to sleep through withdrawal. It cost £20,000. My family paid. But when I got back onto the streets here in London, I kept slipping. Finally, I fell in love. It’s as simple as that. I haven’t touched a stone since. 

Would you ever go back to being a heroin baron?

Not in a million fucking years. I’ve been offered a million pounds in cash to start up again. I could fly to Turkey now and get 100 keys and be away. £100,000 in cash by tomorrow. Mine. I get approached every week by someone or other, some of the country’s biggest gangsters, to go into business. But I can’t do it.

Why? Are you scared?

Fuck off. D’you want a smack?

See all articles by this contributor

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Comments

Anonymous, on Oct 23, 2008 wrote:
Hey! Awesome! Let’s judge this guy and judge his motives!
or...
we could just enjoy the well written and informative interview and get back to our lives. You know, those of us on this site who have them.
Anonymous, on Oct 22, 2008 wrote:
I agree with the last comment, if you (understandably) don’t like criminals like him selling heroin, then why don’t you start supporting legalisation and regulation of the drug instead. And no, introducing harsher penalties will not get rid of heroin at all, there are many countries, especially in the Middle East and southeast Asia that have VERY long sentences or even sometimes the death penalty for drug dealing and are they drug free? Are they fuck. At least if it was prescribed/sold in chemists to registered users people would be less likely to overdose or catch HIV because of proper regulation, and guys like this would suddenly find themselves without a business.
Anonymous, on Oct 22, 2008 wrote:
Whats with all the haters? I mean more so than usual?

Hey angry junkies and friends of junkies, if you don’t want guys like this to get rich, then see if you can get heroin legalized. As long as that multi-billion dollar industry is underground, its profits are up for the taking. If this guy is so bad, then how would you prefer heroin to be distributed instead? Government agencies? 7-11? Or do you have a plan to stamp out junk entirely worldwide?

Anyone who buys heroin is basically voting for this guy’s success, so shut the fuck up junkies.

Great piece.
Anonymous, on Oct 21, 2008 wrote:
it’s a good life story. ans shitty at the same time. fuck heroin man, there’s all kind of drugs to do. fuck that one drug. fuck it. my brother is an addicted since he was 15. he is 37 tofay. he’s been only 8 years without it, but he felt on vice again. fuck that. do coke. do pot. fuck that.
Anonymous, on Oct 21, 2008 wrote:
so, he has been clean for ONLY a year? Round of applause to dickhead then. Why does smack and crack claim the lives of so many beautiful and brilliant people and leave wankers like this alive to get paid to glorify their experiences? My friend, the boy I was crazy for died of an accidental overdose from that shit when he relapsed. If the person he knew that sold it to him that night in his hour of weakness had said no - he would still be with me. It’s devastating.

I DETEST the dealers of it - and they deserve all the bad things that happen to them. Shame this asshole has got off so lightly. he was off his head for the ten year sentence in a smack haze - not exactly a justified sentence
Anonymous, on Oct 20, 2008 wrote:
he deserves to fucking die in a slow painful way.
That guy has ALOT of nasty blood and fucked up lives on he`s hands
Anonymous, on Oct 20, 2008 wrote:
If you want to read more about Ergun read Druglord or Powder Wars, books about Ergun’s drug dealing days, by me Graham Johnson.

Suleyman wrote most of his own replies to these questions - and most his accounts in Druglord. He’s a lucid and clever feller, despite his history as a drug dealer.

I used to pay him 50 quid a day to write his memoirs - it kept him straight for a while.

The rest of the interview was a straight forward taped q and a.

Graham Johnson
Anonymous, on Oct 20, 2008 wrote:
Why do VICE choose to glorify him? Vicemag -1 in my books.
Anonymous, on Oct 20, 2008 wrote:
I love coke but I dont think I would take it up my ass to do it though. Weed, definately. lol
Anonymous, on Oct 19, 2008 wrote:
ha ha he’s got facebook
pretty bad ass
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
i once sold a pencil to my neighbor for 80 cents and then retired. does that make me a badass too?
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
Awesome story! well done vice! Karma is Karma, all you twats admitting you’ve done smack are the pussies! the man didnt touch the shit till he was in prison...whats your excuse.
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
most interesting interview i’ve read in a while...
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
When I grow up I want to be him. Danny (aged 38)
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
Brilliant interview with a dirty junkie rat!! He had bag loads of dirty money..... hope he knows how much misery his little enterprise caused.... stick that up your arse.
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
heroin and crack are great!
Anonymous, on Oct 18, 2008 wrote:
Recovery is a beautiful thing. Been clean & sober 12 yrs 12/08/08.
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
third item down. also wouldn’t be terribly surprised if an ex-cartel dealer adopted a new name after going clean.

findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4161/is_/ai_n12911120
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
search this guys name in google. its nowhere
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
nice work. another good read. is it me or is this issue lifting itself out of the usual VICE gutter?
joxmcrox, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
Is he scared? is he Fuck! I’d give the twat from Vice a smack haha! cool story...: )
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
awesome story. best vice i’ve read in a while.
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
I used to be a homeless rodeo clown but now I am a world class magician !
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
good interview. if you thought it was shit why did you read on after the title...
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
So some of you believe that he was wrong for selling drugs but you weren’t wrong for buying it? It’s the dealer’s fault for ruining lives? Personal responsibility people. Seek truth.
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
regardless of the story, you ex junkies need to quit blaming other people for your dumb fucking decisions, thats why you are in the situation you get in. that mentality
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
oh and by the way...i’m clean and have been for years!! i hope all the scumbag drug dealers turn out like him and get strung out themselves!! he deserves everything bad that can happen to happen to him.
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
what a loser that dude is. i was on heroine for years and its people like him that helped me destroy my life all them years ago. him getting all strung out and knowing what it feels like to be addicted really puts a smile on my face. karma’s a bitch people....just remember that
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
yeah, well done vice for interviewing cunts like him.
Anonymous, on Oct 17, 2008 wrote:
mmmm. interesting.
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