WoolyO Gang Members Get Tougher Sentences for South East London Shootings
Two members of the notorious WoolyO gang have had their prison terms bumped up by the Court of Appeal after judges ruled the original sentences were too soft. The gang, linked to violent incidents and firearms offences across South East London, sparked fear with two shootings on the Cherry Orchard Estate in Charlton and brazen online boasts.
Sentences Upgraded for Two Gangsters
Back in March, six WoolyO gang members aged 18 to 28 were handed jail for a long-running feud played out through street violence, drill music, and social media threats. Their original sentences were:
- Dafe Orogun, 22, Abbey Wood – 15 years
- Karan Singh, 19, Woolwich – 9 years
- Bryan Aidoo, 19, Lambeth – 4 years
- Roqeeb Ladeaga, 23, Eltham – 4.5 years
- Stephen Ayanleye, 28, Charlton – 5 years
- Gabriel Adepoju, 23, West Norwood – 4 years
On 20 June, the Court of Appeal reviewed all six sentences for leniency. Only Bryan Aidoo and Roqeeb Ladeaga saw their sentences increased to five years each. Judges deemed the others lenient but within acceptable limits.
Police Slam Gang’s ‘Glamourised’ Crime Lifestyle
Detective Inspector Yoni Adler from Essex Police’s Serious and Organised Crime Unit slammed the gang after the original sentencing:
“The WoolyOs boasted about their criminal activity and came to Essex to commit further crime. They carried firearms and even filmed themselves doing so. They tried to glamourise their lifestyle — but it’s a lifestyle that has caught up with them.”
He praised the joint investigation between Essex Police and London’s Metropolitan Police Trident team for securing convictions.
“These convictions show that carrying guns comes with punishment. Guns have no place on our streets, and we will robustly investigate anyone we believe to be carrying them.”
Two gang members initially denied the charges, but the jury rejected their lies and found them guilty.
Drill Music Meets Real Violence in WoolyO Feud
The WoolyO gang, based in Woolwich, have been locked in a bitter, violent feud with rivals, using drill music and social media to provoke and brag about real gun crimes. The case shines a harsh light on how gang culture, linked to drill music, stokes both online hostility and brutal street violence, threatening public safety.