No jail for drug dealer after Georgie Shore star plunges to her death

A bodybuilder who offered "party platters" of drugs has avoids jail after one of the stars of Geordie Shore plunged to her death from his plush pad.

Police arrested Daniel Lewis in the hours following glamour model Aimee Spencer’s fall from his seafront house in Brighton in July 2016.

The Geordie Shore: Magaluf Madness star never regained consciousness and died in hospital the next week.

Officers raided Lewis’ house, where he lived rent-free thanks to his wealthy grandfather’s trust fund, and found drugs worth between £8,000 and £15,000 stashed in drawers and behind the fridge.

The 30-year-old had built his reputation selling drugs he had received through the post to high end clients.

Lewis boasted he made "f*** loads of money" by selling "party platters” including cocaine, ketamine, LSD, and methadone.

At Lewes Crown Court, he admitted seven counts of possessing class A, B and C drugs with intent to supply, and one count of possessing ketamine.

However, Judge Christine Laing QC spared him from prison because she believe he had turned his life around.

Police had originally launched a murder investigation after Lewis was spotted at the kitchen window by a neighbour.

When officers arrived at the address the door was answered by Lewis, who was naked and sweating profusely.

Lewis had been sharing the flat with Helen Dawson, now his wife and the head of radiology at a hospital in Brighton.

Using his home as a base, he had bought drugs from the dark web and then resold them to customers.

Despite not officially working, £20,000 was deposited in his bank account.

Lewis, now of Piddinghoe Avenue in Peacehaven, was handed a two-year suspended sentence and ordered to complete 300 hours of unpaid work.

He must also complete rehabilitation, and will be under a four-month curfew.

Ms Spencer shot into the limelight in 2012 when she was filmed jumping into bed with Vikcy Pattison during an episode of Geordie Shore: Magaluf Madness.

She later appeared on BBC Three’s 2014 documentary The Truth About Webcam Girls, which followed the lives of three women who performed online for paying customers.

In a inquest last year toxicologist Dr Olaf Biedrzycki said the cocktail of drugs she had taken could have put Ms Spencer in a ‘dream-like state’, which might explain why she was in such dangerous position on a window ledge.


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