A GANG member who was held by police for eleven days after storing the drugs he was dealing inside himself has been warned he is facing jail.

Samuel Browne-Morgan had been stopped twice in the weeks before his final arrest on County Road when he was seen to have something sticking out of his nether region.

The 22-year-old was detained and taken to hospital before being held for more than a week and a half while detectives waited for nature to take its course.

And when the man from Peckham finally relented and passed what he had consumed he was found to have been storing crack cocaine.

Although it was believed he also had wraps of heroin stored with them when the wrappers he produced were analysed only traces were found on them.

Prosecutors said that because of the pleas he had entered to the other counts they would not be proceeding with that charge.

After he was told that the maximum sentence he would get after a trail was four years he pleaded guilty to three counts of possessing drugs with intent to supply.

He pleaded not guilty to a fourth charge after it was found the wrapping he consumed which was thought to contain heroin only had traces of the drug on it.

Hannah Squire, prosecuting, told Swindon Crown Court that he was first spotted by drugs squad officers on Tuesday May 12.

He ran off and as he went was seen to throw a package away which contained 88 deals of heroin and crack cocaine, each of which would sell on the streets for £10.

After being released on bail he was seen on Friday, June 19, and after again running off was found with just £300 in cash and no drugs.

The following day he was on County Road and also had £240 but officers detained him believing he had consumed the drugs, which came out 11 days later

Judge Tim Mousley QC said that the maximum sentence after trail would be four years.

Browne-Morgan, of Peckham, pleaded guilty to three counts of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply.

The court heard that he was jailed for four years at the Old Bailey in 2011 for perverting the course of justice.

He was still a teenager when he set fire to a car which contained the body of a man who had been shot dead in a gangland execution.

Judge Mousley adjourned the case to Friday, October 23, and remanded him in custody until then.

Because he pleaded guilty to the charges he is likely to get a third off the four year sentence and it may be reduced further following mitigation.

The court was told the Crown also will be seeking a Criminal Behaviour Order because of gang related activity in the capital over a number of years.