A FORMER bouncer who set out to make 'easy money' by dealing cocaine has been ordered to hand over more than £4,600 of ill gotten gains.

Adeshina Teniola, who used his knowledge from working on the door to pay off his debts by selling hard drugs, was jailed for two years in February.

Now the 27-year-old has been ordered to hand over the cash during the next six months or face having 30 days added to the sentence and end up still owing the money.

At Proceeds of Crime Act hearing, before Swindon Crown Court, Judge Peter Blair QC ruled he benefitted from crime by £4,605.61p.

He ordered him to pay the full amount after hearing police seized £790 in cash when he was arrested and frozen £1,915.61p in his Coventry Building Society account.

Rob Ross, defending, said his client was left having to find the remaining £1,900 and needed the time to arrange it because he is in prison.

He told the court: "He has got to raise that. He has monies, he owns his own home outright."

Teniola was stopped in his car on the way to meet a customer last summer and was found to have scores of wraps of cocaine ready for sale.

When he was pulled over and spoken to by police shortly before 10pm on Thursday, August 28, he seemed very nervous, raising officers' suspicions.

He was asked if he was involved in drug supply and he said he was, handing a bag of powdered cocaine, containing seven deals.

His phone was seized and his home address was also searched and as well as scales police found a further 67 street wraps of cocaine.

The defendant also showed them cash in two envelopes stored in a footstool and his mobile phones had message relating to the trade.

When he was questioned and made 'full and frank admissions' saying he had been dealing for four to six weeks before being stopped.

All the drugs were his, he said, and he intended to sell them and was on his way to meet a customer when he was stopped by the police.

He said he had bought a couple of ounces for about £1,900 and intended to sell it in smaller deals making a profit of about £700.

Once he made about £4,000 profit and cleared his debts he said he planned to stop dealing adding it was not to be a long term career.

Teniola, of Wainwright Mews, Wroughton, pleaded guilty to possessing cocaine with intent to supply.

Rob Ross, defending, told the court his client had misused cocaine in the past after getting a large payout following a car crash.

He said: "He is a man who had allowed things surrounding his life to get on top of him. Not to put too fine a point on it, he took a chance to earn some easy money.

"He had tried to work as a doorman for some time, he also did other jobs. He owed money, not for drugs but as people do these days.

"He had knowledge, probably from working on the door, how easy is was to deal cocaine."