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Brit ‘drug mule' Charlotte May Lee, 21, tears up as cops wheel £1.2m kush haul into court she ‘didn't know was in case'

Brit ‘drug mule' Charlotte May Lee, 21, tears up as cops wheel £1.2m kush haul into court she ‘didn't know was in case'

The Irish Sun6 days ago

A BRIT former flight attendant accused of smuggling £1.2 million worth of cannabis today appeared in front of a Sri Lankan court.
Part-time beautician Charlotte May Lee was seen tearing up as she was wheeled into the court by local cops.
6
Charlotte May Lee today appeared in a Sri Lankan court
Credit: BBC Breakfast
6
Charlotte was seen wearing handcuffs
Credit: BBC Breakfast
6
The Brit was arrested last week after cops found two suitcases stuffed with 46kg of synthetic drug kush
Credit: BBC Breakfast
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Pictures released by Sri lankan police shows packets allegedly containing drugs
Credit: Sri Lanka Police
The Brit was arrested last week after cops found two suitcases stuffed with
46kg of synthetic
drug
kush — which is 25 times more potent than opioid fentanyl.
If found guilty, South Londoner Charlotte could face a 25-year sentence.
She appeared in front of a court today
after languishing in a 'hell-hole'
prison
for days.
Charlotte from Surrey
was stopped by Sri Lankan customs officials after stepping off a flight from
Thailand
on Monday last week.
Speaking from behind bars, she said she had "no idea" that there were drugs in her luggage when she left Bangkok.
She claimed: "I had never seen them before. I didn't expect it all when they pulled me over at the airport. I thought it was going to be filled with all my stuff.
"I had been in Bangkok the night before and had already packed my clothes because my flight was really early.
"So I left my bags in the hotel room and headed for the night out. As they were already packed I didn't check them again in the morning."
Most read in The Sun
The young Brit believes those packets of drugs were planted in her luggage in a planned move by dangerous dealers in Southeast Asia.
Kush, a highly addictive synthetic drug, has claimed the lives of thousands in West Africa where it first appeared in 2022 - and is spreading globally at an alarming rate.
The dirt-cheap drug is cut with an array of additives including acetone, the opioid tramadol and formalin, a toxic chemical commonly used to preserve bodies in mortuaries.
More to follow...
For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
Thesun.co.uk is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video.
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6
Charlotte May Lee booking picture after she was caught
Credit: Sri Lanka Police

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