logo
Brit pensioner 'drug mule' claims gang promised him £3.7m to carry case

Brit pensioner 'drug mule' claims gang promised him £3.7m to carry case

Daily Mirror2 days ago

The 79-year-old was stopped by custom officers at Santiago International Airport after landing on a flight from Cancun, Mexico - police say claimed he had no idea how the crystal meth ended up in his luggage
A British pensioner detained at a Chilean airport, alleged to have had £200,000 worth of high-grade crystal meth in his suitcase, claimed a Mexican gang promised him £3.7m to carry the case, according to police.
The 79-year-old landed from Cancun, Mexico and was stopped by custom officers at Santiago International Airport. Police say the man claimed he had no idea how 5kg of methamphetamine up in the case, and produced a bizarre certificate with prize money pledged to him before being taken into custody and remanded in prison. New details about the arrest emerged today as Chilean police warned criminal gangs were targeting 'out-of-the-ordinary' drug mules.


Police said initial findings suggest the unnamed Brit had conversations with suspected traffickers in Brazil and the States.
Sergio Paredes, head of the Chilean PDI police force's Anti-Narcotics Division at Arturo Merino Benitez Airport which is Santiago's international airport, said: 'The elderly British man we arrested claimed he had no idea his suitcase contained drugs when he was intercepted after picking it up from the luggage carousel and trying to enter our country with it. We interviewed him in English because he didn't speak a word of Spanish and he alleged he had been deceived.
'He said he had received the suitcase from some Mexicans at the airport in Cancun before he boarded his flight and he claimed he had been promised a prize of $5million (£3.7m) for delivering the suitcase to its final destination. He was even carrying a rudimentary certificate alluding to the prize.

'He told us he was going to spend the night in Santiago and fly to Australia the next day but he didn't have a hotel or flight booking. Apart from the two or three bits of information he offered us about the supposed prize money and his accommodation and travel plans, he didn't say much.
'We believe he was a drug mule in the pay of a criminal gang and he's now in prison on remand while we work on gathering evidence against him and the criminal organisation that sent him ahead of probable charges and a trial. We've intercepted drug couriers who are paid anything from $1,000 to $15,000. There are a lot of variables. We're still looking into where the drugs came from and where they were going to end up.'

Officers said they obtained court authorisation to look through the OAP's mobile and will continue working with police forces in Mexico, the US and the UK to identify the people who sent him to Chile.
Sources say the British pensioner is being held in Santiago 1 Penitentiary where, for his own safety, he is being kept away from other convicts and is only with other remand prisoners who have been accused for the most part of non-violent offences.

A judge has said he can be held in jail for 120 days, giving investigators just under four months to try to formally charge him.
Although initial reports pointed to the OAP facing a possible 15-year prison sentence if convicted, Chilean legal experts insisted last night he would probably be looking at five years behind bars and could benefit from preferential treatment if he agreed to co-operate as part of a plea bargain deal.
Mr Paredes said: 'This case has its peculiarities, a frail-looking, elderly person being caught with a large amount of methamphetamine who had recently been operated on and still had scars from that medical intervention and looked like a typical grandad if I'm going to be honest.

'But we've seen everything here at this airport and we know the criminal gangs are increasingly using mules they think will be less likely to attract attention. We've caught people in wheelchairs trying to leave Chile through this airport with drugs attached to their bodies.
'We believe he was going to receive further instructions on what to do with the suitcase and the drugs once he got through immigration and left the airport. What we have gathered so far is information pointing to him being directed from Brazil and the United States because off his own back he showed us his mobile with conversations with prefixes from those countries."
Rodrigo Diaz, a regional Chilean customs director whose remit includes the airport, said: 'The scanner picked up something suspicious before this British OAP's luggage reached the carousel. We'd marked the suitcase using a technology that meant lights flashed when he came through an arch in the customs filter on his way out of the airport and then proceeded to check it in the pensioner's presence.
'Initially nothing was discovered after he took his clothes and other belongings from the suitcase. But the packets containing the amphetamine were found once a secret compartment in the case was broken open which was what the X-Ray scanner had detected as suspicious."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Madeleine McCann: Latest search sees teams drain well and clear dense vegetation
Madeleine McCann: Latest search sees teams drain well and clear dense vegetation

South Wales Guardian

time30 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Madeleine McCann: Latest search sees teams drain well and clear dense vegetation

German investigators along with Portuguese police officers and firefighters are working in a little-developed area of countryside a few miles from Praia da Luz where Madeleine was last seen in 2007. Then aged three, she vanished while on holiday with her family in the Algarve resort after her parents went out to dinner and left her sleeping in a room with her toddler twin siblings. Journalists were being kept a distance away from the search sites on Tuesday and a no-fly zone was imposed that stopped the used of drones, although some activity could be seen as teams used strimmers, pick-axes, shovels and chainsaws to clear the undergrowth and debris surrounding an abandoned building. Personnel wore safety gear such as gloves and hard hats as they worked in the dense vegetation, and firefighters and police were seen using a yellow hose to drain a well. Around a dozen officers focused on one abandoned building where digging was taking place, while another member of the search team cleared large rocks. The Sun reported that investigators are also planning to use radar equipment that can scan beneath the ground. TV footage showed two Portuguese police officers guarding the end to a narrow lane that leads through an area of fields and scrubland with a few houses and a vineyard. It has been variously reported that investigators will look where trenches were dug near the resort at the time of Madeleine's disappearance, at wells, ruins and water tanks, and that there are plans to examine 21 pieces of land. The search is being carried out at the request of the German federal police as they look for evidence that could implicate prime suspect Christian Brueckner, who is in prison for raping a 72-year-old woman in Praia da Luz in 2005. He is due to be released from jail in September if no further charges are brought. Ulrich Oppold, a journalist from German broadcaster RTL, visited Brueckner in prison in Germany, who said if he gets out of jail the thing he is most looking forward to is a steak with a beer. Brueckner refused to answer any questions relating to Madeleine after discussions with his lawyers. He told the journalist that if he does get out of jail he will have to lie low as he is so well known. Brueckner described himself as 'bekannt wie ein bunter Hund' – which literally translated is 'as well-known as a colourful dog'. In October last year, Brueckner was cleared by a German court of unrelated sexual offences alleged to have taken place in Portugal between 2000 and 2017. Around 30 German police officers, including forensic experts, are expected to take part in the search along with Portuguese officers, with the activity due to last until Friday. The Metropolitan Police said it is aware of the operation but that British officers will not be present. German investigators and Portuguese officers last carried out searches in the country in 2023 near the Barragem do Arade reservoir, about 30 miles from Praia da Luz. Brueckner, who spent time in the area between 2000 and 2017, had photographs and videos of himself near the reservoir. It was previously searched in 2008, when Portuguese lawyer Marcos Aragao Correia paid for specialist divers to search it after he claimed to have been tipped off by criminal contacts that Madeleine's body was there. British police were later given permission to examine scrubland near where she vanished in 2014. Last month, Madeleine's family, who are from Rothley in Leicestershire, marked the 18th anniversary of her disappearance, describing her as 'beautiful and unique' before her 22nd birthday, and expressing their determination to keep searching. A statement from her parents Kate and Gerry McCann and the family said: 'The years appear to be passing even more quickly and whilst we have no significant news to share, our determination to 'leave no stone unturned' is unwavering. We will do our utmost to achieve this.' In April, ministers approved more than £100,000 in additional funding for Scotland Yard detectives investigating Madeleine's disappearance.

Military expert gives chilling British 'civil war' warning over 'feral cities'
Military expert gives chilling British 'civil war' warning over 'feral cities'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Military expert gives chilling British 'civil war' warning over 'feral cities'

British cities are at risk of becoming 'feral' and could even descend into civil war over the next few years, a military expert has warned A military expert has warned that British cities could fall into a state of 'civil war' within five years because a breakdown in law and order. David Betz, Professor of War in the Modern World in the Department of War Studies at King's College London, cautioned that the UK and France are among the nations likely to struggle to maintain peace in the years ahead due to a multitude of social and economic issues - creating the risk of so-called "feral cities". It follows the shocking riots that gripped Paris after PSG's victory in the Champions League at the weekend, which left two dead and hundreds injured. ‌ ‌ Distressing footage from the French capital showed frightened women cowering inside their cars as mobs of out-of-control football fans smashed windows and set fire to nearby vehicles. And in Britain, a report released last month cautioned that authorities must be much swifter in tackling misinformation on social media to avoid a repeat of last year's riots, which followed the murders of three young girls at a dance class in Southport. Writing in in the latest issue of Military Strategy Magazine, Professor Betz argued that governments across the Western world have been "losing the ability to peacefully manage multicultural societies", leaving them open to mass disorder and potential civil war". He added: "The initial result is an accelerating descent of multiple major cities into marginally 'feral' status". In another part of the essay, Professor Betz predicted that the "countries that are most likely to experience the outbreak of violent civil conflict are Britain and France" - but said that other parts of Europe and the United States could also be at risk "It must be assumed that if civil war breaks out in one place it is likely to spread elsewhere", he added. ‌ Hundreds arrested after deadly PSG riots Clashes between police and supporters on Saturday began long before PSG's thumping 5-0 victory over Inter Milan had even finished, with officers deploying a water cannon on the Champs-Elysees at half-time. Ugly scenes later in the night saw drivers attacked in their cars, vehicles torched and shops looted, with over 200 people injured and two killed in gatherings connected to the post-match celebrations. A 17-year-old boy was stabbed to death in the western city of Dax during a street party after the final, the national police service said, and in Paris, a man in his 20s was killed when his scooter was hit by a car during PSG celebrations. A police officer was also hit accidentally by fireworks at a PSG fan gathering in northwest France, and placed in an artificial coma because of severe eye injuries. More than 500 people were arrested by police in connection with the disorder. Reacting to the initial reports of rioting Saturday night, France's Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau labelled the rioters "barbarians" and not "true PSG fans", adding: "It is unbearable that it is not possible to party without fearing the savagery of a minority of thugs who respect nothing." Smaller clashes between gangs of youths and police continued in the centre of Paris on Sunday.

Peru Two's Michaella McCullum soaks in the Benidorm sun after telling of prison ‘horrors' awaiting Brit ‘smugglers'
Peru Two's Michaella McCullum soaks in the Benidorm sun after telling of prison ‘horrors' awaiting Brit ‘smugglers'

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Peru Two's Michaella McCullum soaks in the Benidorm sun after telling of prison ‘horrors' awaiting Brit ‘smugglers'

McCollum says young Brits 'won't survive' prison as she recalls maggot-infested meals and cockroach-covered tables WISH PERU WERE HERE WISH PERU WERE HERE Peru Two's Michaella McCullum soaks in the Benidorm sun after telling of prison 'horrors' awaiting Brit 'smugglers' PERU Two's Michaella McCollum has been spotted soaking up the sun in Benidorm — just days after warning that Brit 'smugglers' Bella Culley and Charlotte Lee could face 'prison horrors' she wouldn't survive. The 31-year-old convicted drug mule was seen in a pink Louis Vuitton bikini enjoying the beach in Spain. 10 Peru Two's Michaella McCollum cools off in the sea in Benidorm Credit: Splash 10 The convicted drug mule shows off her curves after recent a boob job Credit: Splash 10 Michaella plays with a beach ball while soaking up the Spanish sunshine Credit: Splash 10 McCollum served three years in a hellish jail after smuggling £1.5million of cocaine into Peru in 2013 Credit: Splash The mum-of-two, who had a boob job at the end of last year, was pictured cooling off in the sea and playing with a ball on the sand. McCollum served three years in a hellish jail near Lima after she and pal Melissa Reid were busted smuggling £1.5million of cocaine into Peru in 2013. Now, after carving out a new life as a public speaker and influencer, she has opened up about her time behind bars — and issued a chilling warning to 18-year-old Culley and 21-year-old Lee. 'I could not do 20 years in a prison like that. I just couldn't. And that's what those girls are facing,' she said. Culley was caught earlier this month with a 31lb stash of cannabis and hashish at Tbilisi airport in Georgia — and told a court she's pregnant. She's being held in a Soviet-style clink ringed by watchtowers. Lee, from south London, is locked up in Sri Lanka after two suitcases packed with 46kg of super-strength kush were allegedly found in her hotel room. The potent synthetic drug is 25 times stronger than fentanyl. Friends say she's been denied medicine and is forced to 'have a glass of water poured over her head' to clean herself. 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' 10 Michaella McCollum (L) entering the Sarita Colonia jail with a police escort in October, 2013 Credit: EPA 10 View of the containment areas of the Ancon 2 prison, where McCollum served her sentence Credit: AFP McCollum compared their ordeals to her own — and said she 'couldn't imagine' how pregnancy would complicate Culley's ordeal. 'As a mum, I can't even begin to imagine what it would be like to give birth in that sort of place, and to potentially have the child taken from you and put into care,' she said. 'That adds a whole new, terrifying, dimension. It's just incredibly sad.' Reflecting on her arrest at 19, McCollum said: 'The situation was almost exactly the same. 'Her mum had reported her missing, then it emerged that she'd been arrested. 'There were such parallels with my case – except it was just in a different country.' She added: 'They are 19 and 21. Whatever they have done, it's so young to be caught up in something like this, and I know what they are going to go through. 'And their families. It's the worst thing anybody can have to face.' 10 Bella May Culley was arrested on drug offences in Georgia Credit: Facebook 10 Bella pictured in court in Tbilisi after she was detained at the city's airport Credit: East2West Lee claimed she was duped by a mysterious Brit called 'Dan' who bought her a flight to Sri Lanka from Thailand — and then vanished. McCollum said she was also coerced — offered £5,000 to carry the drugs and manipulated by older men. 'At the time I was so high (on cocaine) that I could barely walk. Yet the men around me were all sober,' she said. 'I thought they were my friends, but actually they didn't give a s**t about me.' She added: 'It's easy to look at girls like this and think 'how could you be so stupid?' but I look back at myself and think exactly that. 'The vast majority were the victims of some sort of coercion, usually by men. 'Prisons all over the world are full of women who have been caught up in something like this.' The once notorious mule has now written a book, starred in a Netflix doc, and works with police to warn teens off drugs. With an estimated net worth close to £1million, she says: 'Even £50,000 isn't enough. No amount of money is worth your freedom.' 10 Part-time beautician Charlotte was arrested on May 12 after stepping off a flight to Sri Lanka from Thailand Credit: Sri Lanka Police

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store