
Pregnant Brit ‘mule' Bella Culley's drug trial in Georgia POSTPONED over ‘evidence issue' as dad tells her ‘stay strong'
Bella from Billingham, County Durham, appeared at Tbilisi City Court for a brief hearing after she
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On Bella's first court appearance she announced she was pregnant
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Thai police have now released CCTV footage of the Brit going through the automated gates at Suvarnabhumi Airport in Thailand
Credit: Asia Pacific Press via ViralPress
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Cops said cannabis was found wrapped in air-tight bags in Bella's luggage
Credit: Unpixs
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Bella Culley seen in court at the beginning of July as her devastated family watched on
Credit: Supplied
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The court heard there were issues surrounding evidence that must be resolved.
Bella's heartbroken dad, who was present in court, told her to "stay strong".
Her next hearing is scheduled for 24 July.
Bella claimed
read more on bella
Her family launched a missing person hunt in Thailand after she vanished on holiday but she
Then on her first court appearance she
.
CCTV footage of Bella was released, which cops say
Police Major General Cherngron Rimphadee said a few weeks ago: 'This matter is not complicated.
Most read in The Sun
'Police have reviewed CCTV footage and confirmed that she used a British passport to exit through the automatic passport control channel.
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Police confirmed she she used a British passport to exit Thailand
Credit: Asia Pacific Press via ViralPress
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The Brit told a court she was tortured into trafficking £200,000-worth of cannabis by evil crimelords
Credit: Facebook
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She was caught at Tblisi International Airport with 30 pounds of marijuana and hashish in her luggage on May 10
Credit: Prime Time
'As a result, she did not interact with or speak to any immigration officers and simply exited the country.'
Thai authorities say Bella's claims of seeking help from customs staff are "absolutely baseless".
Surveillance shows the teen, from Billingham, Teesside, apparently passing calmly through Suvarnabhumi Airport's automated gates without raising any red flags.
'There is no evidence whatsoever that any immigration or police officers forced or threatened the suspect to smuggle drugs out of the country,' Lt. Gen. Choengron said.
'It was a deliberate departure.'
The footage had reportedly been shared with media outlets in an attempt to debunk Bella's courtroom testimony in Tblisi, where she claimed she "didn't want to do this" and was
Bella's lawyer, Malkhaz Salakaia, claimed corrupt Thai police officers were in on the trafficking ring and that when Bella turned to one for help, she realised he was part of the gang.
Salakaia alleged she and her family were
He went on to claim that "They told her: we know the addresses of your parents, we know where your 16-year-old brother is", before showing her a video of a person being beheaded.
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Cannabis was found wrapped in air-tight bags in Bella's luggage, police said
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Bella May Culley claims she was coerced into transporting £200k worth of cannabis
Credit: NCJ Media
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Bella has said she never touched the drugs found in her suitcase
Credit: Facebook
The court was also shown a scar on her arm which Salakaia said was inflicted before the suitcase containing the drugs - which she allegedly never touched - was given to her.
But Thai police say it's all an attempt to wriggle out of punishment.
Officials believe the teen's high-stakes tale is part of a strategy to secure a lighter sentence in Georgia.
The Georgian prosecution has charged her with "illegally purchasing and storing a particularly large amount of narcotics" and "illegally importing them into the country".
Bella currently faces up to 20 years or even life behind bars if convicted.
The teen, who now claims she is 18 weeks pregnant, was previously seen online bragging about "getting up to criminal activities" and flashing thick wads of cash.
Thai cops said she would now be blacklisted for entering the country "to commit a drug offence", citing a breach of Section 12 of the Immigration Act.
Inside the dark world of Brit 'drug mules'
A SLEW of drug mule arrests involving Brits have emerged in the last few months.
In April and May,
Bella was the first after she allegedly tried to smuggle a suitcase of weed into Georgia.
Meanwhile, former air stewardess
Her two suitcases were said to have been stuffed with 46kg of a synthetic cannabis strain known as kush — which is 25 times more potent than opioid fentanyl.
If found guilty, South Londoner Charlotte could face a 25-year sentence.
As a young mum was detained in Germany for allegedly smuggling cannabis in her bags on a flight from Thailand - in yet another shocking case.
Glamorous Cameron Bradford, 21, from Knebworth, Herts, was detained at Munich Airport on April 21 as she tried to collect her luggage.
It comes as a Brit couple claiming to be tourists from Thailand have been busted with more than 33kg of cannabis in their suitcases at a Spanish airport.
The pair were picked out by suspicious cops at Valencia Airport after displaying a 'nervous and evasive attitude' and are now behind bars on drug trafficking charges.
Experts told The Sun how wannabe Brit Insta stars are being lured by cruel gangs into carting drugs across the world.
Then last month, a six-year-old British
The lad was picked up by customs officials along with his mum and five other Brits as they arrived on the tropical island.
Authorities branded the

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Irish Examiner
7 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Irish Examiner view: We need more gardaí but facial recognition could help the force do its job
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But a joke of the worst possible kind, one which has gone on too long. Shoppers enjoying a hula hoop demonstration in Cork in the run-up to Christmas, 1958. Joan Anderson, who sparked the hula hoop craze in the US died this week aged 101. Picture: Irish Examiner Archive It would be easy to complain this morning but, to draw a lesson from Monty Python, it is better to look on the bright side of life. And there is plenty there to lighten our load. American scientists have just confirmed that the world's longest streak of lightning — a 'megaflash' — covered more than 500 miles, from Texas to the outskirts of Kansas City. Meanwhile a holidaymaker rockpooling on South Uist in the Outer Hebrides has rediscovered a species of jellyfish, Depastrum cyathiforme, thought to have been extinct for 50 years. 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It's just the sort of slang phrase you can imagine being used by Gregg Wallace at the height of his laddish popularity as a TV personality, something that viewers will be able to experience for conceivably the last time starting next week. Allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour and language were made against presenter Gregg Wallace after the forthcoming MasterChef series was recorded. Picture: BBC/PA It's certainly an adequate description of MasterChef, which in its various iterations, can be viewed as the durable forerunner of international format programming. From its launch in 1990, under the rather different stewardship of Loyd Grossman, it has been mimicked by a number of hugely successful shows all utilising a comfortingly predictable participatory and voyeuristic formula. What is common to all these programmes is that they contain lesser or greater amounts of humiliation for the contestants and the occasional soupcon of cruelty, presumably just enough to meet modern tastes without, showrunners hope, tipping over into something darker. The global MasterChef franchise has been better than most at attracting interest, watched by hundreds of millions worldwide. The upcoming series, filmed last year and which will begin on BBC One next Wednesday, was produced before allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour and language were made against Wallace. His co-presenter John Torode was accused of making a racist comment — euphemistically known as 'the N-word' — at a social gathering more than five years ago. He says he has no recollection of doing so. After an independent review by the Lewis Silkin legal practice, which also has offices in Dublin and Belfast, Torode was told that his contract with the BBC would not be renewed. The Silkin team upheld 45 allegations against Wallace including claims of inappropriate sexual language and one incident of unwelcome physical contact over a 17-year-timeline. The decision on whether to air this latest series featuring the two sacked presenters has been fraught. It has been on hold since the accusations emerged with the BBC deciding it should go ahead after most of the contestants supported its broadcast. John Torode and Gregg Wallace. The decision on whether to air the already-recorded latest series of MasterChef featuring the two sacked presenters has been fraught. File picture: PA/BBC/Shine TV Most, but not all. One participant wanted the whole show canned, and has now been edited out of the final version. 'For me, it's about the enabling environment,' she said. 'It's that complicity. Those individual powerful men do not [act] in isolation. There is an enabling environment, turning a blind eye ... it's about years of these institutions not being accountable.' Sincere though these expressions are, based on the evidence this seems extreme. All potential viewers have the sanction of the on-off button. How many use it is likely to determine whether we get to see the Celebrity MasterChef series and the Christmas special. Wallace looks to be a serious loser. His access to international networks is being replaced by his reported plan to launch a private chat room (€13.50 a month) for men over the age of 50. 'Real talk, real support — hosted by Gregg Wallace. Fitness, food, lifestyle, laughs. Sign up below and pop in to say hello' — says the blurb. It sounds a more measured approach than one of his responses to complaints made against him. On that occasion, ignoring the dictum that, when you are in a hole, you should stop digging, he hit out at 'middle class women of a certain age'. Perhaps this is a lesson learned. Perhaps chippy masculinity will come back into fashion. But that is probably not the way to bet.


Sunday World
10 hours ago
- Sunday World
Belfast man missing for over two weeks found alive in Paris
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The Irish Sun
17 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Chilling wolf map shows ferocious beasts prowl Brit holiday hotspots after boy, 6, snatched from mum by infamous ‘Bram'
FEROCIOUS wolves are prowling British holiday hotspots as the number of the predators continues to grow. It comes after a six-year-old boy was 8 A wolf bares teeth as he is attacked by a wolfhound Credit: Reuters 8 The terrifying moment a wolf attacked a young boy in a snow-covered Russian park Credit: East2west News 8 Picture shows rogue wolf named Bram who is suspected to be behind the dangerous attack on the six-year-old Credit: Animal Rights Netherlands 8 The child suffered , which required stitching - and was found with multiple scratches and abrasions on his body. The tot went for a walk with his mum and younger brother in the Dutch province of Utrecht when they saw an animal running towards them. At first, Mum Nynke, 41, thought it was safe for her children to play with what appeared to be a friendly dog from a distance. It was only when the wild wolf jumped on the boy and dragged him into the woods, the mum realised the danger. read more news Passers-by in the tourist hotspot Den Treek nature reserve then rushed to save the boy from the wolf's jaws. The terrified mum told Locals suspect that a rogue wolf named Bram was behind the dangerous attack. Bram, who is officially designated GW3237m, is reportedly on a death sentence for attacking other people and dogs in the region. Most read in The US Sun Parents of boy, 3, mauled to death by devil dogs facing jail after they 'let him wander into pen unsupervised' Just a few weeks ago, the lone wolf bit a female hiker twice on the leg at the Den Treek estate near Leusden A court permitted the province of Utrecht to shoot the wolf dead, saying it poses a threat to the people, the According to the court, the risk of serious injury to people is 'so severe' that the wolf must be culled. Recent wolf attacks on pet dogs, livestock and even children have sparked uproar across Europe. Wolf populations have continued to grow due to the predators being protected under the Bern Convention in EU law. But this also means there has been an increasing contact with humans. Chilling figures released in June show the number of wolf attacks on sheep and other livestock is at an all-time high. In the first three months of 2025 in the Netherlands, 368 attacks on animals were recorded, compared to a much lower 266 the year prior. 8 Warning signs on how to handle a wolf encounter are placed at the entrances of the nature estate Credit: Alamy 8 A pack of European grey wolf seen in Germany's Bavaria 8 Emile Soleil, 2, vanished in the French Alpine hamlet of Le Vernet last July, with locals fearing he was killed by wolves The Central European lowlands population of wolves currently sits at between 780-1030 wolves. And our map shows how the Dinaric-Balkan region are having to deal with the highest number of the beasts - roughly 4,000. The wolf-ridden region of mountains covers holiday hotspot destinations like northeastern Italy, Croatia, Slovenia and Albania. Wolves may also prowl Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia, as well as the northwestern part of Kosovo. Central European lowlands are also having to grapple with between 780 to 1030 wolves. Meanwhile the Alps and areas of Italy are dealing with up to 3,000 of the beasts. The EU law was modified in March of this year, however, shifting the protection status of wolves in Europe from "strictly protected" to "protected". This change grants member states more flexibility in managing the ever-growing wolf populations. The remains of a little two-year-old boy named Emile Soleil were found in a forested ravine last year with a bite mark on his skull France . Cops said that little Emile's remains were found outside of the hamlet Le Vernet almost eight months after the tod mysteriously disappeared from Alpine village. A few locals believed at the time that Another boy was attacked by a rogue wolf in a snow-covered Russian park a few years ago. Shocking video shows the However, according to the WWF, wolves in Europe don't pose a threat to humans. The animal charity says that scientific evidence has proved that wolves don't treat humans as prey, with fatal encounters being exceptional. 8 The Red Wolf (Canis rufus) is the worlds most endangered canine Credit: Getty