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EXCLUSIVE Why Brits are 'flavour of the month' for drug smuggler gangs: The pensioners and glam influencers recruited as drug mules on promise of fast cash and luxury holidays

EXCLUSIVE Why Brits are 'flavour of the month' for drug smuggler gangs: The pensioners and glam influencers recruited as drug mules on promise of fast cash and luxury holidays

Daily Mail​2 days ago

British 'drug mules' are the 'flavour of the month' for criminal gangs and are being recruited on the promise of quick cash and the 'perfect package' luxury holiday, experts warned today.
Attracted by the white sand beaches and bustling nightlife, party-going Brits are flocking to countries such as Thailand and Indonesia in their droves - but some are never making it home.
That's because several Brits, mostly glamorous young women, are being lured into the murky world of drug smuggling which has left them facing lengthy sentences in hell-hole prisons or even the death penalty.
But in a case that has bucked the trend, a 79-year-old British pensioner was arrested in Chile last week after a Mexican gang allegedly promised him £3.7million to smuggle a suitcase of crystal meth from Cancun.
One leading drugs expert claimed smugglers are seeing Brits as the 'flavour of the month' because UK nationals, particularly young women, are easily incentivised and can slip back into the UK more easily with the goods on a British passport.
But with a trend of Brits now being caught, they warned airport security will be paying a closer eye, explaining: 'That's why they are being picked up more, because they are being picked on more. If it's a run on Brits, this could sustain for years.'
Another leading drugs expert added: 'They recruit anyone they think looks innocent enough to get through customs, and yet still be dodgy enough to do the deal.'
In recent weeks, 18-year-old Bella Culley, from Billingham, County Durham, was arrested in Georgia after allegedly carrying 14kg of cannabis into the ex-Soviet nation from Thailand, where she had been holidaying.
Then came 21-year-old Charlotte Lee May, from Coulsdon, south London, who is locked up in a Sri Lankan prison after police discovered 46kg of 'Kush' - a synthetic strain of cannabis - in her suitcase when she arrived on a flight from Thailand.
A flurry of similar cases have followed including 36-year-old OnlyFans model Clara Wilson, from Nottinghamshire, 21-year-old Cameron Bradford, from Hertfordshire, and 29-year-old Kimberly Hall, from Middlesbrough, who have all been arrested on suspicion of smuggling abroad.
Many of these alleged smugglers face decades in prison. But at the most extreme end, three British nationals - Phineas Float, Jonathan Collyer and Lisa Stocker - are facing the death penalty over allegedly smuggling cocaine from the UK to Indonesia.
Last week, it then emerged that 79-year-old William 'Billy Boy' Eastment faces dying behind prison bars after he was intercepted at Santiago Airport with £200,000 worth of meth.
The bowls-loving pensioner, from Somerset, claims he was unaware the suitcase contained drugs - with his own sister saying 'He is just so gullible'.
Dr David Holmes, a leading criminal psychologist, told MailOnline that he may have been approached because pensioners 'are obviously not the first target for airport security'.
'I imagine this is someone who wanted money. But it would be a very worrying trend if your average pensioner from the council estate was starting to [smuggle] on holidays. It would be a nightmare for customs.
'I would imagine there isn't an army of pensioners, but they are a relatively easy target, they are not as go-getting and thrill-seeking. But they are interested in money and if they are hard-pressed, easily scared and pressured, they can be targeted.'
He added that customs officers go through 'trends' and 'suspicions', adding: 'If you started to get a few pensioners coming through, I can imagine the look of dread on airport staff.
'They are not the people you want to be pushing into a cell and keeping for hours, complications can get much worse and they have health problems. It's not safe to be wrenching them about like you would with a younger person.'
Gary Carroll, an expert witness in drug cases, suggested that drug kingpins could be adapting to the increased coverage of young female smugglers by preying on pensioners instead.
'Pensioners being used is certainly a commonality that we've seen in the past in the drug world. They adapt as we adapt or as law enforcement adapts.
'Law enforcement and the media have publicised young girls being used as mules. But in four, five, six months we'll see a sharp decrease.
'We'll see this falling off the table. And what we'll have brought back onto the table are the use of pensioners and the use of families, and they'll adapt now that more enforcement have cottoned on to this tactic.'
British grandmother Lindsay Sandiford has also been incarcerated inside Bali's hellish Kerokoban prison since 2013 after she was sentenced to death for attempting to smuggle £1.6million worth of cocaine into Indonesia's capital from Thailand by stuffing it into the lining of her suitcase.
But more recently, there has been a surge in drug seizures involving young women, who experts say share a commonality in being 'vulnerable' and wanting to travel the world.
Mr Carroll, who spent 14 years in policing before becoming an expert witness, said: 'I think what we've seen is with the rise in social dominance of social media.
'It's created a gateway for suppliers to target and make connections with young, well-travelled, glamorous ladies and girls that are seeking that ability to travel the world and afford to do so.
'Smuggling drugs or packages where they're not entirely sure of the contents in exchange for free holidays and cash seems quite a lucrative offer.'
Mr Carroll, from Claymore Advisory Group, said he has worked on cases where the 'common denominator' is free accommodation, free flights, spending money and some cash to come home with.
'I've even seen business class being thrown in there to sweeten the deal,' he said.
'It's almost the perfect package for those that want to travel, take all the pictures for social media at no expense of their own.
He said that in cases he has worked on, it is British nationals being approached within the UK through the introduction of friends.
'It's almost like a multi-level marketing aspect where young girls are recruiting other young girls to become involved on the provision that it's a free holiday, you get some cash,' he said.
And while word of mouth may be spreading on how to secure fast cash and luxury holidays, convicted young female smugglers have spoken out to warn against getting lured in.
Michaella McCollum, one of the notorious Peru Two who served three years in a hardcore prison near Lima over drug smuggling, sympathises with Bella and Charlotte.
'I couldn't help but feel bad for them,' Michaella told the Mail. '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.'
Another, OnlyFans star Levi-April Whalley, who was caught trying to smuggle £160,000 of cannabis into the UK from New York with a pal in 2023 told The Mirror: 'If I had the chance to speak to Bella and Charlotte, I would tell them to tell the truth and be honest.'
Experts have told MailOnline how young women are targeted by mules because they are less likely to be stopped by customs - especially with a surge in female travelling.
Mr Carroll said: 'I don't want to detract from the ones where they are fully aware of what's going on, and it's just pure naivety and greed, which is certainly a dominant factor in a lot of cases.
'But these young girls are getting approached because - not to stereotype every young social media lad and female - but travelling the world is certainly a common denominator.
'It's pictures in foreign, exotic, lovely areas where the everyman can only dream of visiting, whereas these young ladies happen to be getting holidays there, and it makes people wonder,what kind of lifestyle they can lead.
'They do make for interesting targets for suppliers.'
Asked who is targeting them, he added: 'With the people targeting on social media, it's introducing friends of friends. It tends to be UK nationals that are based abroad.
'The person there facilitating the whole transaction and importation, will likely be a British national, someone likes there. It's not the head of a Thai drugs gang targeting UK girls, that's not what I've encountered.
'It tends to be a British person who is orchestrating the events but happens to be in the middle of the drug gang and has the ability to recruit UK females. It's another link in the chain.'
Dr Holmes added that the 'recruiting is often done through people they know', adding: 'It's not just the case of some dodgy looking guy coming along a beach and saying "If you do this, you get that".
'Most of it will be your friends saying, "Oh, I've done that, it's no problem."
He continued: 'It's people that are gullible enough to do it because they've got to go through it, they've got to actually turn up pass over the drugs and things.
'You wouldn't have completely incompetent drunkards.
'It's people that have a certain kind of gloss, or would appear to be a gloss for getting through customs would be attractive to the dealers and the people that are pushing the mules.
'It's anyone they think looks innocent enough to get through customs, and yet still be dodgy enough to do the deal.'
He added: 'It may be that Brits are the flavour of the month - and I would imagine it's quite more likely that Brits are the flavour of the month with airport security.. That's why they are being picked up more, because they are being picked on more.
They have limited resources, they can't stop everybody so they target people...if it's a run on Brits, this could sustain for years.'
Speaking about whether these mules are aware of the risks, Dr Holmes said: 'They will be given a routine such as what to do with burst bags or what to say when they are caught, i.e nothing.
'That is probably the limit of the instruction that they would be given because to be honest, the dealers don't care that much. You are just somebody who's working for them, and you don't give a s**t because you're likely never to do it again.'
Mr Carroll said that it's often implied to the smugglers that the contents are not legal, but it is suggested that it could be something less serious than drugs such as jewellery with unpaid VAT or unethically sourced gold.
The challenge for the courts is working out if the smugglers have 'naively' agreed to take packages without knowing there are drugs inside or if they are aware of what they are doing, he said.
Dr Holmes said the type of suspect has changed over the years, making it even more challenging for Border Force to detect.
'You would have been looking at very poor people that have got nothing else, who are fairly desperate and easily bribed, or easily blackmailed into doing it,' he said.
'Young Brits, obviously, are more robust in terms of getting through customs - but it may be that they've been doing it for years and only just now are they catching on at customs that it might actually be this lot as well.'
As well as the end destination of the drugs reaching the UK, the idea of being 'seen as more above board and less likely to be committing that serious crime', makes British nationals attractive for smuggling, he added.
'You do get some picked upon because they are loners and vulnerable, easily scared, desperate in some way,' Dr Holmes said.
'There might be one or two that want identity if there is nothing in their lives, if they are not achieving anything, and this would give them identity and make them feel special.'
Just last night, it emerged another young Brit, Ms Bradford, 21, from Knebworth, in Hertfordshire, was stopped at Munich Airport on April 21 for allegedly smuggling cannabis from Thailand.
It is thought Ms Bradford could now face at least four months in a German prison while authorities probe where the drugs came from.
In a separate case this week, OnlyFans model Clara Wilson, 36, was allegedly found trying to smuggle around £200,000 of Thai cannabis into Spain.
The mother-of-four from Huthwaite, Nottinghamshire, faces four years behind bars and potential fines of over £750,000 if she is found guilty.
The European cases are far more lenient than those who are stranded in hell-hole prisons abroad.
The trial of three Brits accused of smuggling cocaine or taking part in a drug deal on the island of Bali began on Tuesday, with all facing the death penalty in a nation with some of the world's toughest narcotics laws.
Indonesia hands out severe punishments for drug smuggling and has previously executed foreigners, but has upheld a moratorium on the death sentence since 2017.
Couple Jonathan Christopher Collyer, 38, and Lisa Ellen Stocker, 39, were arrested on February 1 after being stopped at Bali's international airport with 17 alleged packages of cocaine that weighed nearly one kilogramme.
A lab test result confirmed that 10 sachets of Angel Delight in Collyer's luggage and seven similar sachets in his partner's suitcase contained 995.56g of cocaine, prosecutors claimed.
Phineas Ambrose Float, 31, who was allegedly due to receive the packages, was arrested two days later and is being tried separately.
Bella May Culley, 18, from Billingham, is being held in prison in Georgia on suspicion of smuggling 14kg of cannabis from Thailand.
Elsewhere in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Charlotte May Lee, 21, from Coulsdon, south London, was arrested after police allegedly discovered 46kg of 'Kush' - a synthetic strain of cannabis - in her suitcase.
She is facing up to 25 years locked in a hellhole Sri Lankan jail - but she has insisted she has been set up.
Meanwhile it was alleged last month that British beautician Kimberly Hall, 29, tried to trick Immigration and Customs Enforcement into deporting her so she could evade justice after being accused of smuggling $6.2million of cocaine into Chicago.
Hall was caught carrying 43kg of cocaine through O'Hare Airport in August 2024 after getting off a flight from Cancun, prosecutors say.
She was about to board a connecting flight home to the UK when she was apprehended.
She is said to have admitted to investigators that she'd been given the bags during a trip to Mexico and asked to take them back to Manchester in England.

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Family & friends of 3 Brits facing death penalty in £300k Bali coke smuggling plot reveal horror as trio's fate awaits
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EXCLUSIVE Family and friends of three Brits locked up in Bali jail over '£300,000 Angel Delight cocaine smuggling plot' say they are in 'deep shock' as they face death penalty
EXCLUSIVE Family and friends of three Brits locked up in Bali jail over '£300,000 Angel Delight cocaine smuggling plot' say they are in 'deep shock' as they face death penalty

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EXCLUSIVE Family and friends of three Brits locked up in Bali jail over '£300,000 Angel Delight cocaine smuggling plot' say they are in 'deep shock' as they face death penalty

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