logo
Hertfordshire and Essex gang convicted over £4.1m drugs drop

Hertfordshire and Essex gang convicted over £4.1m drugs drop

BBC News27-02-2025
A gang found to have flown from France to drop parcels of cocaine into the British countryside has been convicted of drugs offences.Cocaine worth an estimated £4.2m was later discovered at a car wash in Hertfordshire - and a house in Loughton, Essex.An investigation led by the Eastern Region Special Operations Unit (ERSOU) found that the gang liaised with contacts abroad to drop the packages in Dorset.Det Insp Daniel Barker, of ERSOU, said the group "had put significant thought and planning into how they could best bring Class A drugs into the UK".
Three men pleaded guilty to being concerned in the importation and supply of controlled drugs into the UK. On Tuesday, a fourth man, Tomas Bauza, 44, was found guilty of supplying drugs but cleared of importation during a trial at St Albans Crown Court.
ERSOU said the flights, leaving from the Cherbourg area of northern France, would avoid radar systems and disable transponders which revealed their whereabouts to other pilots.On at least three occasions, flights were made to southern England before immediately returning to France, "dangerously" entering UK airspace without the required documents, ERSOU said.Each time, either Rolandas Bauza, 47, or Martynas Piecia, 37, drove to the same location to collect the parcels.The Bauza brothers, both of Colson Road in Loughton, Essex, travelled to Dorset a few days earlier to explore potential drop sites, the investigation found.
'Great lengths'
A fourth man, 33-year-old Arjan Lisaj of Barrells Down Road in Bishop's Stortford, worked at a car wash in Spellbrook that was being used as a front for criminal activity, investigators found.He was arrested near the car wash in September 2024, alongside Piecia and Rolandas Bauza. Officers found two blocks of cocaine in the car wash office, while Rolandas was found to be carrying £37,000 in cash. Tomas was arrested at a raid of the Bauza brothers' home, which also uncovered 54g of cocaine in the loft and evidence the property had been used as a cannabis factory.Piecia, of Holst Lane in Thaxted, Essex, is due to be sentenced along with the other three men on 4 August.
Det Insp Barker said the group "went to great lengths in attempting to hide their illicit activities"."However, the tenacity of ERSOU's investigators let to our teams uncovering vast amounts of evidence implicating each member, and we were able to stop a significant amount of cocaine entering our communities."We work closely with UK police forces and partner agencies abroad to ensure that those involved in serious criminality such as this are apprehended and brought to justice," he said.
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Normal People author Sally Rooney vows to use her BBC royalties to fund terror group Palestine Action
Normal People author Sally Rooney vows to use her BBC royalties to fund terror group Palestine Action

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Normal People author Sally Rooney vows to use her BBC royalties to fund terror group Palestine Action

Novelist Sally Rooney has vowed to fund the proscribed terror group Palestine Action. The Normal People author said she would donate earnings from her books and BBC adaptations to the organisation, adding: 'If this makes me a 'supporter of terror' under UK law, so be it.' Funding terrorism carries up to 14 years' imprisonment under the Terrorism Act 2000 – the same piece of legislation used to ban Palestine Action last month. Ms Rooney, 34, wrote in an article for The Irish Times: 'My books, at least for now, are still published in Britain, and are widely available in bookshops and even supermarkets. 'In recent years the UK's state broadcaster has also televised two fine adaptations of my novels, and therefore regularly pays me residual fees. 'I want to be clear that I intend to use these proceeds of my work, as well as my public platform generally, to go on supporting Palestine Action and direct action against genocide in whatever way I can. 'If the British state considers this 'terrorism', then perhaps it should investigate the shady organisations that continue to promote my work and fund my activities, such as WHSmith and the BBC.' The Irish writer added that 'to ensure the British public is made aware of my position, I would happily publish this statement in a UK newspaper – but that would now be illegal'. The BBC adaptation of Normal People, starring Daisy Edgar-Jones and Paul Mescal, was one of the corporation's biggest hits of 2020, and it has also adapted Ms Rooney's book Conversations With Friends. Palestine Action was banned last month after it admitted breaking into RAF Brize Norton in June, when £7 million of damage was caused to two Voyager aircraft. The action, approved by both Houses of Parliament, made it a proscribed organisation, meaning it is now a crime to offer it support or be a member. Ms Rooney was referred to during a hearing at the High Court in London last month, when the co-founder of Palestine Action, Huda Ammori, unsuccessfully sought to block the proscription. Blinne Ni Ghralaigh KC, representing Ms Ammori, told the court the ban would create 'far-reaching' harm and cause people to 'self-censor'. She said that Ms Rooney 'fears the ramifications for her, for her work, for her books, for her programmes' if she showed support for Palestine Action. Ms Ni Ghralaigh asked: 'Is the Prime Minister going to denounce her, an Irish artist, as a supporter of a proscribed organisation? Will that have ramifications for her with the BBC?' More than 700 people have been arrested since the ban came into force, including hundreds who held up placards which read 'I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action' at a demonstration in Parliament Square on August 9. The Metropolitan Police said on Friday a further 60 people will be prosecuted for supporting Palestine Action, in addition to three charges announced previously in relation to a protest on July 5. And on Saturday, Norfolk Police said 13 people were arrested at a protest in Norwich. It comes after Sir Jonathon Porritt, a former environmental adviser to the King, last week condemned the ban on Palestine Action as 'absolutely standard authoritarian tactics'.

Brit ex-soldier FREED from Bali prison with Presidential pardon after £30k Bitcoin raid
Brit ex-soldier FREED from Bali prison with Presidential pardon after £30k Bitcoin raid

Daily Mirror

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Brit ex-soldier FREED from Bali prison with Presidential pardon after £30k Bitcoin raid

Disgraced British soldier turned Bitcoin robber Greg Simpson, 39, has been released from a prison in Bali after a 2022 offence and could return to the UK within days A British robber who took £300,000 of Bitcoin in a terrifying knifepoint raid walks free early from his hell-hole Bali prison. ‌ Disgraced former soldier Greg Simpson, 39, could be back in the UK within days after he was given a reprieve by Indonesian authorities. The veteran, an Army reservist who toured Afghanistan as a member of the London Regiment, was jailed for kidnap and robbery in 2022. ‌ He tied up Italians Principe Nerini, 40, and wife Camilla Guadagnuolo, and held them at knifepoint at their Seminyak villa in November 2021. It comes after a kickboxing champion takes dead body to police station as he hands himself in for murder. ‌ READ MORE: Police shame British drugs mules by making them pose for photos with suitcases Simpson was said to have been part of a four-strong gang that stole 5.8billion Indonesian Rupiahs in the raid, the equivalent of £300,000. Authorities swooped and arrested Simpson and his alleged right-hand man Nicola Disanto, 34, but two accomplices were never traced. Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto freed Simpson as part of the country's independence celebrations. Exclusive pictures obtained by the Mirror show Simpson carrying his belongings as he was allowed to leave Bali's notorious 320-inmate Kerobokan prison yesterday. He looked fresh and healthy as he left Kerobokan – which is one of Indonesia's most feared institutions, because it is ruled by violent domestic gangs. He refused to speak to journalists as he was taken from the prison by immigration officials to a waiting car that drove him to spend the night in an immigration detention cell. ‌ A source said: 'Simpson's crime was abhorrent but the Indonesian authorities are desperate to cut the huge prison population and foreign nationals are easy to release.' Prison chief Hudi Ismono said that Simpson was among three Brits to receive remissions yesterday – where prison times are reduced for good behaviour. These are handed out every year the day after Indonesian Independence Day on August 17. ‌ 'During his time in prison, Simpson received remissions on Independence Day and Christmas,' Mr Ismono said. He has been well behaved and has not caused disturbances. He was released with only a bag containing his clothes.' A number of British prisoners, including drug mule Lindsay Sandiford, 69, who has spent 12 years on death row, had hoped to be freed. The cocaine trafficker, of Cheltenham, Glos, thinks she can dodge the firing squad thanks to a change in the law. Indonesia has recently freed other smugglers serving similar sentences as it relaxes its notoriously tough anti-drug laws. She has been held in Kerobokan since 2013 for bringing £1.6million of cocaine into the country. The Mirror understands just three UK nationals were released or given reductions in their sentences. Thomas Parker, a 32-year-old electrician from Workington, Cumbria, was given a one month and 25-day remission on his 10-month sentence for failing to report a drug crime. Parker had unwittingly accepted a delivery of a kilo of MDMA from a taxi driver in January. Drug convict Callum James Park, 35, of Hull, East Yorkshire, was handed eight months off his 2021 five-year sentence for possession 11.8 grams of methamphetamine and 5.5 grams of ecstasy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store