
Dundee student who became international cannabis courier will 'face music' in China after serving sentence
Xiang Chen was acting as a courier while studying ethical hacking in the city, shifting shipments of cannabis for £30 a box in winter 2022.
Chen, 23, returned to the dock to be sentenced, aided by a Mandarin interpreter, having been found guilty of being concerned in the supply of cannabis at a trial in February.
More than 10kg of the Class B drug were intercepted by the UK Border Force in boxes from North America.
Jurors rejected his claim he thought the boxes he was collecting and handing over contained cigars.
Chen was ordered to complete unpaid work in Dundee but his Home Office-approved leave will end once his sentence is served and he will return to China.
Jurors at Forfar Sheriff Court heard parcels of drugs were intercepted at Heathrow and East Midlands airports.
Chen's role was collecting parcels from properties in Dundee and delivering them to a man at the city railway station.
He used controversial messaging app WeChat to send his boss a photograph of a letter from Inland Border Command confirming they'd seized 1.6kg of cannabis destined for a flat used by his operation.
When he was arrested in April 2023, Chen told police he thought the boxes contained cigars.
Sentencing had been deferred for social workers to compile a report on the courier.
Chen's defence counsel Janice Green said: 'Mr Chen is certainly prepared to undertake unpaid work.
'He is quite scared of the prospect of custody. If that has not been conveyed to the author of the report, that has been a misunderstanding.
'This is a case where the weight is 8.48kg. Mr Chen might rightly be categorised as a courier with limited financial advantage, no influence with the chain of operation and an involvement through, perhaps, immaturity and naivety.'
Ms Green added: 'In the period of him being on bail, he has returned to China.
'His parents are traditional Chinese with traditional values. They feel quite acutely the shame and disgrace has affected them.
'Whatever he has said in terms of explaining his position, it doesn't make sense. It wasn't accepted by the jury.
'His status is that he was on a student visa. He has been allowed to remain by the Home Office until the proceedings and disposal have been served.
'It would be his intention then to return home to China where he would take residence with his parents and face the music there.
'Clearly he is immature. His limited social interaction skills… perhaps impacts on his naivety and immaturity.'
The court heard Chen is no longer working or studying.
Sheriff Jillian Martin-Brown ordered him to complete 300 hours of unpaid work over the next two years and granted forfeiture of all the seized drugs.
She said: 'I've taken into account what's been said on your behalf by your counsel, the criminal justice social work report, the fact that you have no previous convictions and in particular your age.
'In all the circumstances I'm satisfied that an alternative to custody is appropriate.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Nine arrested as West Midlands raids target illegal workers
More than 20 people have been arrested after immigration raids across the West Midlands. Delivery drivers suspected of working illegally were targeted by officers in Birmingham, Coventry and Hereford, the Home Office said. Images showed enforcement agents apprehending two men at New Street railway station on Wednesday, as people were stopped for allegedly using modified e-bikes. It comes amid a crackdown on undocumented workers operating in the so-called gig economy, as well as places like car washes, construction sites and nail bars. The two-day operation saw 21 foreign nationals taken into custody for a range of immigration offences, the government added. They included people from Eritrea, Guinea, Italy, India, Pakistan, Vietnam and Bangladesh. All of them now face being deported from the UK. Matthew Foster, who leads on immigration in the West Midlands, said illegal working was undercutting legitimate businesses and allowing vulnerable people to be exploited. "Those who choose to break the law by working illegally or employing illegal workers should expect to be caught and face the consequences," he said. The enforcement activity comes after ministers promised to get tough on illegal migration to "protect UK borders". Plans have included a focus on food delivery companies such as Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat to prevent illegal working. In June, the companies agreed to strengthen security checks following reports some asylum seekers were working illegally as couriers. Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
Albanian who cannot be deported taunts Home Office with personalised number plate
An Albanian convicted burglar who cannot be deported has taunted the Home Office by posting a TikTok video of the new personalised number plate on his £80,000 Mercedes. Dorian Puka, 28, who has been jailed and deported twice from the UK for burglaries, filmed himself peeling the cover off his new registration plate: DO24 AMG, reflecting his name and high-end marque of the Mercedes. He then posted a video of himself driving through London onto the M25 towards the intersection with the M40 to Oxford. It is his latest defiant mockery of Home Office officials who are powerless to deport him because he has claimed asylum. Rules state he cannot be removed until his case is fully considered – a process that could take months, and possibly years given the backlog of immigration tribunal appeals. He was originally jailed for nine months in 2016 and then deported the following year for attempting to break into a property when the owner spotted him on a webcam while on holiday in France. Yet, within a year, he managed to evade border controls and return to the UK where he carried out a string of burglaries in London. Puka was eventually caught wearing an expensive watch he had stolen when he was spotted by plain clothes officers patrolling Surbiton in south west London. He was jailed for three-and-a-half years and then deported in March 2020. Awaiting immigration tribunal During his time in prison in the UK, he earned notoriety for using an illegal mobile phone smuggled into the jail to post Instagram pictures of himself standing alongside the leader of an organised crime group who was serving a 12-year sentence for conspiracy to supply cocaine and money laundering. After returning to his native Albania for several months, he travelled through Germany, Belgium and Netherlands before beating border checks to enter Britain again in December 2020, according to his Instagram account. It is understood he has lodged an asylum application and has been on immigration bail and subject to an electronic tag since last year, awaiting an immigration tribunal to decide on his claim. In December, he posted happy new year messages from a London nightclub alongside a picture of himself celebrating while smoking a shisha pipe next to a belly dancer. It comes three months after he posted a series of videos of himself driving a £300,000 Ferrari in London on his TikTok and Instagram accounts, as well as images of himself with dozens of Rolex watches and other expensive cars. 'A proper wrong 'un' Puka also taunted Nigel Farage by posting a picture of himself eating and drinking with a photoshopped image of the Reform party leader giving the thumbs up. Mr Farage had described him as a 'proper wrong 'un' who was 'walking all over' the UK authorities. The Albanian's sources of funding remain unknown, but reports suggest he has been staying in a £250,000 two-bed terraced flat in Hounslow, west London. A Home Office spokesman said: 'Foreign nationals who commit crimes should be in no doubt that the law will be enforced. Mr Puka has been deported by the UK before. It is UK law that we cannot deport individuals where there are claims or representations still awaiting decision. 'We have already begun delivering a major surge in immigration enforcement and returns activity to remove people with no right to be in the UK, with 30,000 returned since the new government came into power.'


North Wales Live
11 hours ago
- North Wales Live
The little boy who was utterly failed by the very people who should have loved and cared for him
He was the boy who was let down on all sides. His mother, grandmother and grandfather were all directly culpable - and health visitors and social workers were unable to halt the countdown to disaster. Deviousness on the doorstep regarding Ethan's real condition and some of the pandemic restrictions due to Covid-19 all contributed in the failure to stop the downward spiral for the innocent two-year-old. It culminated in a belated and frantic 999 call by grandmother Kerry Ives after Ethan's second collapse on August 14, 2021. But she had still felt it necessary to Facetime one of her daughters for advice first, creating an unfathomable, 18-minute delay. You can sign up for all the latest court stories here During the trial, a paediatric neurosurgeon Dr Jayaratnam Jayamohan said that that delay would 'probably' have made no difference to the outcome for the emaciated, brown-haired toddler. By that point it was simply too late. He said the head injury could have been caused by an impact. He said it could have been from 'either some object moving to hit the right side of Ethan's head, or Ethan's head moving to hit an object. "It could be a fist, a hand or a knee or it could be an object that you pick up', or from Ethan being shaken, or both," he told the jury. During the 999 call, the call handler told Kerry Ives to get someone to collect a defibrillator from a yellow cabinet on the front wall of a pharmacy on Welsh Road. Michael Ives then "flew" outside to collect it to save the malnourished tot - likely not motivated by genuine concern for Ethan but only the potential consequences that would come for himself. Soon the ambulance arrived at 44 Kingsley Road. Doorbell footage showed a paramedic entering and coming out carrying the limp, thin Ethan to the waiting ambulance that night. That clip left an indelible mark on the minds of many in court. No stretcher was required - he was that small. The tot had sustained 40 marks and bruises which Michael Ives claimed was surprising. He died in Alder Hey children's hospital on Merseyside on August 16 with experienced Home Office pathologist Dr Brian Rodgers citing blunt force injuries. He had probably been punched in the abdomen, he concluded. There was bleeding in two areas of his abdomen which spread to bleeding on the brain, brain stem and down his spinal cord. Dr Rodgers said: "This type of pathology is related to severe trauma, severe force, likely to be seen in a high speed road traffic collision. You are not going to get this bleeding and spinal injury from a low level force. "(Or) you'd have to fall from a great height - three, four, five storeys from a balcony" (to have Ethan's injuries). 'It's like someone has been punched in the guts,' he said in court. Yet the jury of seven women and five men heard Ethan had once been a lively even chubby boy - 'a little chump', according to his mum Shannon Ives. For various reasons, he ended up with his grandparents in Garden City. Footage showed him playing in the garden, on a trampoline and in a paddling pool - known to the family as the swimming pool. The irony was that this family footage was eventually used by the prosecution to convict them, as it revealed their grisly cruelty. Michael Ives intimated Ethan should be punched, forced the lad to put his hands on his head as 'punishment' for over 40 minutes on one occasion, (as he needed to learn 'the hard way'), and callously let him lie on the bouncy surface with activity around him. All were signs of the unfolding cruelty. Once North Wales Police got involved Michael claimed he was 'ashamed' and 'disgusted' with himself. He particularly regretted dragging Ethan by one arm on several occasions from the trampoline or to the car. But this apparent shame and disgust came too late to save the little boy. As for Ethan's mother Shannon, she claimed she was too 'scared' to report her Dad to the authorities - fearing his reaction. She said she 'hated' her Dad for what he did to Ethan. She coldly calls her parents 'Michael and Kerry'. She and her siblings had been subjected to corporal punishment as children by their parents, according to her and her brother Josh. Shannon also claimed she didn't want to go back to the home she once shared with Ethan's Dad Will Griffiths in Mold - that's partly why she ended up in Kingsley Road. Shannon told her defence barrister Gordon Cole KC that in one troubling incident - in which Michael walks with an exaggeratedly wide gait behind his grandson along the path into their house on August 13 that Michael Ives was "mimicking Ethan". Shannon said she was smiling because she "didn't know what he was doing' at first. "Looking back he was obviously taking the p*** out of Ethan," Shannon Ives admitted. On the night August 14 when Ethan collapsed her Dad Michael said his legs had gone like 'jelly' and he carried him into the garden, as the adults tried to revive Ethan. Soon afterwards Shannon said she realised her mum Kerry was on the phone to her sister Nicole. Shannon said she asked 'What are you doing? What are you not ringing an ambulance?' And Shannon said Michael said 'Just ring an ambulance'. Later Shannon said she saw Ethan at Alder Hey children's hospital. He had tubes coming out of him and a bandage around his head. She was in a 'really bad state…upset and crying and wondering what had happened to Ethan,' the court heard. Shannon too let Ethan down. She herself acknowledged she put her son "at risk of serious harm" by not leaving. She tried and failed to do so the night before his fatal collapse. She said her parents "threatened her with social services" if she exposed the cruelty. Ultimately, she said as a mum she let Ethan down during a tearful exchange with prosecutor Caroline Rees KC in courtroom No. 1. She wasn't the only one.