
Brit drugs mules can't play the victim after flashing weed & cash online – they were conned by something very dangerous
NOW I don't know about you, but when it comes to funding my holiday, I tend to put a little aside in the months before to help cushion the blow.
What I don't typically do is stuff my suitcase full of £1.2million of cannabis and then attempt to smuggle it into Sri Lanka.
6
But that is what former Tui air stewardess Charlotte May Lee, 21, is accused of doing when she was stopped at Colombo airport last week.
The previous day, another young Brit, Bella Culley, 18, was nabbed at Tbilisi airport in Georgia, having allegedly flown in from Bangkok with 14kg of marijuana.
So two girls in two days, caught, locked up and now starring in their own personal reboot of Midnight Express.
Meanwhile, their frantic parents, beside themselves with worry, try every trick in the book to get them out.
What a mess.
Now there is a suggestion that the two — who both flew out of the same Thai airport — are linked.
Investigators wonder if nasty smugglers 'preyed' on these women as part of some sort of international drug ring targeting backpackers.
Because of course there is no way on Earth that these two plucky lasses — no doubt keen to fund a never-ending holiday with the easiest cash available — could have just decided to smuggle drugs on their own.
A bit of 'easy money' to avoid having to do the unthinkable and — OMG! — get an actual job. No, these Gen Z globetrotters must be 'victims'. It wasn't their fault. They're just 'vulnerable women'.
Hmmm.
Bella Culley certainly did not appear to be a victim of anything — other than perhaps social media. Indeed, her boastful posts on TikTok and Facebook prior to her arrest revealed a young woman high on life.
And possibly more — in one snap she has what appears to be a spliff hanging out of her mouth.
In another, she flaunts wads of cash, captioning it with bags of money emojis (Where did she get all that from?)
6
She also revealed she is not necessarily someone who follows the letter of the law too well, writing: 'How about we get up to criminal activities side by side like Bonnie 'n' Clyde making heavy figures and f***ing on balconies all over the world.'
Meanwhile, May Lee, who recently worked on a 'booze cruise' in Thailand and is also no stranger to showing off on social media, insists she had 'no idea' the drugs were 'planted' in her bags.
If convicted, this unlucky pair's sentences will be long and miserable. I don't blame anyone for trying to get them out. Any parent would want the same.
A rat-and-maggot-infested foreign prison is no place for a young Western woman, especially one like Culley, who claims to be pregnant.
But spare me the victim nonsense.
Both these adults, if guilty, should have known what they were doing was highly risky. Backpackers — even those as young as 18 — know exactly how the world works. I was one myself once.
Hardly a month goes by without some well-publicised horror story of a British national getting caught with drugs.
And incidents are on the rise.
Recent stats from Prisoners Abroad, which helps Brits who have been nicked overseas, reveal a huge increase in drug arrests — up 57 per cent, with 243 new cases between April 2024 and March this year, compared to 155 in the previous year.
Brits Michaella McCollum and Melissa Reid — aka the Peru Two — who were banged up in Peru in 2013 for smuggling cocaine, garnered such notoriety that two kids dressed up as them for the village fete.
It is easy to blame social media for all the world's ills, but for Charlotte May Lee and Bella Culley, it might have played a part.
The urge to live a luxury, carefree life and show it off to followers can be a powerful motive to do the most stupid, high-risk things imaginable.
Social media is a powerful drug with which one must exercise extreme caution.
And yes, as another two terrified women are now finding out, it is not the only one that could ruin your life.
ITV IS cutting the number of presenters on Loose Women to save cash.
Presumably it will also now be rebranded . . . Less Women.
A LONG SPELL TO WAIT
WHEN I was a kid, my family visited Orlando to take in the theme parks and it was such a memorable experience for us all.
I will never forget the look of thunder on my old man's face as we queued in the blistering Floridian sun for over two hours for a seat on Disney World's Space Mountain ride.
But that wait was nothing compared with what punters at the new Wizarding World Of Harry Potter have had to endure as it opened in Orlando this week.
Fans hoping for a thrill on the Harry Potter And The Battle At The Ministry ride were greeted with a sign that informed them they would have to queue for 300 minutes.
Yep, that's FIVE HOURS, firmly putting the MUG in Muggles.
Quit moaning at Eurovision – the show is so bad, it's fun
MORE carping about how Eurovision has become some sort of politically driven brickbat to give the likes of Brexit Britain a battering.
Maybe it is. But so what?
6
The actual results mean diddly squat to most of us – we haven't tasted victory for 28 years.
Our entrant this year was named Remember Monday for a reason.
That reason being a plea: 'Please remember us on Monday.'
Good luck with that, girls.
No, the Eurovision Song Contest is less about the contest and more about floating off to some cacophonic country where the LGBT rainbow is the national flag and anyone caught taking things seriously has their bottom smacked by Graham Norton.
As the late great Eurovision host Terry Wogan put it: 'It's supposed to be bad.
'And the worse it is, the more fun it is.'
BRUCE BOOSTS TRUMP
TRADEMARK tantrum from Donald Trump as he orders a probe into whether leftie luvvies like Bruce Springsteen gave 'illegal' support for Kamala Harris's election campaign.
But while the Don works himself up into a tizzy he might want to remember that it was people like Bruce, below, – who tore into him last week – that actually got him elected.
All the right-on celebrities who sided with Joe Biden and then Harris, paved the way for Trump Round 2 by failing to call out how daft the Democrats' campaigning was.
Where were the speeches and songs blasting Kamala for offering nothing meaningful to the American people?
Born To Run? More like Dancing In The Dark.
GARY'S EXIT A SHAME
THERE was a crushing inevitability to Gary Lineker's red card from the BBC.
Gung-ho Gary just cannot seem to function without a regular dopamine hit from social media (yep that old drug pusher again).
6
And with his fateful Instagram repost about Zionist 'rats' he did what many hopeless addicts do – he plunged in the needle before checking the safety of the product.
It was idiotic, offensive and embarrassing, and quite rightly he has apologised and is no doubt kicking himself for this unforced error.
So here we are, facing a World Cup without Lineker as the man to unite the nation.
And I'm a little misty-eyed about that.
Because whatever you think of his leftie posturing, you have to admit he was a bloody good World Cup host.
This former England number 10 knew exactly what our lads were going through on those foreign pitches.
A Mexico '86 golden boot winner and an Italia '90 semi-finalist (and brown shorts victim), the boy from Leicester had the emotional experience as well as the actual experience.
No offence to the perfectly capable Gabby Logan, Kelly Cates and Chappers but they haven't been there.
So I'll raise a glass to Lineker this weekend as, knowing my luck, he discusses Man United's battering by Aston Villa on his final Match Of The Day.
And maybe I'll send him a nice tweet too.
Keep those levels topped up.
Hashtags

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


Reuters
17 minutes ago
- Reuters
Former Arsenal forward jailed in UK on cannabis smuggling charge
LONDON, June 5 (Reuters) - Former Arsenal and Ipswich Town forward Jay Emmanuel-Thomas was on Thursday jailed for four years for orchestrating the smuggling of 60 kg of cannabis into Britain's Stansted Airport. The 34-year-old, who was released by Scottish second division club Greenock Morton after being charged last year, pleaded guilty at Chelmsford Crown Court last month. Britain's National Crime Agency previously said Emmanuel-Thomas had recruited his girlfriend and another woman to travel to Thailand, where Emmanuel-Thomas briefly played in 2019, to collect the cannabis and smuggle it to Britain. The two women were also charged with smuggling cannabis but the prosecution offered no evidence against them and the charges were dropped on Wednesday, the NCA added. Emmanuel-Thomas sat in the dock as Judge Alexander Mills told him: "Your transition from professional footballer to criminal represents a substantial fall from grace, one that effectively ends the only career path that you have ever known." He will serve 40% of that sentence in custody before he is released on licence. Prosecutor David Josse said the 60 kg of cannabis had a street value of approximately 600,000 pounds (roughly $816,000) and a wholesale value of around 250,000 pounds, though Emmanuel-Thomas was paid 5,000 pounds for his involvement. "This was an isolated incident (and) a catastrophic error of judgment," Emmanuel-Thomas' lawyer Alex Rose told the court.


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Former Premier League player 'threw away' his professional career for a £5,000 pay-day drug deal, judge says as he locks him up for four years
A former Premier League player 'threw away' his professional career for a four-jail term over a £5,000 pay day for a drug deal, a judge said today. Jay Emmanuel-Thomas, who played for Arsenal and a string of other clubs, arranged for his girlfriend and another friend to bring suitcases with what the women thought was gold into the UK from Thailand. But the luggage was filled with 132lb of cannabis which was found when they were stopped and searched at Stansted Airport, leading to Emmanuel-Thomas' arrest. Within days of being charged, he was sacked by Scottish Championship side Greenock Morton and is now starting his time behind bars after admitting cannabis importation with a street value of £600,000 worth of the Class B drug. Chelmsford Crown Court heard he had offered the two women £2,500 for a free holiday to Thailand, while he was expecting just £5,000 if the operation was successful. It is understood he was acting as an intermediary between suppliers in Thailand, where he played between 2019 and 2020, and drug pushers in the UK. Sentencing him, Judge Alexander Mills said: 'It was you who got those women involved. They would be taking the primary risk of going to prison. 'You knew precisely who you were involved with and what you had gotten them involved with. 'Clearly, you were aware of the importation of cannabis from Thailand and the seemingly inexhaustible supply of it. 'It is through your own actions you will no longer be known as a professional footballer. 'You will be known as a criminal. A professional footballer who threw it all away.' Charges against the defendant's accomplices were dropped after he told police he had tricked them into taking part in the plot. Emmanuel-Thomas – who was once hailed as having 'big potential' by former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger – saw his career unravel when his girlfriend, Yasmin Piotrowska, 33, and her 28-year-old friend Rosie Rowland, were caught on September 2 last year. Border Force officers looked in the four suitcases they had brought into the UK after flying business class from Bangkok to Stansted, via Dubai, and found the vacuum-packed drugs. National Crime Agency officers then arrested the footballer, who had paid for the women to go on a similar trip two months earlier, at his home in Gourock, Renfrewshire, on September 18. Prosecutor David Josse KC told the court the defendant had a 'significant role' in the drugs operation, which officers linked him to by numerous WhatsApp messages, voice notes and photos – despite him asking Miss Piotrowska, who sat in court weeping today, to 'delete everything' after her arrest. 'It became apparent that Mr Emmanuel-Thomas had been involved in their [the women's] recruitment and travel to Thailand,' Mr Josse said. Alex Rose, defending, said his London-born client's career had helped him 'turn his back on and disassociate from negative influences and temptation'. But the father-of-two became involved in the drugs world after falling into 'significant financial hard times' during a period when he didn't have a football contract and 'didn't realise the enormity of what he was entering into'. He added: 'His football career is finished. That is something he has brought entirely on himself but it is a devastating blow for somebody who had such promise.' A letter to the judge by the defendant, who wore a black roll-neck jumper beneath a grey suit jacket and was flanked by two security guards, was read out in court. In it, he said: 'This past year has been the most harmful and eye-opening of my life. At times it has been unbearable.' Referring to the eight months he had spent on remand, he added seeing his daughter there during visits 'broke me' - although he showed no emotion as he was sent down. Emmanuel-Thomas was 19 when he made his Premier League debut aged 19 for Arsenal against Chelsea, shortly after captaining its youth team to the FA Youth Cup. The technically gifted, agile striker was lauded by Wenger for his 'outstanding quality', who predicted he would 'not only be a good player but a great player'. 'It is down to how far he wants to go because he has big potential,' the Frenchman added. Despite his promising start, Emmanuel-Thomas struggled to stay in the Arsenal first team. He went on loan to Ipswich Town and then Bristol City, where he scored 24 goals in 82 appearances, before a spell at QPR. In 2019, he accepted a transfer to PTT Rayong, an obscure Thai team based just south of the capital, Bangkok. Thailand had become the first East Asian country to decriminalise cannabis just a year earlier, a decision that has led to a booming industry of commercial and cottage growers. Emmanuel-Thomas is believed to have acquired contacts in the country's weed industry during his short spell at PTT Rayong, which folded the year he joined. Despite continuing his professional career with an Indian team and several Scottish clubs, including Aberdeen, the footballer pursued the drug smuggling business on the side – with disastrous consequences. David Phillips, the senior investigating officer for the NCA, said: 'We would appeal to anyone who is approached to engage in any kind of smuggling to think very carefully about the likely consequences of their actions and the potentially life-changing risks they will be taking.'


BBC News
39 minutes ago
- BBC News
Jay Emmanuel-Thomas: Ex-Arsenal player jailed for cannabis plot
A professional footballer who imported £600,000 worth of cannabis from Thailand to the UK has been jailed for four Emmanuel-Thomas, 34, orchestrated the smuggling of a 60kg (132lb) drugs haul that was found at London Stansted Airport, Essex, on 2 was sacked by Scottish club Greenock Morton after being arrested, having previously played for Arsenal, Aberdeen and England at youth level."It is through your own actions you will no longer be known as a professional footballer; you will be known as a criminal," Judge Alexander Mills told him at Chelmsford Crown Court. "A professional footballer who threw it all away."Emmanuel-Thomas recruited his girlfriend, Yasmin Piotrowska, 33, and her 28-year-old friend Rosie Rowland, to smuggle the Class B drug into the Force officers at the airport found vacuum-packed cannabis stored across four suitcases they transported from Bangkok to Essex. Mobile phone analysis linked Emmanuel-Thomas to the discovery, with him texting Miss Piotrowska to "delete everything from our chat if you can" when she was stopped and then travelled to Stratford, east London, on 5 September and replaced his own mobile phone, prosecutor David Josse KC was arrested at his home in Cardwell Road, in Gourock near Glasgow, Scotland, on 18 Josse said he used his "influence as a professional footballer" to trick the women, also offering them an all expenses paid trip to Thailand and £2,500 in against Ms Piotrowska and Ms Rowland were dropped after it emerged they thought they were transporting gold, a previous hearing was Emmanuel-Thomas was to be paid £5,000 by an unknown person for a successful operation, said Mr Josse. 'Catastrophic error' The court was read a handwritten letter penned by the footballer to Judge it, he wrote: "This past year has been the most harmful and eye-opening of my life."At times it has been unbearable." His barrister, Alex Rose, said he was tempted into crime during "significant financial hard times" when out of the footballer's arrest, he said: "When he had that knock on the door and realised it was the police and he was going to be arrested, he realised his whole world was falling in - his career as a footballer was over."His football career is finished. That is something he has brought entirely on himself, but it is a devastating blow for somebody who had such promise."Mr Rose said Emmanuel-Thomas struggled with moving to Scotland to play football, adding: "That, I am afraid, led to the temptation in this case."He succumbed to temptation and a catastrophic error of judgement." Follow East of England news on X, Instagram and Facebook: BBC Beds, Herts & Bucks, BBC Cambridgeshire, BBC Essex, BBC Norfolk, BBC Northamptonshire or BBC Suffolk.