logo
Gangster granny who used family to run UK-wide cocaine ring & splashed cash on designer accessories for CAT is jailed

Gangster granny who used family to run UK-wide cocaine ring & splashed cash on designer accessories for CAT is jailed

The Sun18-07-2025
A GRAN nicknamed 'Queen Bee' who headed a family drug network which flooded the UK with almost a ton of cocaine in just seven months, was jailed for 20 years today.
Crime matriarch Deborah Mason, 65, masterminded the drug operation - composed almost entirely of women - while receiving state benefits.
7
7
7
7
She recruited her sister, three of her daughters and son, along with two of their partners and a family friend, to transport the cocaine across the country.
Seven of Mason's crime clan - including four of her children - were jailed for a total of 84-and-a-half years at London's Woolwich crown court.
The court heard how 'Ma Coke' Mason trafficked a ton of cocaine with a street value of around £80 million between April and November 2023.
Mason - Britain's equivalent to Netflix Miami drug baron granny Griselda Blanco - funded an extravagant lifestyle from her cocaine dealing.
She bought an expensive Bengal cat and a £400 Gucci collar and lead for the pet, which had its name 'Ghost' engraved on a 9-cwt gold name tag.
Mason, of Tufnell Park, North London, made trips to Dubai and Bahrain and planned cosmetic surgery in Turkey, the court heard.
The drug dealing granny was known as 'Queen Bee' and paid her loved ones and their partners more than £1,000 a day for working for her.
The court heard how Mason's sister, daughters and son would go on 'family days out' with young children in tow delivering large packages of cocaine.
Mason's family couriers delivered cocaine to dealers in Bradford, Leicester, Birmingham, Bristol and Cardiff as well as Rotherham and South London.
The female-dominated group enjoyed exotic holidays and bought luxury goods, expensive garden furniture and designer clothes.
Met detectives launched an investigation in April 2023 following a tip-off and shadowed Mason as she drive to Harwich at 4.30am to collect a large consignment of cocaine before returning to London.
The group used encrypted messaging site Signal to communicate before their arrests in May 2024.
Prosecutor Charlotte Hole told the court how the conspiracy involved a nationwide supply of around a metric tonne of cocaine.
Ms Hole said the value of the cocaine was between £20-25 million wholesale and 'capable of achieving a street value of up to £80 million.'
She went on: 'When it comes to specific roles it is clear that everyone involved had an expectation of a significant financial advantage.
'There was at least £1,000 per trip and being paid and it was the motivating factor for this conspiracy.
'They were all involved, and in our submission had been aware of the scale of the operation.
'We do say that every individual played at least a significant role, with the exception of Deborah Mason who fell into a leading role.'
The prosecutor said Deborah Mason was involved in the 'directing or organising of buying and selling cocaine on a commercial scale.'
Ms Hole revealed how greedy Mason was claiming dole at the same time.
'She was in receipt of in excess of £50,000 in benefits income - legitimate income - during the conspiracy,' said Ms Hole..
The prosecutor referred to Mason's 'lavish spending on designer goods and her express intention to travel to Turkey to have cosmetic surgery procedures..'
She also outlined Mason's 'list of holiday destinations and her actual travel to Dubai and Bahrain during the conspiracy period.'
Mason was convicted of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs with daughters Roseanne Mason, 29, Lillie Bright, 26, and Demi Bright, 30, following an 11-week trial.
Lillie Bright's partner Chloe Hodgkin, 23, was also found guilty of the same offence along with one of Demi Bright's friends, Anita Slaughter, 44.
Mason's sister Tina Golding, 66, of Ashford, Kent, son Reggie Bright, 24, and his partner Demi Kendall, of Staplehurst, Kent, pleaded guilty to the same charge.
Reggie Bright and partner Kendall also admitted a separate offence of possession with Intent to supply Class A drugs and possession of criminal property.
It followed seizures of cocaine and more than £15,000 cash during a search of their home address.
Reggie was jailed for 15 years and partner Demi Kendall got 13 and a half years.
Roseanne and Demi(Bright) got 11 years each and Lillie was jailed for 13 years.
Mason's sister Tina Golding got 10 years while Anita Slaughter received 13 years.
Hodgkin will be sentenced at a later date.
7
7
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mother's warning after being left with just £1.61 after phone scammers emptied her account of £10,500
Mother's warning after being left with just £1.61 after phone scammers emptied her account of £10,500

Daily Mail​

timea few seconds ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mother's warning after being left with just £1.61 after phone scammers emptied her account of £10,500

A mother has been left with just £1.61 after answering a phone call from an unknown caller. Vicki Jones, 44, from West Derby, lost £10,500 of her own money to scammers last week who 'didn't even ask for bank details'. Vicki told the Liverpool Echo how the scammers pretended to be from Action Fraud - the UK's national reporting centre for fraud and cybercrime that people are supposed to report scams to. But after spending five hours on the phone to the scammers, who knew details including her name, address and the bank she already had two accounts with, Vicki had transferred thousands of pounds of her own money over to a fake 'holding account'. Vicki said: 'They [the scammers] rang me to say that there had been unusual activity on my account and they had stopped a few payments. 'They said to me that they were going to run through security with me. 'They didn't ask anything out of the ordinary, they knew most of the information. I didn't have to give any of my bank details or anything like that.' Vicki said the scammers knew her name, address and were also aware she had two accounts with this bank and a third account with another bank. She added: 'They then said that they wanted to transfer me through to the tier three digital security team because as well as these payments that they'd put a stop on, they also said the supposed imaginary scammers had also managed to successfully set up direct debits in my name.' As they were calling from a withheld number, Vicki asked if she could ring them back with the number on the back of one of her bank cards. The scammers said she was welcome to do so but gave her a number with two different last digits under the pretence that it was an 'extra secure' line. Vicki said: 'Obviously hindsight is an amazing thing but they'd already put me in a panic. 'They knew I had all these different bank accounts and one of the bank accounts held a substantial amount of money that belongs to my daughter for when she goes to college or university or whatever. 'I had another savings account that had my emergency house fund holiday money because me and my daughter were going on holiday in a couple of weeks.' After ringing the number Vicki spoke to the same man, who told her that he needed to transfer her to a colleague before hanging up. She was then called again on a withheld number by a man who informed her that he was from the 'tier three digital fraud team'. It was at this point that the scammers convinced Vicki that one of her bank accounts had been compromised and she needed to move her money into a new 'holding account'. Vicki claims she was given a fake crime reference number and email from Action Fraud. The scammer then gave her instructions to use her card reader and take a selfie on her bank account to verify her identity. Vicki said: 'He then told me, 'we can now proceed to close down your account but we're going to have to open you a new account in order to do it because the scammers who have mirrored your banking app, they'll have access and can see what's going on, so we need to try and go undetected.' 'He said, 'when we open your new account, if there's any payments made outside of Merseyside then we'll get in touch, we won't let the payment go through until we've spoken to you.' Action Fraud's Advice Action Fraud will not call victims unless they have made a specific request and will never ask for victims' bank details. If a person making a report is unsure whether a call is genuine, call the Action Fraud team directly on 0300 123 2040. If you've been a victim of fraud, you should report it via the online tool at or by calling 0300 123 2040. In Scotland, contact Police Scotland on 101. 'I asked, how's that going to work? He said, 'we can discuss all this, don't worry about it.' All I was concerned about is my daughter's savings and making sure that they didn't end up disappearing. 'So I agreed. They told me to not do it all at once because it would look ironic, it would look too suspicious to the scammers.' It was 11.30pm at this point and Vicki had been on the phone for over five hours. The man on the other end of the line said they would be in touch the next day to keep her up-to-date. 'In total on Thursday night, I'd moved in the region of about £10,500 into the supposed holding account,' Vicki said. It was not until Vicki had a chat about it with a friend the next morning that she realised she had been conned. 'Friday morning came about and I spoke to a friend of mine. 'She sent me a video that she'd seen on TikTok. The video was of this girl saying, 'scammers are getting clever, I was scammed by someone who was pretending that I was being scammed.' 'My stomach just dropped.' After contacting her bank who had supposedly called her, Vicki was told there had been no investigation into her accounts and there was no tier three digital fraud security team. Vicki said: 'I just broke down and was like, what have I done? I know I'm opening myself to criticism because people will be like, how could you be so stupid? 'But I am not usually a naive person. Someone might sit there and go, 'oh my god, there were so many alarm bells. There were so many opportunities that she had to just spin this off', but I genuinely believed that I was at risk. 'So as embarrassing as it is, I just don't want anybody else to go through this absolute nightmare.' Vicki added: 'I don't know if I'll get my money back. I don't know how long it'll take if I do get my money back. 'Obviously, I needed my holiday money, I needed my emergency house fund, but my daughter's money that we've worked so hard for is what I'm most upset about. 'I am lucky that I've got the support of my family to buy me shopping and give me money for petrol. I was literally left with £1.61 in my bank account.' Vicki warns that the scammers faked communications from Action Fraud - the organisation that people are asked to report scams to. Action Fraud, the UK's national reporting centre for fraud and cybercrime, takes reports from members of the public and businesses on behalf of the police. The reports made to Action Fraud are then sent to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB) which is run by the City of London Police, and the organisation then decides whether a case will be passed on to a police force. People can fall victim to scams when they offer an incentive, such as a discount on bills or an opportunity to make money which leads them to hand over personal information such as credit card details. But Vicki said that in her case the scammers, who said they were from a bank that she had two accounts with, claimed she needed to move money to a new holding account as her finances had been compromised. Vicki's case is now being investigated by Action Fraud. In the first week of June, Merseyside Police announced its support for phishing awareness week, an initiative led by Action Fraud. Detective Sergeant Gavin said: 'Don't get caught out. Stop, Think Fraud, and make sure you report suspicious-looking emails or messages if you receive them. 'It is important to report these attempts because you're not only protecting yourself but helping us protect others in the community.'

‘I sold my home to HS2 for scrapped line for £1.2m – only for it to be turned into a cannabis factory'
‘I sold my home to HS2 for scrapped line for £1.2m – only for it to be turned into a cannabis factory'

The Independent

timea few seconds ago

  • The Independent

‘I sold my home to HS2 for scrapped line for £1.2m – only for it to be turned into a cannabis factory'

A man who sold his home to HS2 says he was left distraught after discovering it had been turned into a cannabis factory. Alan Wilkinson bought the four-bedroom luxury home in the leafy hillside village of Whitmore Heath in Staffordshire with his wife, Gillian, in the late 1970s. The couple added a swimming pool and new kitchen to the plush property – but when proposals emerged for the now-axed HS2 line beneath the hamlet, they pushed forward with plans to downsize and sell. It triggered a battle to sell the home to HS2, a fight Gillian would not see the end of, as she died from pancreatic cancer two weeks before the scheduled move-out in 2019. The detached property was not required to make way for the line, but the couple settled on a £1.2m deal with HS2,which purchased it under a 'special circumstances' purchase scheme. But Mr Wilkinson was left shocked when he discovered his old home, which had subsequently been rented out, was being used to grow cannabis plants. 'My old neighbour saw two Jehovah's Witnesses walking out of my old drive and he told them 'you won't find anyone in there',' the 85-year-old said. 'They replied 'no, but there's cannabis'. Turns out there was 184 cannabis plants growing inside. They could smell it.' Soon after, Staffordshire Police raided the house and found the drugs growing across five rooms inside. A man from Merseyside pleaded guilty to the production of a class B drug in July. The property, which Mr Wilkinson said was re-roofed and had its swimming pool removed before being rented out, has now been left empty – one of hundreds of properties requiring security, costing HS2 £1.9m in 2023/24. 'It's terrible,' he said. 'I feel awful, truthfully, about what's happened. I lived there for 30 years; it was a great chunk of my life, a beautiful house, and now it's sitting empty, abandoned. 'I hear rumours it's going to be knocked flat and rebuilt.' The Wilkinsons' home was one of 35 sold to HS2 under a number of selling schemes as HS2 planned twin tunnels beneath the hill-top village. Some are now rented out, while a number sit empty, judged not to be suitable for the letting market. The community's strain over the situation was exacerbated by the then-Tory government's decision in 2023 to scrap the section of line that would have run from Birmingham to Manchester. Mr Wilkinson said: 'HS2 destroyed our village. It was a fine community where people who had made it and gone to live. But the plans for the line tore it apart, more than a dozen people died while waiting to sell their homes. 'I can't bear to go back, so many memories there with my wife, all gone.' Mr Wilkinson, who also served as the chairman of Whitmore Parish Council, was central to the community's dispute with HS2 as locals sought deals to sell their homes. With his wife's condition worsening, he travelled to London to deliver a petition for HS2 over the selling of homes at the High Speed Rail Bill Committee in 2018. Asked on the impact of the HS2 plans on his family's health, Mr Wilkinson said: 'Yes, of course it did [have an impact]. HS2 was the worst thing that could have happened to Whitmore Heath.' It's understood that homes purchased by HS2 in Whitmore Heath, and along the stretch of axed line to Manchester, remain under Department for Transport ownership despite the route being scrapped almost two years ago. In total, HS2 spent £3.79bn purchasing properties for the overall line, including £633m on the now-scrapped sections of the route. An HS2 spokesperson said the line would have run in a tunnel up to 30 metres beneath Whitmore Heath, and that no homeowner was compelled to sell their property for the railway to be built. They continued: 'We recognised Mr Wilkinson's difficult situation and he accepted our offer in 2019 to buy his home through HS2's Special Circumstances Scheme, under which we covered moving costs, paid stamp duty and legal fees. 'We utterly condemn the illegal use of property acquired by the project being used as a cannabis farm. It was let on the open rental market, and managed by property agents, to help recoup costs to the taxpayer. 'We have been unable to relet the property since the farm was closed down by police because the costs of returning it to a lettable state are too great. The area is patrolled by our private security teams who work closely with Staffordshire Constabulary.' On the cannabis farm discovered at Mr Wilkinson's former home, Staffordshire Police said Darren Pinnington, 32 of Gomville Road, Liverpool, was charged with being concerned in the production of a controlled drug of class B in May. He pleaded guilty to the charge at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court in July and is awaiting sentencing. The HS2 section still going ahead will run from London to Handacre in Staffordshire with a spur to Birmingham, but delays and spiralling costs mean no target date has yet been announced for opening.

Mother appeals to find son's killers after ‘three painful and traumatic years'
Mother appeals to find son's killers after ‘three painful and traumatic years'

The Independent

timea few seconds ago

  • The Independent

Mother appeals to find son's killers after ‘three painful and traumatic years'

A woman said she had suffered 'three painful and traumatic years' as she made an appeal to find her son's murderers on the anniversary of his death. Sam Rimmer was with a group of friends in Lavrock Bank, Dingle, Liverpool, on August 16 2022 when riders on two electric bikes drove into the cul-de-sac and fired a number of shots towards them at around 11.40pm, Merseyside Police said. Mr Rimmer, 22, was injured and despite the efforts of police officers and ambulance staff he was pronounced dead a short while later in hospital. Ten people have been arrested in relation to the murder but no one has been charged. On the third anniversary of his death, Mr Rimmer's mother Joanne said: 'It is three painful and traumatic years since Sam was murdered. The passing of time has not eased the pain. ' People say to cherish the memories, but when I think of Sam, the memory I have is of his body in the morgue, staring at his chest, willing him to breathe. No parent should ever have to identify their child's body. 'Unless you have experienced the murder of your child, you cannot begin to understand the agonising, torturous mental and emotional horror we endure daily. The ache of my heart just to see my son again. 'My appeal is to the people who know who killed Sam. If you know something and you are reading this, please, please speak up. No one will ever know as it will be completely anonymous. 'Sam was shot in his back. He was turned away from his killers. This image haunts me. In his final moments, was he scared? Was he in pain? 'I died the day Sam did. I function but I do not live. I know the pain of losing Sam will never go but if I see justice for his murder, maybe the family and I can begin to move forward and remember the happy memories of Sam.' Detective Chief Inspector Steve McGrath said: 'Sam's death has had a devastating impact on his family, and in particular his mum, and they deserve to get justice. 'It has now been three years since Sam was tragically killed, but we are still determined as ever to find the person or people responsible. 'As part of our investigation we have made a number of arrests and received a lot of information from the public. We just need the final piece of the puzzle. 'We know that there are people out there who live in the Dingle/ Toxteth area who know who is responsible and my appeal is for those people to come forward and tell us what they know. 'Do you know who was riding on the bikes that arrived in Lavrock Bank that night? Do you know where they went afterwards or where they are being stored? 'Any information passed on to us will be handled with care and sensitivity, and we can put extensive measures in place to protect those brave enough to come forward.' Anyone who witnessed the incident, was in the area at the time or has any information is urged to contact Merseyside Police through their public portal. The force said it can also be contacted through its social media desk @MerPolCC on X, or information can be left anonymously with Crimestoppers on 0800 555111, with reference number 22000603397.

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