logo
Another Thai Brit smuggler suspect arrested with cannabis haul bound for UK after Bella Culley & Charlotte May Lee drama

Another Thai Brit smuggler suspect arrested with cannabis haul bound for UK after Bella Culley & Charlotte May Lee drama

The Sun28-05-2025
ANOTHER Thai Brit smuggler suspect has been arrested with a cannabis haul bound for the UK, following similar cases like Bella Culley and Charlotte May Lee.
The 31-year-old suspect was stopped during a transit stop on his way to Newcastle via Frankfurt from Bangkok and was led away in cuffs to be locked up in preventive custody at the Korneuburg prison.
1
The arrest took place at Vienna International Airport, a city airport on the outskirts of the Austrian capital yesterday.
Customs officers found 11.3kg of cannabis packed into 13 vacuum-sealed parcels concealed among clothes in the man's suitcase.
The suitcase had been checked in at Bangkok and was labelled for onward travel to Frankfurt and Newcastle.
Police said the street value of the cannabis was approximately £95,000.
According to police, the man, who was not named, refused to confess and made no statement about the contents of the suitcase.
Officials said the investigation is being led by the public prosecutor's office in Korneuburg.
It comes merely a day after a British couple claiming to be tourists from Thailand were busted with more than 33kg of cannabis in their suitcases at a Spanish airport.
The pair were picked out by suspicious cops at Valencia Airport after displaying a 'nervous and evasive attitude' and are now behind bars on drug trafficking charges.
The man and woman, aged 33 and 34, were stopped before reaching customs, with officials later discovering vacuum-packed marijuana and no clothes or personal belongings in their luggage.
This marks the fourth case in weeks involving British nationals and alleged drug smuggling linked to Thailand.
Brit woman, 21, rotting in Dubai hellhole jail without a shower for a month after being arrested on drugs charges
Bella May Culley, 18, sparked a massive international search operation in early May after she was reported missing while she was believed to be holidaying in Thailand.
But it was later revealed that the teen, from Billingham, County Durham, had been arrested 4,000 miles away on drug offences in Georgia, allegedly carrying 14kg of cannabis into the ex-Soviet nation.
The teen - who posted online about living a "Bonnie and Clyde" lifestyle - is now in Georgia's grim No5 Women's Penitentiary near Rustavi, facing 15 years to life in prison.
Her new lawyer Malkhaz Salakaia, a juvenile law specialist, said Bella didn't even know where she was when arrested.
Bella is said to have told her lawyer she is pregnant and cooperated with police for the first time last week, as her anguished dad Niel visited her for 45 minutes and delivered food and clothes.
And recently 21-year-old Charlotte Lee May, from Coulsdon, south London, was arrested in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo after police discovered 46 kg of 'Kush' - a synthetic strain of cannabis - in her suitcase.
The former flight attendant, facing up to 25 years in prison if convicted, is claiming she had 'no idea' about the drugs worth up to £1.2 million.
She insists they must have been planted in her luggage without her knowledge.
Charlotte, a part-time beautician and ex-TUI stewardess, had flown into Sri Lanka from Thailand and was snapped in a white outfit and sparkly sandals just after her arrest.
Her two suitcases were reportedly stuffed with tightly vacuum sealed packages of the deadly synthetic drug, 25 times more potent than fentanyl.
She claims she left her packed bags unattended overnight in her Bangkok hotel while out partying and had no idea what was inside.
'I had never seen them before,' she said.
A mystery British man she met in Thailand was reportedly waiting for her at Colombo airport, and sources fear she may have been under his influence.
Charlotte is now holed up in the overcrowded Welikada Prison, where she's been forced to sleep on a concrete floor, clean herself with a bucket of water and survive on rice and curry.
'She is a total mess,' a source told The Sun.
'She hates the food… The prison is not fit for a rat to live in.'
She broke down in court after being told she may not be sentenced for another 12 months and is now banned from contacting loved ones.
Meanwhile an older British man has been arrested by police in Chile after allegedly being caught trying to smuggle five kilos of methamphetamine into the country.
The 79-year-old was held after leaving a flight from the Mexican resort of Cancun at Santiago Airport.
He was booked on a flight to Sydney in Australia the following day after spending a night at a hotel in the Chilean capital.
The unnamed pensioner was remanded in custody following a court appearance after a judge approved a prosecution request to send him to prison pending probable charges and trial.
Cops say the drugs he was apprehended with would have been worth around £200,000 on the streets of the south American country.
He was intercepted after his luggage was put through an airport scanner.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Britain hopes a crackdown on people-smugglers' social media ads will help curb Channel crossings
Britain hopes a crackdown on people-smugglers' social media ads will help curb Channel crossings

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Britain hopes a crackdown on people-smugglers' social media ads will help curb Channel crossings

Britain says people who advertise fake passports or people-smuggling services on social medial could face up to five years in prison, in the government's latest effort to deter migrants from crossing the English Channel in small boats. The government said Sunday that anyone convicted of creating online materials intended to break U.K. immigration law will face prison time and a large fine. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the aim was to stop the 'brazen tactics on social media' used by smuggling gangs. 'Selling the false promise of a safe journey to the U.K. and a life in this country — whether on or offline — simply to make money, is nothing short of immoral,' she said. Assisting illegal immigration to the U.K. is already a crime, but officials believe a new offense — part of a border security bill currently going through Parliament — will give police and prosecutors more powers to disrupt gangs that send migrants on perilous journeys across one of the world's busiest shipping lanes. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said the crime gangs are a threat to global security and should be treated like terror networks. Since taking office a year ago, Starmer's center-left Labour Party government has adopted powers to seize the assets of people-smugglers, beefed up U.K. border surveillance and increased law-enforcement cooperation with France and other countries to disrupt the journeys. Despite that, more than 25,000 people have reached Britain by boat so far this year, an increase of 50% on the same period in 2024. Small boat crossings have become a potent political issue, fueled by pictures of smugglers piling migrants into overcrowded, leaky inflatable boats on the French coast. Opposition parties say the government's plans aren't working — though the government argues the problems built up during 14 years when the Conservative Party was in power, The Conservatives say Starmer should not have scrapped the previous government's contentious and expensive plan to send migrants arriving by boat on a one-way trip to Rwanda. 'This is a panicked attempt to look tough after months of doing nothing,' Conservative immigration spokesman Chris Philp said. The government says it will take time to clear a backlog of applications that has left thousands of migrants stuck in temporary accommodation — often hotels — without the right to work. The hotels have become flashpoints for tension, attracting protests fueled by a mix of local concern, misinformation and anti-immigrant agitation.

Wealthy Albanian who owns string of UK businesses is accused of £355m cocaine smuggling plot: Son-in-law of glamorous politician is arrested by police alongside his brother
Wealthy Albanian who owns string of UK businesses is accused of £355m cocaine smuggling plot: Son-in-law of glamorous politician is arrested by police alongside his brother

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Wealthy Albanian who owns string of UK businesses is accused of £355m cocaine smuggling plot: Son-in-law of glamorous politician is arrested by police alongside his brother

A wealthy Albanian with a string of British businesses and a glamorous politician mother-in-law has been arrested alongside his brother over claims they took part in a £335million cocaine smuggling plot. Klevis Hoxhosmani, 37, and his 42-year-old sibling, Artur, were arrested by Albania's organised crime squad on Saturday for their alleged involvement in a conspiracy to traffic industrial quantities of the drug from Latin America to the UK and EU. Hoxhosmani is in a relationship with Kejda Ajazi - daughter of Majlinda Bregu, 51, Albania's former minister for European integration, who stepped down as an MP in 2017 and now works for an organisation called the Regional Cooperation Council. The young couple are well known in Albania for flaunting their luxurious lifestyle on social media, including frequent jaunts to London, Dubai, and Monaco - where they were recently filmed decked out in designer gear while stepping out of a supercar. Hoxhosmani's arrest has now prompted speculation in Albania about the true source of the couple's wealth. This will also be of interest to officers from Albania's Special Structure against Corruption and Organised Crime (SPAK), which is overseeing the investigation that led to his arrest. Albanian prosecutors claim Hoxhosmani and his brother were part of a large international organised crime group involving at least nine other people. The gang are accused of smuggling drugs from Colombia or Ecuador before transporting them by sea and land to Britain. Prosecutors claim they were behind a 250kg shipment of cocaine that was seized in France in April 2020 - allegedly on its way to the UK. Texts exchanged on an encrypted platform called Sky/ECC allegedly reveal members of the gang reacting with horror when they realised the drugs had been seized. Hoxhosmani has close ties to Britain, with Companies House linking him to three businesses based in Bournemouth. He was listed as a director of Crystal Hand Car Wash, which was set up in 2013 and dissolved in 2015. He is also the former director of Barrack Road Tyres, a tyre shop in Christchurch that is now under new ownership. Hoxhosmani remains the director of Opa Coffee Limited, which is registered to an empty shop next to Central Gardens, a park in Bournemouth town centre. He has a criminal record in the UK, and pleaded guilty in 2014 to assaulting a woman in nearby Ferndown. He was handed a community order and told to pay £60 compensation. His brother, Artur, is the former owner of another local car wash, Ferndown Hand Car Wash, where two men - an Afghan and an Iraqi - were recently arrested for working in breach of bail conditions. Hoxhosmani and Ms Ajazi stepping out of a supercar in Monaco in a video widely published in the Albanian press According to prosecutors, the drug gang sourced cocaine from Colombia or Ecuador. This was allegedly transported in sea containers to major ports in Europe, such as Antwerp in Belgium and Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It then headed by land to France and through the Channel Tunnel to the UK, it is claimed. Prosecutors said drugs were hidden in wooden pallets, boxes of bananas and bags of cocoa beans, while others were contained in shipments of timber. The group allegedly hid behind pseudonyms and made payments using the Hawala system - an informal method of money transfer that works through trusted brokers. Prosecutors Altin Dumani and Adnand Xholi said: 'The organisational structure of this criminal group, with links to several continents and with 16 members identified so far, proves the high level of sophistication of Albanian criminal groups, their capabilities and their reach into international criminal markets.' They described the gang as 'hierarchical', with its leaders not only ordering and financing drug shipments, but also overseeing their journey across Europe, before associates in the destination countries, including the UK, distributed them to local dealers. Gang members were based in the UK, various EU countries, Dubai, and the UAE, and prosecutors claim they aided by 'customs officers and port personnel'. Klevis Hoxhosmani remains the director of Opa Coffee Limited, which is registered to this empty shop next to Central Gardens, a park in Bournemouth town centre One of the alleged gang members, Erion Alibej, is now cooperating with prosecutors. In court, he claimed an associate was beaten up in London after 50kg of cocaine went missing. SPAK officers have seized a luxury yacht and a fleet of cars including a Mercedes Benz AMG G63, a Volkswagen Golf 7, and a Volkswagen Sharan. They have also taken possession of two high-end watches, 16 mobile phones, 19 bank cards and three pistols with magazines and cartridges. The men arrested on Saturday alongside the Hoxhosmani brothers were named as Plarent Dervishi and Erion Alibej. They appeared in court a day later, with Judge Erion Bani granting the prosecution's request to keep them in prison before a trial. Two other men, Elidon Skëndaj and Ilir Lloshi, are still wanted by police. Albanian prosecutors said their investigation had been aided by police in the UK and EU. 'This successful investigation led by SPAK is a direct result of close inter-institutional and international cooperation, in particular with EUROPOL, EUROJUST, EU Member State agencies, as well as partner law enforcement agencies in the United Kingdom, who provided support through in-depth data analysis and the implementation of effective international police coordination,' they said. 'The value of the material uncovered through the analysis of the decrypted communication data by Sky/ECC has been essential to complement the evidence collected during the investigation and remains valuable in achieving the appropriate investigative results. 'This information has been key in identifying serious criminal offences, suspects, and determining their role in this structured criminal group.'

UK threatens jail for people smugglers who advertise on social media
UK threatens jail for people smugglers who advertise on social media

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

UK threatens jail for people smugglers who advertise on social media

LONDON, Aug 3 (Reuters) - People smugglers who use social media to promote their services to migrants seeking to enter Britain illegally could face five years in prison under plans announced by the government. Prime Minister Keir Starmer's Labour government is under huge political and public pressure to cut the number of migrants arriving illegally in small boats from France. More than 25,000 people have made the crossing so far this year. Analysis by the Interior Ministry showed around 80% of migrants arriving on small boats had used social media during their journey to find or communicate with people smugglers. Under a new offence, which will be added to legislation already passing through parliament, individuals who post online to advertise services that facilitate a breach of immigration laws will face fines and prison sentences of up to five years. It is already an offence to facilitate illegal immigration to Britain, but the government said its latest plan would give law enforcement agencies another option to disrupt the criminal gangs that profit from organising the crossings. Last month, the government launched a new sanctions regime allowing it to freeze assets, impose travel bans and block access to the country's financial system for individuals and entities involved in enabling irregular migration.

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