UK’s ‘biggest drug smuggling gang’ hid narcotics worth £7bn inside rotten onions
A gang believed to have run the UK’s biggest-ever drug smuggling operation transported over £7 billion of narcotics in the back of trucks filled with rotting onions and other smelly vegetables.
Ringleader Paul Green, 59, known as ‘The Big Fella’, was the point of contact for numerous organised criminal groups (OCG’s) who paid a fee to ship heroin, cocaine, amphetamines and cannabis into the UK from around Europe.
Green and his accomplices went to ‘extraordinary lengths’ to hide their involvement in the drug trade, setting up a series of front businesses and warehouses in Rotterdam and the north of England using false and stolen identities.
The gang stashed the drugs within pallets of fresh produce at the Dutch end of the operation, which were then shipped to the UK by unsuspecting haulage firms, where criminals paid the gang a ‘transportation fee’ upon arrival.
Onions, garlic or ginger were said to be the gang’s product of choice as they helped conceal the smell of narcotics.
Among their customers was Merseyside mob enforcer John Kinsella, 53, who was shot dead by a hitman in May 2018 as he walked his dogs with his pregnant partner.
Prosecutor Andrew Thomas KC said a feature of the gang’s activities between March 2016 and September 2018 was the ‘determination to continue the importations even after arrests and/or drug seizures’.
He told jurors: ‘As soon as one company became exposed, they would switch to another one.’
Only six seizures of drugs were made but National Crime Agency (NCA) investigators were able to prove at least 240 consignments took place with up to four shipments per week.
‘Big Fella’ Green, 59, had no previous convictions, but had changed his name twice by deed poll from Simon Swift to James Russell and then to Green due to financial difficulties and his self-confessed involvement in property and business fraud.
As well as his criminal customers, Green also brought in drugs for his own gang to distribute for sale.
Sentencing, Judge Paul Lawton told gang members: ‘Your main purpose was the importation of controlled drugs on an international, and hitherto unprecedented, scale with a value of at least £2 billion and potentially as high as £7 billion.
‘The harm caused beyond the importation is incalculable.
‘What you were actually distributing was addiction, misery, social degradation and death.’
The defendants were separated into two trials with reporting restrictions lifted following the conclusion of the second trial which lasted nine months.
The first trial involving Green lasted 23 months as jurors took 141 hours to reach their verdicts.
Green, from Widnes, Cheshire, was jailed for 32 years after he was convicted of conspiracy to import drugs and fraud by false representation.
His ‘right-hand man’, Steven Martin, 53, of Chorley Old Road, Bolton, Greater Manchester, who organised the finances, was imprisoned for 28 years, while another key member, Muhammad Ovais, 46, of Bournelea Avenue, Burnage, Manchester, who was in charge of distributing drugs to OCG customers, was sentenced to 27 years in jail.
Among others sentenced for drugs importation conspiracy charges were fluent Dutch speaker Russell Leonard, 48, of Grosmont Road, Kirkby, Liverpool, who was jailed for 24 years; and Dutch OCG bosses Johannes Vesters, 54, and Barbara Rijnbout, 53, both of Utrecht, who received prison terms of 20 years and 18 years.
Richard Harrison, NCA regional head of investigations, said: ‘This was an extremely high-harm OCG that used every tactic possible to evade detection and cheat justice.
‘The offenders smuggled huge quantities of drugs into the UK. They had absolutely no ethics. They stooped incredibly low and left a trail of devastation for entirely innocent people by cloning businesses and stealing identities.
‘NCA officers and Dutch partners were tenacious and left no stone unturned in this investigation.’
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