A drug-smuggling gang has been jailed after cocaine with a street value of £200 million was intercepted in a shipment of bananas – making it the UK’s largest haul of the drugs at the time.
Crime boss Petko Zhutev was in charge of taking delivery of the Colombian drugs at a London warehouse in February 2021 – unaware it had already been seized by border officials at Portsmouth.
Midway through a retrial at the Old Bailey, Zhutev, 39, who entered the UK from Bulgaria in January 2021, admitted importation of a class A drug having previously been cleared of possession of a revolver and ammunition with intent to endanger life.
On Tuesday, he was jailed at the Old Bailey for 27 years alongside four others, after Judge Rebecca Trowler KC said he played a “leading role” in the importation.
The judge said Zhutev had committed previous offences, including making a fraudulent application for a Covid bounce back loan to a company in his name.
Erik Muci, 45, of Haynes Road, Hornchurch, and Olsi Ebeja, 40, of Malta Street, Islington, were found guilty of importation at the conclusion of the retrial and were sentenced to 33 years’ and 17 years’ imprisonment respectively.
Muci, described by a judge as a “key organiser”, was jailed for 26 years for the importation and given a further consecutive sentence of seven years’ imprisonment for the supply of class A drugs, after police recovered 33kg of cocaine from a property on Caledonian Road, north London.
Judge Trowler said Muci, who had worked as a plumber since arriving into the UK as a refugee from Albania, was “organising the buying and selling of cocaine on a commercial scale”.
Judge Trowler said Ebeja, who was born in Kosovo and had worked as a waiter and a minicab driver since arriving in the UK in 1999, carried out an “operational function” in the enterprise, including as a driver.
Bruno Kuci, 32, who was born in Albania and came to the UK in December 2020, and Gjergji Diko, 34, of west Beckton, who were arrested with Zhutev, had previously pleaded guilty to the importation charges.
Kuci, described as a “trusted member of the operation”, was jailed for 21 years and Diko, who also moved to the UK from Albania and had worked as a mechanic, for 18 years.
Sentencing them on Tuesday, Judge Trowler said the importation was “plainly the work of an organised crime group with international elements”, adding the group had Bulgarian and Albanian elements.
Ms Trowler added: “The extremely large quantities of cocaine involved and the organisation required to bring such amounts into the UK from Colombia demonstrated beyond doubt that this enterprise was sophisticated in its planning and well resourced.”
The court had heard how port officials uncovered four pallets containing 2,330 blocks of the class A drug weighing 2.3 tonnes amid a consignment of 41 pallets of bananas from Colombia on February 14 2021.
Four days later, two covert officers posing as lorry drivers delivered the boxes to a warehouse in north London, having already switched the drugs for more bananas.
Zhutev used the cover of his role as director of a food importation business, Agro Food Ltd, to organise and set up the UK side of the criminal operation, jurors heard.
He was in charge when two lorries delivered the pallets of bananas, having secured the manpower to unpack, repackage and distribute the drugs hidden among the fruit, it was alleged.
Around two hours after the delivery on February 18, officers entered the warehouse and arrested three of the defendants.
Jurors were told that numbered pallets in which the drugs were transported had been identified and moved to a first floor where the process of searching them had started.
A revolver containing six live cartridges was recovered from a ceiling girder above the boxes.
Jurors were told the cocaine had a potential street value of at least £186 million, rising to £200 million when mixed with other substances, at the time making it the largest inland seizure ever by UK officers.
Judge Trowler said the “sophisticated” operation included specialist laminated glass being installed at the warehouse to limit visibility, as well as the use of hi-vis jackets to give the impression of a legitimate operation and Dutch sim phones to avoid detection.
Orange stickers were also used by the smugglers to identify the correct banana boxes.
The NCA said the drugs had different branded stamps on them, which corresponded to particular organised crime groups planning to sell them on the streets of London and the wider UK.
It added that officers also found nine empty suitcases which were to be filled with cash generated from drugs sales.
John Coles, head of specialist operations at the NCA, said the sentences represented the “culmination of a thorough investigation”.
Mr Coles added: “By intercepting this huge haul of cocaine, which was one of the largest ever of its kind in the UK, we stopped it from reaching UK communities and protected the public from the scourge of class A drugs and street violence associated with it.”
Gemma Burns, a senior crown prosecutor at the CPS, said investigators “foiled the gang’s banana box scheme” and stopped “dangerous drugs from reaching our streets”.
Ms Burns added: “A banana import business was used as a front to smuggle well over two thousand kilograms of cocaine into the UK; representing international drug trafficking on an industrial scale.
“The significant sentences given to the gang mean they will be off our streets for a long time.
“These sentences send a clear message to criminals intent on trying to flood the UK with drugs that we will not rest until you are convicted and behind bars.”
The CPS said it will now commence confiscation proceedings in order to reclaim the proceeds of the crimes.
Diko and Kuci were also convicted of possessing a prohibited firearm and possession of ammunition without a firearm certificate.
Why are you making commenting on The National only available to subscribers?
We know there are thousands of National readers who want to debate, argue and go back and forth in the comments section of our stories. We’ve got the most informed readers in Scotland, asking each other the big questions about the future of our country.
Unfortunately, though, these important debates are being spoiled by a vocal minority of trolls who aren’t really interested in the issues, try to derail the conversations, register under fake names, and post vile abuse.
So that’s why we’ve decided to make the ability to comment only available to our paying subscribers. That way, all the trolls who post abuse on our website will have to pay if they want to join the debate – and risk a permanent ban from the account that they subscribe with.
The conversation will go back to what it should be about – people who care passionately about the issues, but disagree constructively on what we should do about them. Let’s get that debate started!
Callum Baird, Editor of The National
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article