The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Suspected British drug kingpin ‘confesses’ over Air France cocaine

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PARIS: A British man suspected of orchestrat­ing one of the most brazen cocaine traffickin­g shipments to Europe in recent years told a French court that his bragging about it was ‘just a script.’

Robert Dawes, 46, has been on trial since last week over the 2013 seizure of 1.3 tonnes of cocaine in an Air France plane shortly after it landed at Paris’ Charles de Gaulle airport from Caracas.

He was arrested in a dawn raid at his luxury resort in Ben almaden a, Spain, in November 2015 after Spanish police filmed a conversati­on at a hotel in Madrid where Dawes claimed ownership of the drugs.

Soon after he was extradited to Paris, and since then his defence teams have tried to have the video recording dismissed as evidence on legal technicali­ties.

But during six hours of questionin­g, Dawes surprised the judges – and evidently his own lawyers – by saying the claim was only a ploy to end what he called heavy-handed surveillan­ce by Spanish police, by getting himself arrested.

“That was all a script,” a closecropp­ed Dawes, wearing faded jeans and a long sleeve black and grey T-shirt, told the specially composed court consisting only of judges.

“I spoke about airports, shipping ports, like I was involved in something,” Dawes said of his meeting with a Colombian associate, Fernando Cepeda.

Asked if he knew there was a microphone hidden in a nearby plant, Dawes said: “That’s why I told Cepeda on the telephone three times, sit in the same place!”

But he reiterated he had no involvemen­t in the Air France shipment, which was stuffed in 30 unregister­ed suitcases and had a street value of some 240 million euros (US$275 million).

“The facts don’t lie in this case, I’ve no connection with these people,” he said of the two other Britons and three Italians also on trial.

Nathan Wheat and Kane Price were arrested after undercover officers tricked them into trying to transport some of the cocaine to Italy shortly after its arrival in September 2013.

Marco Panetta, Vincenzo Aprea and Carmine Russo were also arrested in the operation.

“I know in my heart that I’m not involved in this crime,” Dawes said.

Asked why he had stayed three years behind bars, while his wife and three children remained in Spain, without telling investigat­ors the claim was fake, Dawes said his lawyers had advised silence while appealing the video’s admissibil­ity.

His surprising new evidence came after the state prosecutor announced that his defence team had submitted a forged document trying to prove that Spanish police had no legal authority to make the surveillan­ce video.

Asked how the document came into his possession, Dawes appeared not to understand his translator, answering only that if he had access to the full Spanish findings he could ‘prove my innocence’.

Dawes, from a town outside Nottingham, central England, has a long record of conviction­s since his teenage years, but has never been found guilty of drug traffickin­g charges.

After years of investigat­ions, however, police believe he became one of the largest drug importers to Europe, with alleged links to the Italian mafia and South American cartels.

At the time of his arrest, Spanish police said Dawes “headed up the biggest criminal organisati­on in Britain and Europe devoted to drug traffickin­g, money laundering and murder”.

He is also accused of buying large amounts of drugs from Italy’s secretive ‘Ndrangheta mafia, which is thought to run much of Europe’s cocaine trade from Calabria.

But Dawes said Tuesday that he and his family had been successful with a variety of businesses in Spain, including furniture and window manufactur­ing, management consulting and property investment­s.

That gave him ample opportunit­y to travel and make contacts, some of who featured in other recordings secured by Spanish police suggesting Dawes’ involvemen­t in deals involving huge amounts of cash.

Asked about one recording in which Dawes discusses a real estate deal in Colombia, he said “it was just chit-chat.” The verdict is expected Friday.

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