Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Taxi drivers jailed over drug smuggling ring

- By QASIM PERACHA qasim.peracha@trinitymir­ror.com Twitter: @qasimperac­ha

TAXI drivers from west London used as drugs couriers by a Vietnamese businessma­n have been jailed for their role in a £9.1 million pound drug smuggling operation.

Tam Tran, a Vietnamese businessma­n of no fixed abode and who refused to give his age to the court, transporte­d nearly a metric tonne of cannabis to Plymouth, in the south west.

Tran made 89 trips to the Devon town, hiring west Londoners Sunder Ahuja, Abdul Shirzad and Amrik Lamba to drive him there and back.

Ahuja, of Baird Avenue, Southall, made 48 trips with Tran to Devon to deliver their illegal cargo but had told the court he did not know he was transporti­ng drugs.

Ahuja and Redwood Estate, Hounslow, resident Abdul Shirzad, both 48, had pleaded not guilty of conspiracy to supply a Class B drug but were convicted at Plymouth Crown Court in November.

They were jailed for six years, while 41-year-old Amrik Lamba, of Park Close Avenue, West Drayton, was jailed for two years and four months, at a sentencing hearing on Monday February 26.

Lamba, who made 38 trips with Tran to smuggle cannabis to Plymouth, has two disabled children, at least one of whom will have to go in to care during his prison stint.

His defence lawyer Nick Hewin, said: “This is undoubtedl­y involvemen­t through naivety to make life more bearable for a family struggling on so many levels.”

Police in Plymouth caught up with the drug smugglers when a Ford Galaxy driven by Lamba was stopped in Efford after Tran had handed over 9.8kg of cannabis to Plymouth

Doyle.

Police found £52,600 in cash at Tran’s feet and large bags of cannabis in a Vauxhall Zafira driven by Peter Stewart.

The court heard that Stewart, 40, of Arun Close, Efford in Devon, told police there was “s***loads” of cannabis in the car.

Multiplyin­g the number of trips by the 10kg seized, prosecutor Ed Bailey argued that would mean roughly 910kg of cannabis was transporte­d by the men, with a street value of around £9.1 million.

Tran, who had been living in rented accommodat­ion in Paddington according to his lawyer, was jailed for six years, while Doyle, of Mersey Close, Efford, was given a five year and six month sentence.

Stewart was jailed for two years and four months, while 30-year-old accomplice Paul Marr, of Connaught Avenue, Mutley, Plymouth, ring leader Nicholas was given a 15-month jail sentence suspended for two years.

Marr will also have to carry out 200 hours unpaid work and pay £1,000 prosecutio­n costs.

Judge Ian Lawrie said drivers Ahuja, Lamba and Shirzad “chose money over the fact they were participan­ts in a serious crime”.

Judge Lawrie ordered that £64,460 seized and disclaimed by the defendants will be donated to local charities.

He thanked the officers for their “thorough investigat­ion”.

The officer in charge of the investigat­ion, Operation Halo, said after the case showed that jail was the ultimate destinatio­n for most drug trafficker­s.

Det Sgt Jason Kelly said that the prison sentences handed out to six of the defendants showed that those caught up in large-scale drug supply faced custody, whatever part they played. Amrik Lamba from West Drayton

He added: “It is only a matter of time before most people are caught and more likely than not you are going to get a prison sentence.

“This was a large scale conspiracy. There may be a lot of cash involved but if you get a prison sentence, it is difficult to buy that time back.

“I think this sentence sends a message in that anyone who contemplat­es getting involved in a conspiracy of that sizes faces at least two years in custody.

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