The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Drugs found in hijacked pram company parcels

- CIARAN SHANKS

An Angus man who set up a drug smuggling operation while still a teenager is facing jail after a bid was foiled to have almost £20,000 worth of ecstasy delivered from Amsterdam.

Lewis Webster travelled to the Netherland­s to buy Class A drugs, which he tried to deliver to a friend’s house on Bruce Road, Arbroath.

A consignmen­t of drugs, packaged in parcels from a Dutch pram company, was intercepte­d by UK Border Force agents at Heathrow.

Dundee Sheriff Court heard how the haul of more than 1,000 tablets had been on its way to a “Lewis Jackson” in Arbroath.

A search warrant was executed by police in August 2019 on the Bruce

Road property. The woman who lived there confirmed Webster would have parcels delivered to the address under that name.

At Dundee Sheriff Court yesterday, Webster was remanded in custody after he pleaded guilty to importing and dealing the drugs between December 2018 and October 2019.

The court was told how Webster made two trips to Amsterdam, in January and March 2019, after taking out almost €6,000 from Ramsdens each time.

Over three dates in July 2019, the Border Force intercepte­d parcels from a pram company in Alkmaar.

Fiscal depute Kirsten Letford said: “The parcels were likely hijacked by a criminal gang. UK Border Force recovered 1,103 tablets.

“They had a potential value of £11,030. MDMA crystals weighing 199g were recovered with a potential value of between £6,000 and £8,000.

“The accused’s fingerprin­ts were found on the packages.”

The woman at the Bruce Road property told police Webster would visit twice a week and used the address to collect parcels.

Mrs Letford said: “The accused had told her he had big plans but she took his claims with a pinch of salt.”

Webster’s bank account showed a number of highvalue transactio­ns, with independen­t witnesses confirming they had previously bought ecstasy from Webster.

It was also revealed he had purchased vacuum bags and padded envelopes. Webster, now 21, of Glenesk Avenue, Montrose, admitted being concerned in the fraudulent evasion of the prohibitio­n of MDMA – illegally importing ecstasy.

Those crimes began on December 10 2018, when he was just 19, until July 21 2019.

Between December 10 2018 and October 11 2019, Webster – who has a previous conviction for cultivatin­g cannabis – was concerned in the supply of the drugs on Bruce Road and High Street, Arbroath, and his home address.

Solicitor Billy Rennie said: “He is under no illusions as to what has to be considered. Clearly he has some plans but it might come across in the social work report that all is not what it seems.”

Sheriff Richard McFarlane took a dim view of Webster’s conduct and remanded him in custody ahead of sentencing later this month.

“It occurs to me that you have involved yourself in a very significan­t and sophistica­ted scheme,” he said.

“I am in no doubt that a custodial sentence is in contemplat­ion.”

“The accused’s fingerprin­ts were found on the packages

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