March 28, 2024

British pensioners jailed for eight years in Portugal for trying to smuggle £1million of drugs

image

A retired British couple were jailed for eight years today after being found guilty of trying to smuggle £1million of cocaine into Europe on a £6,800 luxury Caribbean cruise.

Three judges convicted retired chef Roger Clarke, 72, and his ex-secretary wife Sue, 71, of drugs trafficking after a one-day trial at Lisbon’s main criminal court.

They were told they will serve their sentences in Portugal instead of being kicked out of the country and sent back to Britain to do their jail time as a state prosecutor had requested.

The pair were arrested on board cruise liner Marco Polo on December 4, 2018, after Portuguese police acting on a tip-off from Britain’s National Crime Agency discovered 9lbs of cocaine hidden inside the lining of four suitcases Mr Clarke had been handed on the sunshine island of St Lucia. 

Mr Clarke, who held hands with his wife as they learnt their fate through a translator, whispered to her: ‘Jesus Chris, I was not expecting more than four years. I’ll be 80 when all this is over.’ 

Roger Clarke and Sue Clarke, a British pensioner couple convicted of smuggling drugs aboard a cruise ship, arriving at the court in Lisbon ahead of their sentencing today 

Roger Clarke and his wife Sue (pictured together) were arrested with 9lbs of the class A drug hidden in their suitcases as their ship the MC Marco Polo docked in Portugal 

As he left court in handcuffs with a police escort he told a reporter: ‘Someone should come to see me. I would like to tell the real story.’

Lead judge Margarida Alves told the Clarkes as she announced the court ruling in a short 20-minute hearing: ‘We are totally convinced you knew the contents of these four cases. You did what you did not because you are drug consumers but because you wanted to make an easy profit.’ 

Bromley-born Mr Clarke, insisted he had no idea the cocaine was hidden in the lining of four suitcases picked up on the paradise island of St Lucia.

Clarke told the court he was taking the suitcases back to the UK for a friend called Lee who had promised to pay him £800 and bragged he could sell them for a massive profit at upmarket stores such as Harrods.

He said UK-based Jamaican businessman ‘Lee’ and another associate called Dee, who he named in court as George Wilmot, had asked him to help negotiate the import of exotic fruit during Caribbean cruise stopovers and he brought the suitcases back for them as a sideline.

State prosecutor Manuela Brito rubbished his court claim he had been ‘betrayed’ by people he trusted and insisted the Brits were drug mules who used the four cruises they took to South America in two years as a front for their crimes.

And she questioned how they could pay for the cruises costing around £18,000 when they survived on a joint monthly pension of £1,150 from which the couple had to pay rent of £445. 

Mr Clarke, who said after his arrest Lee paid for the last trip, but at trial claimed they had paid through ‘savings from hard work’, gave a cabin steward one of the old suitcases the couple boarded the Marco Polo with at the start of their cruise in Tilbury, Essex, and gifted the other two to the unidentified man he claimed handed him the new holdalls. 

Police pictures (right and left) show the Clarke’s suitcases being taken apart to show the hidden cocaine in the couple’s cabin on the cruise ship

Cocaine worth around £1million was discovered by police in the lining (pictured above) of suitcases Mr Clarke had taken on a luxury cruise from the Caribbean 

Mother-of-three Sue, from Wellingborough, Northampton, admitted in court she had been with her husband when they took two of the four cases containing the drugs onto their cruise ship, but insisted she only knew her husband’s business associates socially and never accompanied him when he negotiated fruit sales.

Mr Clarke confirmed in court they had both served prison sentences in Norway after being convicted in 2010 for trafficking 240 kilos of cannabis resin, claiming he had done a first drugs run to clear debts and was made to do more with his wife as cover after being threatened with violence by gangster paymasters if he stopped.

Roger, who was born Roger Button but changed his surname to Clarke after finishing his prison sentence, was jailed for nearly five year and Sue for three years nine months.

The expat couple lied to friends in Guardamar del Segura near Alicante where they lived and were the life and soul of local bars and members of a golf club, by telling they had served time in prison for cigarette smuggling.

They were warned ahead of last Tuesday’s trial they faced up to 12 years in jail. The crime they were convicted of carries a prison sentence of four to 12 years in Portugal. 

The lead judge told the court today as she announced the verdict and sentence that Mr Clarke’s claims about helping his mystery business associates with their fruit and suitcase business ‘didn’t deserve any credibility’.

She added: ‘Any person involved in importing fruit would do their business directly instead of going through friends on cruise ships.

‘It’s not credible either that they would carry four cases for someone and throw away their existing cases with the justification they they’ve got no room in their cabin.’

Sue and Roger Clarke’s Villa in Guardamar, Spain, where they were the life and soul of local bars and members of a golf club before their arrest and conviction for drug trafficking 

Portuguese police acting on a tip-off from Britain’s NCA discovered 9lbs of cocaine hidden inside the lining of four suitcases Clarke had taken from the island of St Lucia

Insisting their age and life experience should have made them suspicious about the idea of bringing holdalls back to Europe for someone else, especially as convicted drugs smugglers, she added: ‘This court is convinced the accused did what they did consciously and of their own free will and knew what they were carrying.’

Roger, dressed in a blue jumper, blue shirt and black trousers, shook his head in disbelief as he realised he was not departing court a free man, leaving one hand on his wife’s lap as he raised the other to his forehead.

His wife, wearing a white shirt with blue stripes and black trousers, clasped his hand tightly but made no comment.

They were led away from Lisbon’s Campus de Justica with a police escort and driven away to the same prisons where they have spent the last nine months – Roger to EP Lisboa which another Brit who was in jail with him has describe as the ‘worst’ prison in Europe and Sue to nearby Tires Women’s Prison.

The pair (pictured) led a jet-set lifestyle with no obvious way of paying for it, court papers show. Roger and Sue Clarke went on luxury cruises worth £18,000 in two years before their arrest despite living on just £885 a month

Their defence lawyer Susana Paisana said she was planning to appeal.

The couple have already served nine months in custody which will be taken into account when fixing their release date.

Portuguese police insisted in court the couple had not cooperated by giving the information they needed to identify the criminals paying them to do drugs runs.

It is not known if British police or other crimefighting agencies have managed to identify the men Mr Clarke pointed the finger at.

Although the street value of the nine kilos of cocaine the couple were caught with was initially put at £2million, experts later valued it at around half that figure.

Portuguese prosecutors say they believe the Clarkes were making between £18,000 and £26,500 plus exes per cruise they took so they could smuggle drugs into Europe.

Britain’s NCA said they believed the couple were planning to offload the cocaine in Portugal but Policia Judiciaria inspector Carla Nunes told their trial she thought the final destination was the UK.

At an earlier hearing Clarke told the three judges presiding over his case: ‘Some people knew we occasionally went on Caribbean cruises and asked me to negotiate to buy exotic fruit for shipment back to the UK.

‘I met people on certain islands to do that job. Then they asked me if I would bring some suitcases back because they could fetch a high price in places like Harrods, up to £1,500 per case.

‘They said they were going to use the cases as samples. It was something I did for them with no problems on earlier cruises and so I said ”yes” this time round.’

Describing his shock when Portuguese police knocked on their cabin at 5am after it docked in Lisbon and cut open their cases to find cocaine inside, he added: ‘I am so sorry we are here but we never ever knew drugs were in them.’ 

Explosive court papers released ahead of their trial allege the couple used their age as a front to hide their ‘illicit project to make easy money’.

The elderly pair were enjoying a jet set lifestyle of flights and cruises around the world worth £18,000 in two years despite a monthly disposable income of £885-a-month, papers found. 

Clarke told the court earlier this month: ‘I dealt with both Lee and Dee. They said they were having problems getting the fruit and as I had been a chef and knew the difference between good fruit and bad fruit, I said I would help.

‘The people I negotiated with in the Caribbean were the same ones who gave me the suitcases.

Clarke, from Bromley, Kent, claimed after his arrest a mysterious UK-based Jamaican businessman called Lee had asked him to negotiate the exotic fruit sales during cruise ship stopovers in the Caribbean and bring back the suitcases ‘as a sideline’ [File photo]

‘I’d give Lee or Dee our itinerary before our cruise and I’d be met dockside by a man with my name on a board who’d take me in a car to the pack-house to see the fruit.

‘I’d get £2,000 per container that ended up being shipped back to the UK. I wasn’t always asked to take back suitcases but when I was I got £2000 for each case.

‘The first time we picked up cases was in Antigua, twice we were given cases in St Lucia and once in Barbados.’

Prosecutor Manuela Brito asked why a man of Clarke’s ‘age and life experience’ agreed to bring back suitcases given to him by strangers for someone whom he knew only by their first name.

‘I have known Lee and Dee for years,’ Mr Clarke insisted. My wife met them, Lee came out to our home in Spain with his wife on holiday.

‘We went to two weddings in Jamaica of the people importing the fruit. We thought they were genuine friends and we were just happy to do them a favour.’ 

The police chief accused the Clarkes in a damning pre-trial report of being drug mules who used their world cruises as a cover for their criminal activities.

Mr Clarke fought back tears as he told the court before the judges retired to consider their verdict last week: ‘We have lost everything now since we have been in custody.

‘They have stopped our pensions, my family has sold our car to raise money for our lawyers, we have lost all our possessions. We have nothing.’

Read More

Daily Mail

Share
Filed Under: Essentials
Source: