A Spalding lorry driver caught smuggling drugs appeared in court in Edinburgh this week.
He was one of two drivers who claimed they were transporting a load of kitchen appliances when they were caught at a Scottish ferry port with a haul of drugs worth more than £500,000 on the streets.
Domas Paskauskas, of Peterborough, and Donatas Sukys, of Spalding, were stopped by border officers at Loch Ryan sea port, at Cairnryan, in Dumfries and Galloway, bound for Northern Ireland.
The lorry they were travelling in was pulled over and officials noticed a strong smell of aftershave in the cab and a search was carried out.
The High Court in Edinburgh heard that nothing untoward was found in the trailer, but 16 packages were recovered from the cab, with the smell of herbal cannabis coming from many of them.
But the court was told that officers suspected some of the packages might contain Class A drugs and more than three kilos of high purity “prop” cocaine was found after a Paul Smith designer bag in the cab was checked.
Judge Paul Brown was told that the cocaine was 78 per cent pure and had the potential to be worth in excess of £300,000 in street deals.
More than 25 kilos of the Class B drug cannabis was also recovered which had a potential maximum street value in excess of £250,000.
Paskauskas (38) of Vere Road, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, and Sukys (41) of Harlequin Drive, Spalding, in Lincolnshire, admitted being concerned in the supply of both cannabis and cocaine at the port on October 2, 2022, when they appeared in court on Monday (February 10).
Both men had Lithuanian interpreters present in court with them to aid them in following the legal proceedings.
The court heard that Paskauskas, a lorry driver and sole director of a company, was approached by “a third party” who asked him to transport a consignment of goods to Northern Ireland.
He was told that cannabis was involved, but not cocaine.
Paskauskas was disqualified from driving at the time and approached Sukys to drive the load and told him the consignment contained cannabis.
Defence counsel Frances Connor, for Paskauskas, said neither of the accused has served a prison sentence previously.
The judge adjourned sentence for the preparation of background reports on the pair and they were remanded in custody.