A
gang of elite British Army soldiers who smuggled drugs and guns into the UK has
been jailed for a combined total of almost 50 years today.
Trooper
Lemar Loveless, 26, masterminded the operation to bring a cache of guns,
ammunition and £70,000 worth of cocaine through the Channel Tunnel loaded into
the back of BMWs.
The
pair had five guns, including two Walther PPKs favoured by fictional spy James
Bond, along with three silencers, ammunition, and half a kilo of cocaine,
Woolwich Crown Court heard today.
The
court heard the operation was well-planned and included wrapping the illegal
stash in curry powder lined tape to try to evade detection by sniffer dogs.
Evidence
from the seized phones of Loveless and Dyce showed fellow soldiers Duran
Wright, 28, and Lance Laurent, 26, were also involved.
Laurent,
also from the Queen's Royal Hussars, had supplied Dyce with the car to carry
the illicit stash, while Wright, from the Royal Logistic Corps, was
instrumental in planning the operation.
Laurent
and Dyce, both serving soldiers based in Germany, were arrested in March last
year and charged on June 7 after flying back to the UK.
Prior
to his arrest, Loveless had turned in his papers and resigned from the
regiment, which is based in Sennelager, Germany, and operates Challenger tanks.
Dyce
was still a serving soldier when taken into custody.
The
court heard they had links to an Italian arms dealer in Germany who sold them
the army-issue guns - two German Walther PPKs and three Italian converted
pistols - and cocaine.
A
fifth defendant, Romone Marshelleck, 24, was waiting to receive the guns in
London to sell on to members of the criminal underworld.
Police
raided his home in south London, and found pictures of him on an iPad posing
with guns and ammunition.
They also
found a picture of guns and bullets arranged to spell the words 'f*** love'.
Dyce,
of Smethwick, West Midlands, Laurent, of Battersea, south London, Wright, of
New Cross, south east London, and Loveless, of Islington, north London, were
all convicted of conspiracy to import firearms and conspiracy to import
cocaine.
Dyce
admitted the drugs charge prior to the trial and was jailed for
seven-and-a-half years.
Loveless
and Laurent pleaded guilty to the firearm offences at the start of the trial,
which concluded earlier this week.
Loveless,
marked out as the ringleader, was jailed for 14 years, and Laurent was
sentenced to ten years behind bars.
Wright
was jailed for ten years.
Marshalleck,
of Wimbledon, London, was convicted of conspiracy to import firearms.
He received
a six-and-a-half year prison sentence
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