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British pensioners accused of smuggling cocaine on cruise ship

Written by on 17/09/2019

An elderly British couple accused of smuggling cocaine on a luxury cruise spent thousands of pounds on trips abroad – but court documents suggest they were unable to afford them.

Roger Clarke, 72, and his wife Sue, 71, claim they were tricked into smuggling 9kg (20lbs) of cocaine which was found in their luggage by Portuguese authorities last December.

The retirees are facing up to 12 years in prison if convicted of drug trafficking at a trial in Lisbon.

Experts have valued the drugs haul at about £1m.

According to court papers, the pair went on exotic cruises costing nearly £18,000 over two years, despite living on £885 a month after paying rent.

They told investigators they were fooled into smuggling the drugs by a mystery businessman “of Jamaican origin” named Lee who had paid for their cruise.

Roger Clarke said Lee asked him to pick up “empty” new suitcases in St Lucia and buy exotic fruit which could be sold for a huge profit in the UK.

Policia Judiciaria inspector Carla Nunes said it made “no sense” for the mystery businessman to pay for the cruise as Roger Clarke was unable to identify him or provide any contact information.

A 2018 diary which was seized from Sue Clarke’s bedside by police detailed the couple’s extravagant trips.

One entry in the diary, referring to a trip which was never taken as the couple were behind bars, read: “12 March 2019. 16 days. Fly to Havana, Cuba. Cruise to Philipsburg, St Maarten; St John, Antigua and Barbados; Funchal, Madeira; Malaga, Alicante. Approx 4,000 pounds.”

The couple were arrested when the cruise liner they were on, MC Marco Polo, docked in the Portuguese capital and the cocaine was found “ingeniously concealed” within four suitcases, according to local police.

Court files show officers were tipped off by the UK’s National Crime Agency when the couple told British passport control that they had been visiting family in Kent, when they had in fact just returned from the Caribbean.

A Portuguese police report signed by Ms Nunes said: “There is no doubt Roger and Susan Clarke had contact with drugs trafficking organisations during two trips in 2017 and another they made in 2018.

“They were made to South America, to countries which were linked to the transport of cocaine to Europe.

“While they made their first trip at the beginning of 2017 by plane, they made subsequent trips on cruise ships which allowed them to carry a larger amount of drugs.”

Roger and Sue Clarke are expected to plead not guilty when they appear in court.

(c) Sky News 2019: British pensioners accused of smuggling cocaine on cruise ship