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Speedboat drug dealers jailed after botching £30,000 Shetland cannabis transfer

The speedboat involved in the crime was confiscated and moored at Victoria Pier.
The speedboat involved in the crime was confiscated and moored at Victoria Pier.

Two men whose plot to bring nearly £30,000 worth of cannabis into Shetland was scuppered when the speedboat they used to ferry the drugs into Lerwick off a NorthLink ship sparked the attention of the emergency services have been sent to prison.

Mitchell Cross, 26, of Lerwick, was given four years behind bars when he appeared at Lerwick Sheriff Court this week. Alasdair Kelly, 28, of Sandwick, was given a prison sentence of two years and four months.

The court heard that Kelly – wearing a wetsuit and waiting in a speedboat – was given a hold-all bag of cannabis and cannabis resin when Cross arrived back in Lerwick on the NorthLink freight boat Helliar on 18 December 2016.

But their plan was botched when Kelly failed to correctly secure the speedboat at the nearby Hay’s Dock – leading to the boat floating out to sea before it was rescued by the Lerwick lifeboat, sparking a full-scale search for Kelly in the process after he was spotting swimming in the water before disappearing.

The pair previously admitted supplying cannabis and cannabis resin from their homes and other addresses and locations in Lerwick and the cargo boat Helliar between 4 September 2015 and 18 December 2016.

Sheriff Ian Cruickshank said the incident in December 2016 was probably the “tip of the iceberg” when it came to their involvement in drug dealing.

Lerwick Sheriff Court

Procurator fiscal Duncan Mackenzie said the plot was a “sophisticated and carefully planned endeavour which only just failed”.

The court heard the Cross was the ringleader in the operation, with close friend Kelly helping out.

Mackenzie said Cross had booked a one-way flight to Aberdeen on 16 December 2016 for the next day, booking himself back north on the freight boat.

When he went on the freight ferry, he was seen with a now-full hold-all.

The bag contained one kilogram of cannabis and four kilos of cannabis resin, Mr Mackenzie said.

The freight boat arrived in Lerwick at around 11.30am on 18 December 2016, with Kelly on hand in the harbour in speedboat.

With the pair on contact on mobile phones, the bag was thrown into the water and picked up by Kelly in the speedboat, who then stopped off at the nearby Hay’s Dock – but the boat started to drift into the sea.

He had managed to retrieve the hold-all – which also contained one of the buoys – and put it over a fence. Someone spotted Kelly “dripping wet” and making a “panicked” phone call to ask to hide at a friend’s house.

A number of bank accounts were also discovered between the pair which had transactions involving thousands of pounds – mainly carried out by Cross, who was said to have had a gambling problem.

Kelly’s defence agent Gregor Kelly said that his client was more of a “cog in the wheel”.

Tommy Allan, defending Cross, said his client had “accepted in full” his involvement in the dealing.

Sheriff Ian Cruickshank noted that the pair had admitted being involved in drug dealing over a period of 15 months and not just on one day.

He said given the suspicious money activity in the various bank accounts, it was likely that the operation was only the tip of the supplying.

The sheriff said the botched job in Lerwick Harbour was a “calculated and tenacious venture” symptomatic of a “commercial operation for profit”.


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Detective Sergeant Bruce Peebles said: “Both men played significant parts in this elaborate, though ultimately botched drug sourcing and dealing operation.

“Painstaking inquiries were carried out involving witnesses, CCTV, travel agencies, local businesses, forensic DNA examination, mobile telephony and national financial institutions, with all of the evidence pointing to the guilt of both the accused in this clearly planned and pre-meditated operation.

“As a result, more than £28,000 worth of Class B drugs was recovered and prevented from being supplied within the local Shetland community.”