Four Men Locked Up After £100 Million Cocaine Haul Found on Fishing Boat Off Cornwall
Four men have been handed hefty prison terms after the National Crime Agency (NCA) smashed a major cocaine smuggling plot off Cornwall.
More than a tonne of Class A drugs, worth a staggering £100 million on the streets, was discovered hidden on the fishing vessel Lily Lola during a high-stakes maritime interception in September 2024.
Heavy Sentences for Drug Kingpins
The criminals behind the operation were convicted of conspiracy to import large quantities of cocaine into the UK. This week, they received the following sentences:
- Jon Williams – 26 years behind bars
- Patrick Godfrey – 25 years
- Jake Marchant – 18 years
- Michael Kelly – 21 years
Fishing Boat Rigged for Smuggling
The NCA revealed the Lily Lola had been extensively modified to secretly stash narcotics in specially built compartments. This cunning design helped the traffickers evade detection as they sailed near the Cornwall coast.
Officials hailed the bust as “one of the largest maritime cocaine seizures in UK waters in recent years.” It dealt a massive blow to organised crime gangs trying to flood British streets with deadly drugs.
NCA Issues Strong Warning
“This operation disrupted a major trafficking network attempting to flood UK streets with dangerous Class A drugs,” an NCA spokesperson said. “The sentences reflect the serious threat posed by those involved in the supply of cocaine at this scale.”
The crackdown sends a clear message: UK authorities are zero-tolerance when it comes to drug smuggling – especially with smelly smuggling ships off the Cornwall coast.