SOCIAL DEV'T NEWS

British ‘drug lord’ charged in Ghana

David McDermott, the British national and in-law to the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, who was arrested in the country in connection with a plot to import £71 million worth of cocaine into the UK, has been arraigned for extradition processes to begin.

Mr. McDermott, who has been on the run from UK authorities for some years now, and married to the step-daughter of the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Kofi Wampah, was charged with dealing in prohibited drugs.

According to Ghanaian prosecutors at an Accra circuit court today [Monday], the fugitive who was arrested in an international sting operation at his home in the Burma Hills area of country’s capital Accra last week is in possession of Ghanaian passport with the name David Smith and runs a mining company in the Eastern region.

They also told the court that investigations are still ongoing in the matter and are still expecting certain information from their British counterparts to facilitate their investigations. The fugitive did not have any legal representation in court for the first hearing.

The suspect is said to be a member of an organised crime syndicate from Liverpool and he has been on the run for three-years for his connection to a smuggling plot to import £71 million worth of cocaine into the UK.

McDermott’s gang is believed to be responsible for a failed smuggling operation discovered by Border Force at Tilbury Docks in May 2013, when officers seized 400kg (881Ibs) of cocaine smuggled into the country in a container of frozen Argentinian beef.

The case has been adjourned to the March 30, 2016.

Source: citifmonline.com

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