A
locksmith, who kept £8.6m worth of cocaine in three safes cemented
into the walls and floor of a suburban storage unit, has been jailed
for thirteen years.
Charles
Court, 27, (pictured) of Friern Close, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire was
arrested by officers from the Metropolitan Police's SCO7 Central Task
Force East.
He
pleaded guilty at Wood Green Crown Court to two counts of possessing
class A drugs, with intent to supply.
Court
was stopped in Goffs Lane, Cheshunt on August 28, last year and brown
taped packages containing drugs were found in his car.
Police
also seized keys, which opened a lock-up at an industrial unit in St.
James Road, Goffs Oak.
Inside
they discovered a false wall secured with screws and a locked door
behind.
Officers
found three safes concreted into the wall and floor and a locksmith
helped open the safes.
Inside
were twenty-eight packages containing 27 kilos of cocaine.
Acting
Detective Inspector Tim Grinsted said: "Tenacious detective work
prevented a massive amount of cocaine reaching London's streets and
causing the inevitable misery that Class A drugs bring.”
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