Man who snorted cocaine from Pablo Escobar's grave jailed for attempting UK drug smuggle

Steven Semmens is said to have snorted the cocaine from Escobar's grave for a 'laugh.' Credit: Media Wales / South Wales Police

A Welsh drug dealer who snorted cocaine from the grave of feared drug lord Pablo Escobar, has been jailed for trying to smuggle the Class A drug into the UK.

Steven Semmens from Port Talbot said he carried out the stunt for a bet and did not think things would go as far as they did.

He along with four other cocaine conspirators have been sentenced to a total of more than 52 years in prison at Swansea Crown Court for their parts in trying to bring the drug into the UK.

The court heard how the men were involved in trafficking large quantities of cocaine into south Wales. One of the defendants, Shane White, used the EncroChat secure communications network to run the operation while still working for the family glazing business.

White also plotted with Semmens to import kilos of cocaine from South America to the UK – though as his barrister told the court not a single gram of the drug was every actually brought into the country by the duo due to their lack of ability and there was "something almost comical about their ineptitude".

Another of the defendants, Swansea plumber Andrew Botto, used a shipping container hidden behind camouflage netting and fencing just yards from one of city's busiest roads as a base for his separate cocaine-dealing operation.

The area used by Botto to run the cocaine operation in the UK. Credit: Media Wales

When police forced entry to the locked unit in May last year as part of Operation Wizard they found a 1kg block of high-purity cocaine in a coolbox along with disposable gloves, bags, and weighing scales.

Botto was arrested later the same day and was found to have more than £2,000 in cash in his trouser pockets.

Steven Semmens aged 39, of Constant Road, Taibach, Port Talbot; Andrew Botto, aged 34, of Penlan Fach, Penlan, Swansea; Shane White, aged 34, of Broomhill, Port Talbot; and 37-year-old Ieuan Emlyn Williams, of Ynys y Gored, Port Talbot, had all previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply cocaine between April 2020 and August 2021.

Semmens and White had also admitted to conspiracy to import cocaine. Botto had also previously pleaded guilty to a separate conspiracy, committed with others unknown, to supply cocaine, while White had also previously admitted conspiracy to import cannabis.

Botto has a previous convictions from 2014 for possession of cocaine with intent to supply for which he received a five year prison sentence.

Speaking in 2018 Semmens said he had snorted cocaine off Escobar's grave for a bet and "thought it would be a laugh".

He said: "I was drinking with a friend and they said: 'Do you want to go and see the grave?'. And then my friend said: 'Sniff cocaine off it' and bet me £200 I wouldn't do it on Facebook Live."

The video of him emptying a bag of white powder on the grave and then rolling up a $5 note subsequently went viral. He said he later shaved his hair in an effort to change his appearance and went into hiding but was found by the police and thrown out of the country.

Semmens said the incident and the notoriety which follow had made it "awkward" to get a job and he added: "I just thought it would be a laugh, I didn't think it would go this far... I was drunk at the time...I've been bombarded with threats that I'm going to get skinned alive."

Andrew Taylor, for Semmens, said his client had ended up working as a nightclub ticket promoter in San Antonio in Ibiza where he met and formed a relationship with a Colombian woman and the couple subsequently moved to Colombia.

He said Semmens snorting cocaine off the grave of the cartel boss Pablo Escobar came to the attention to Escobar's "criminal confederates" and was something which they were "not pleased" about.

The court heard shortly after this incident Semmens left Colombia "never to return". The barrister described his client as "naïve" and as a "fantasist" inhabiting a Walter Mitty world of a "lifestyle he sometimes thinks he has".

Andrew Evans, for Botto, said his client was "a plumber from Penlan" who, with work hard to come by following the Covid lockdowns, had returned to his old business of supplying drugs.

Andrew Botto has been sentenced for nine years and seven months. Credit: Media Wales / South Wales Police

He said Botto had been operating as a one-man-band from his unit in Brynhyfryd and now realised he had ruined the lives of his partner and her daughter and wished he had not returned to his old ways as a way out of his financial difficulties.

Nicholas Wells, for Williams, said his client had been involved as a courier working under the direction and instruction of others.

He said Williams had served with the Royal Welsh Regiment for seven years and had been deployed to Basra in Iraq in 2003 where he witnessed "horrific events" including the bombing of a school bus.

The barrister said Williams was subsequently medically discharged and diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and in 2011 the Ministry of Defence accepted liability and gave him £60,000.

Ieuan Emlyn Williams has been sentenced to six years in prison. Credit: Media Wales / South Wales Police

However he said a large part of the lump sum went on legal bills before the defendant bought and ruined an expensive car and he quickly found himself with very little of the payout left.

Mr Wells said that while being held on remand in prison awaiting sentence the father-of-two had become a valued member of small group of veterans who were serving time.

James Wing, for White, described his client as a middle man connecting dealers and suppliers and moving money.

He said the defendant had not been working for a Class A drug crime group and had been working in a "quasi-self-employed capacity" for which he was paid on a commission basis and at the same time had still been working for his family's glazing business.

Mr Wing said since being held on remand in prison the defendant had realised the devastating effect cocaine had on people, families, and communities and realised it was not, as he had previously thought, just a "party" drug or a drug you "take with friends in Spain".

Shane White will spend 15 years and four months in prison. Credit: Media Wales / South Wales Police

But the barrister said it was accepted White had made significantly more money from his second drugs business of importing cannabis from America and supplying it on to others – an enterprise for which he "kept the lion's share of the profits".

Judge Huw Rees said defendants had been involved in the commercial-scale trafficking and dealing of the cocaine.

He told them: "It goes without saying, but it seemingly needs to be said, sheer greed led you to profit from selling an insidious Class A drug without a thought or a care about the misery or danger being inflicted on others.

"To put it in short form – you were in it for the money and you must pay the consequences for your avarice".

He sentenced Semmens to 13 and a half years in prison, White to 15 years and four months behind bars, Botto to nine years and seven months in jail, and Williams to six years in prison. They will serve up to half those periods in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community.

As part of the same operation Richard Philip Ronald Gerrard, aged 42, of Heysham Road, Heysham Lancashire, had previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply cocaine alongside Semmens, White, Botto, and Williams and he has already been sentenced to seven years and eight months in prison.

Richard Gerrard had already been sentenced to seven years and eight months in prison. Credit: Media Wales / South Wales Police

Luke Thomas, aged 21, of Heol Llan, North Cornelly, had previously been sentenced to six months in prison suspended for 12 months and ordered to do 180 hours of unpaid work after pleading guilty conspiracy to supply cannabis which White had imported.

Speaking after the sentencing detective inspector Russ Jenkins from South Wales Police's force intelligence and organised crime unit said: "This was a complex and protracted investigation which resulted in the successful prosecution of a number of organised criminals.

"The web of conspirators were spread far and wide, crossing national borders and continents.

"As a direct result of this investigation South Wales Police are still actively engaging with other UK police forces and the National Crime Agency, along with our international partners, to disrupt the activities of those who seek to flood the streets of south Wales and the wider UK with cocaine.

"I would urge the public to contact us with any information they have. It may be the key piece of the jigsaw to assist us in prosecuting these serious and organised criminals."


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