Brit teen ‘drug mule’ Bella Culley ‘TORTURED into trafficking £200k-worth of cannabis’ as she shows shock wound in court

BRITISH drug mule suspect Bella Culley was tortured into trafficking £200,000-worth of cannabis by evil crimelords, a court heard today.

Bella, 18, said a brutal Thai trafficker held her arm under a jet of steam to force her to fly with 31lb of cannabis to the former Soviet state of Georgia.

People in a courtroom.
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Bella Culley seen in court this week as her devastated family watched on[/caption]

Woman in a pale yellow dress making a kissy face.
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The Brit told a court she was tortured into trafficking £200,000-worth of cannabis by evil crimelords[/caption]

A handcuffed woman in a courtroom.
East2West

Bella has now been locked up for six weeks in Georgia[/caption]

The teenager showed off a vivid snake-like scar to the court in the capital of Tbilisi as she insisted she never touched the drugs she is accused of trafficking.

She was seen breaking down in tears alongside members of her family as a Georgian judge rejected her plea.

After six weeks banged up in a hellhole jail following her arrest, Bella told the hearing: “I didn’t want to do this – I was forced under torture.

“I just wanted to travel, I just want to live with my family – I am a loving person, I am studying at the university to become a nurse.

“All I wanted to do was travel but bad things happened.”

The tearful teen, looking downcast in a pink shirt with her hair in a bun, added: “I don’t do drugs, as you can see in my blood tests, I am clean. I always wanted to make my family proud.”

Bella from Billingham, County Durham, claimed baggage containing the cannabis was carried to the airport for her and put in the plane’s hold when she boarded a flight from Bangkok in May.

Her family launched a missing person hunt in Thailand after she vanished on holiday but she turned up under arrest 4,000 miles away in the European nation.

Then on her first court appearance she announced she was pregnant.

Her baby bump had visibly grown in the latest court appearance as she was supported by her 39-year-old oil rig worker father Niel.

Bella told her family she was flying to meet a boyfriend in the Far East on a backpacking holiday, the court heard.

It has also come out that the father of her child is from the UK.

Her aunt Kerri Culley was in court and sobbed as evidence was presented.

Bella’s lawyer Malkhaz Salakaia said corrupt Thai cops had been in on the plot and stopped the Brit from trying to raise the alarm before she flew to Georgia.

Mr Salakaia said she went to a police officer to show him the burns to her arm – but he took her to another officer who turned out to be a member of the drugs gang.

He argued that she should not stay in the tough No5 Women’s Penitentiary and requested bail.

Mr Salakaia said: “You’ll see her actual involvement with these charges in her own testimony that is coming shortly – she is innocent.

“Her emotional state exactly confirms that she was forced,  I want to ask her to show the court her arm and you can see the burning scar.

Two suitcases full of seized drugs.
East2West

Cannabis was found wrapped in air-tight bags in Bella’s luggage, police said[/caption]

Screenshot of a courtroom scene with two women, one wearing glasses.
East2West

Bella in court last month[/caption]

Illustration of a map showing Bella's travel route from the UK to Georgia, including stops in the Philippines and Thailand, with photos and text detailing her journey and arrest.

“This scar occurred before she was “equipped” with her baggage, that she never even touched.”

The lawyer said Bella never saw the drug bag – which flew to Georgia via Sharjah in Abu Dhabi – until she was arrested for importing it.

He said: “From Thailand to Sharjah, from Sharjah to Thailand, this baggage was carried by a different person. She was only given a passport and told you go there and there.

“She tried to inform the passport control but was paid no attention. She even has no idea geographically where she is – she thought Tbilisi was a country.

“She was given a photo and was told to keep it and that she would be approached by certain people. This meeting didn’t happen because she was detained.

“Said has never taken  drugs and tests carried out by police once she arrived in Georgia proved she was telling the truth.”

Bella’s family said they were willing to submit a bail surety of at least £13,400 to guarantee her return to court to face trial after her lawyer said she had travelled to Thailand with just £70 cash.

But Judge Lela Kalichenko rejected her plea for bail insisting the teeanger was a potential flight risk and was receiving all necessary medical care where in prison.

Inside the dark world of Brit ‘drug mules’

A SLEW of drug mule arrests involving Brits have emerged in the last few months.

In April and May, two Brit women were arrested abroad for alleged drug smuggling.

Bella was the first after she allegedly tried to smuggle a suitcase of weed into Georgia.

Meanwhile, former air stewardess Charlotte May Lee was also caught allegedly trying to smuggle drugs worth £1.2million into Sri Lanka.

Her two suitcases were said to have been stuffed with 46kg of a synthetic cannabis strain known as kush — which is 25 times more potent than opioid fentanyl.

If found guilty, South Londoner Charlotte could face a 25-year sentence.

As a young mum was detained in Germany for allegedly smuggling cannabis in her bags on a flight from Thailand – in yet another shocking case.

Glamorous Cameron Bradford, 21, from Knebworth, Herts, was detained at Munich Airport on April 21 as she tried to collect her luggage.

It comes as a Brit couple claiming to be tourists from Thailand have been busted with more than 33kg of cannabis in their suitcases at a Spanish airport.

The pair were picked out by suspicious cops at Valencia Airport after displaying a “nervous and evasive attitude” and are now behind bars on drug trafficking charges.

Experts told The Sun how wannabe Brit Insta stars are being lured by cruel gangs into carting drugs across the world.

Then last month, a six-year-old British boy was arrested in Mauritius suspected of smuggling part of a £1.6million dope haul stuffed inside his wheelie case.

The lad was picked up by customs officials along with his mum and five other Brits as they arrived on the tropical island.

Authorities branded the use of a child in the audacious drug smuggling plot as “inhumane”. 

Woman on a green dirt bike.
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Bella has said she never touched the drugs found in her suitcase[/caption]

July 1, 2025
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El Chapo’s Mexican drug cartel ‘hired hacker to infiltrate public CCTV cameras to track down and kill FBI informants’

EL CHAPO’S ruthless cartel used a hacker to break into Mexico City’s CCTV system and track down FBI informants — before having them killed.

A shocking new US Justice Department report reveals the Sinaloa Cartel, once run by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, hired a tech expert to spy on American agents and expose their sources.

Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman escorted by Mexican marines.
AFP or licensors

El Chapo’s (pictured) ruthless Sinaloa cartel used a hacker to break into Mexico City’s CCTV system to spy on FBI informants[/caption]

A Sinaloa Cartel member, identified as Guero, holds a handgun while two other masked men prepare drugs.
Reuters

The hacker was used to track down agents and expose their sources before they were killed[/caption]

Burning truck in Culiacan, Sinaloa.
AP

The FBI says it’s drafting a plan to plug security gaps, including more training for agents[/caption]

The hacker hacked into Mexico City’s camera network and phone records in 2018, tailing an FBI assistant legal attaché (ALAT) at the US embassy.

Armed with this intel, the cartel was able to “intimidate and, in some instances, kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses,” the report said.

The Justice Department added: “According to the FBI, in addition to compromising the ALAT’s phone, the hacker also accessed Mexico City’s camera system, used the cameras to follow the ALAT through the city, and identified people the ALAT met with.”

The findings shine a harsh light on how cartels are now using cutting-edge tech to stay a step ahead of law enforcement.

The audit warned that new technology has “made it easier than ever for less-sophisticated nations and criminal enterprises to identify and exploit vulnerabilities” in government data.

It comes as Mexico’s cops desperately try to catch up.

In Chiapas this week, police unveiled armed drones to take on cartels fighting for smuggling routes along the Guatemalan border.

Just weeks ago, the same force sparked a diplomatic storm by chasing gunmen into Guatemala and engaging in a wild street shootout.

The Sinaloa Cartel — once commanded by El Chapo, who’s now locked up in the US — remains locked in a bloody battle with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

Meanwhile, a new breed of younger, tech-savvy narcos is ramping up tactics like cryptocurrency laundering and state-of-the-art surveillance.

“The cartels run a multi-billion-dollar global enterprise and utilize sophisticated technology to enhance their business operations,” said Derek Maltz, former acting DEA chief.

“They utilize state-of-art sophisticated surveillance techniques to identify law enforcement activities and their adversaries.”

The FBI says it’s drafting a plan to plug these glaring security gaps, including more training for agents.

But the Justice Department report warned the threat is so severe that some in the FBI and CIA call it “existential”.

Mexico’s long-running drug war rages on with no end in sight.

More than 400,000 people have been killed since the government first declared war on the cartels in 2006, and tens of thousands more have vanished without a trace.

Despite high-profile arrests and military crackdowns, groups like Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation continue to expand their reach, both at home and across borders.

In the US, the stakes are equally dire.

Authorities have repeatedly blamed Mexican cartels for driving the fentanyl crisis, which has fuelled a record surge in overdose deaths.

Washington has labelled these syndicates “foreign terrorist organisations” in everything but official designation, ramping up efforts to cripple their finances and supply chains.

Mexico’s most dangerous cartels

Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) – The most violent and rapidly expanding cartel, known for extreme brutality, including cannibalism, drone warfare, and high-profile assassinations. Led by Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes.

Sinaloa Cartel – Once led by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, this powerful cartel is known for sophisticated drug trafficking networks and ruthless tactics, including face peeling and mass executions.

Los Zetas – Originally formed by ex-special forces soldiers, Los Zetas are infamous for military-style operations, public massacres, and the “Highway of Death” killings.

Gulf Cartel – One of Mexico’s oldest cartels, involved in human trafficking, kidnappings, and violent turf wars, often clashing with Los Zetas.

Beltrán Leyva Cartel – Known for alliances with other criminal groups and deadly feuds, this cartel specialises in assassinations and corruption at the highest levels.

Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel – A rising force primarily involved in fuel theft and extortion, responsible for deadly attacks against rivals and law enforcement.

June 29, 2025
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