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Drug charges in SL: Young British woman could be linked to Culley case

Drug charges in SL: Young British woman could be linked to Culley case

23 May 2025


  • Charlotte May Lee, 21, from south London, flew from the same Bangkok airport as Bella May Culley, who was arrested a day earlier

Within a day of Bella May Culley being arrested at a Georgian airport for allegedly trying to smuggle 14 kg of cannabis, the same fate met another Briton 3,000 miles away.

As Charlotte May Lee stepped off her flight at the Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo, on 12 May, the 21-year-old former cabin attendant was arrested for an alleged attempt to bring in Pounds 1.2 million worth of a synthetic cannabis strain known as kush in her two suitcases.

Both young women had flown alone from Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport. A potential link between the two cases looks likely to form part of the investigations being carried out by the Georgian and Sri Lankan authorities.

The charges facing the women, as suspected mules for organised crime gangs, could hardly be any more serious.

If found guilty, Lee, from south London, could face a 25-year sentence, while anything from 20 years in jail to life imprisonment would be on the cards for 18-year-old Culley, from County Durham, according to prosecutors.

It is, however, the context that will perhaps be most alarming for any parent whose children may be talking of finding adventure in South-east Asia. Thailand was the first country in Asia to legalise the use and purchase of cannabis leaves in February 2021 and the whole plant in June 2022. The evidence suggests that the result has been an opening of the floodgates for international drug smugglers, who regard naive young travellers as easy prey.

In the case of Lee, it is known that she had flown out to Thailand in April to celebrate her 21st birthday courtesy of her older sister, who was meeting her from Australia, where she lives. She had previously enjoyed a summer contract as a cabin attendant for Tui but she had been training as a beauty therapist specialising in eyelashes. Lee had the travel bug – her social media profiles were full of photographs of white sandy beaches and parties abroad. But, money was tight. Photographs published by the Sri Lanka Customs Narcotics Control Unit in Colombo suggest that the drugs allegedly in Lee’s luggage were in large vacuum packed bags, indicating a high level of professionalism.

The drugs found in the luggage of Culley, who has claimed in her only court appearance in Tbilisi that she is pregnant, were also allegedly discovered in hermetically sealed packages. 

Her family said that she had initially gone abroad at Easter with a friend on a backpacking adventure after finishing an access course at Middlesbrough College. She wanted to be a nurse. Her grandfather, William Culley, said that her first port of call had been the Philippines to “see somebody, a lad there, who she used to go out with a couple of years ago, who was working out there”. She had then gone on to Bangkok on 3 May, according to her mother, Lyanne Culley, but had not called on 10 May as arranged, causing alarm. Culley’s social media profiles suggested that a boyfriend was in tow. She was photographed riding on the back of motorcycles and lounging on sunny beaches in the company of a male figure who was never clearly pictured or named. One TikTok was captioned: “Don’t care if we're on the run baby as long as I’m next to u.” Another video showing her relaxing, had the caption: ‘Blonde or brunette? Erm, how about we get up to criminal activities side by side like Bonnie n Clyde making heavy figures and fcking on balconies all over the world.” Culley is now reportedly being held in Tbilisi prison Number Five, Georgia’s only female prison. “I really didn’t want her to go to Thailand,” her mother was reported as saying. “I begged her to come home. I don’t trust some of the boys over there. But, she wanted to meet up with some friends she made over there on a previous trip. I don’t know who any of them are.”

A former prosecutor who is now a defence lawyer at Lawyers.ge, Giorgi Lekishvili said that there would be a preliminary hearing by 1 July but that Culley faced nine months in jail before the case even got to trial. Culley has been utterly shaken by the events, her lawyer has said, and is yet to see her father, Niel Culley, 49, who has travelled from his home in Vietnam to be with her. “When I explained to her that what she was accused of was an especially severe crime then she was concerned and visibly shaken,” said a defence lawyer provided to Culley by the Georgian authorities, Ia Todua. “My impression was that she ended up in Georgia without even knowing what she was doing. She looked like she didn’t expect it to have such severe consequences.”

(The Guardian)


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