How Elderly UK Lottery Winner’s $3.3M Jackpot Fueled a $400M Drug Empire
An elderly British lottery winner was given a 16-year prison sentence for using his £2.4 million (US$3.3 million) fortune to create a $400 million counterfeit drug enterprise.
According to Greater Manchester Police, 80-year-old John Eric Spiby outfitted his cottage in a peaceful rural region close to Bolton, northwest England, with a "industrial-scale tablet manufacturing set-up capable of producing tens of thousands of tablets per hour."
John Colin Spiby, his son, and two accomplices helped Spiby flood the illegal drug supply chain with etizolam-laced counterfeit Valium tablets. Although it is illegal in the US and the UK, this sedative is recommended in other countries to treat anxiety and insomnia. The central nervous system can be critically depressed by high dosages of etizolam, which can result in unconsciousness, respiratory failure, and even death.
Windfall to Demise
According to court documents, the octogenarian offender, who won a sizable sum of money in the UK National Lottery in 2010 at the age of 65, was the group's ringleader and had a "significant" criminal history.
Despite one gang member, Lee Drury, entering a guilty plea in the middle of the trial, the four men disputed accusations that included conspiracy to create and provide Class C drugs, conspiracy to supply firearms, possession of firearms and ammunition, and perverting the course of justice.
After a 2020 police operation infiltrated EncroChat, a messaging app headquartered in Europe that is frequently referred to as the "WhatsApp for criminals," French law enforcement intercepted encrypted communications on the platform, revealing the operation.
When UK police seized a hired van after starting to monitor the group, they discovered 2.6 million fake pills worth up to £5.2 million (US$7 million) on the black market. Additionally, they raided other residences and seized cash, ammunition, guns, and equipment used in the production of industrial tablets.
According to police, the gang's drugs might be worth up to £288 million ($400 million) on the black market.
Life of Crime
“Despite your lottery win, you continued to live your life of crime beyond what would be a normal retirement age,” Judge Nicholas Clarke of Bolton Crown Court told Spiby before sentencing.
Spiby Jr. received a nine-year jail sentence. Drury and Callum Dorian, the two conspirators, were sentenced to nine and twelve years in prison, respectively.
“These four individuals showed absolutely no regard for human life or public safety,” Detective Inspector Alex Brown, from Greater Manchester Police’s Serious Organized Crime Group, said in a statement. “All they were interested in was lining their own pockets with significant financial gain.”