Child given Lego box full of cocaine as ex-Royal Marines jailed

Two ex-Royal Marines are jailed for importing £1.8MILLION of cocaine in Lego boxes – after one batch was accidentally given to a child as a birthday present

  • Jack Jones, 28, was jailed for 16 years at Liverpool Crown Court on Tuesday
  • Accomplice Isaac Rasmussen received a 10-year sentence for drug offences
  • The two Royal Marine colleagues smuggled drugs from Holland in DPD parcels
  • One Lego package was left with a neighbour who ended up giving it as a present 

A pair of former Royal Marines have been jailed for importing cocaine hidden in Lego boxes, one of which was inadvertently given to a child as a present.

Jack Jones, 28, was jailed for more than 16 years at Liverpool Crown Court on Tuesday and his former Royal Marine colleague Isaac Rasmussen, 28, was sentenced to 10 years.

They pleaded guilty to conspiracy to import and supply drugs which were smuggled into the country from Holland in DPD parcels.


Jack Jones (left), 28, was jailed for more than 16 years at Liverpool Crown Court on Tuesday and his former Royal Marine colleague Isaac Rasmussen (right), 28, was sentenced to 10 years

When police opened the parcel they found eight Lego Duplo boxes, each with a kilo of high purity cocaine inside

A third associate, Paul Jones, 43, was jailed for seven-and-a-half years after the court heard his addresses were used for the packages to be sent to.

Charles Lander, prosecuting, said 18 kilograms of cocaine, with a street value of £1.8 million, was recovered by police but was only the ‘tip of the iceberg’ in terms of the defendants’ criminality.

The court was told one of the packages was delivered to Paul Jones’s address in Lincombe Road, Huyton, while police were executing a warrant there on June 24 last year.

Mr Lander said when police opened the parcel they found eight Lego Duplo boxes, each with a kilo of high purity cocaine inside.

Police said 18 kilograms of cocaine, with a street value of £1.8 million, was recovered but was only the ‘tip of the iceberg’ 

On the same day, the court heard, a package was delivered to an address in Whiston where Rasmussen was a tenant, but it was taken in by a neighbour.

Some weeks later, after attempts by the neighbour to return the parcel to Rasmussen were unsuccessful, she gave one of the Lego boxes to her son’s girlfriend, who needed a present for the birthday of her friend’s son.

The box, which had an image of a fire engine on the front, was gift-wrapped and given to the child, whose mother opened it, Mr Lander said.

He said: ‘When she opened the box, she immediately noticed that it was not Lego but was an item that had been wrapped in various layers of different packaging.’

The court heard a solid white block of cocaine was inside.

Paul Jones, 43, was jailed for seven-and-a-half years

Judge Stuart Driver QC told Rasmussen: ‘You allowed your home to be used for delivery of multi kilo packages of Class A drugs.

‘Part of such a delivery to your address, disguised as Lego, was inadvertently handed to a small child wrapped up as a birthday present, exposing the child to a risk of serious harm.’

The court heard Jack Jones and Rasmussen used encrypted messaging service Encrochat, which was infiltrated by police last year.

In one message, Jack Jones told a contact: ‘Bro we be multimillionaires in three months ha ha ha.’

Alaric Walmsley, defending Jack Jones, said he had served his country as a Royal Marine, working as an ambulance driver in the Medical Squadron.

Rasmussen had known Jack Jones since he joined the Marines at 17 and became involved in the conspiracy because of their friendship, Arthur Gibson, defending, said.

Kenneth Heckle, defending Paul Jones, who is currently serving a prison sentence for cannabis production, said his ‘entry into the criminal world’ started after he lost his job as a forklift truck driver in 2018 when he injured his ankle.

All three defendants pleaded guilty to conspiracy to import and supply cocaine.

Jack Jones, of Hey Park, Huyton, also admitted conspiracy to supply heroin, MDMA and cannabis, conspiracy to import cannabis and conspiracy to convert criminal property.

Rasmussen, of Heath Road, Widnes, admitted conspiracy to import cannabis and Paul Jones pleaded guilty to possessing cannabis and criminal property.

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