Bradford 'crime boss' mum jailed after using children as drug runners in £14m international cocaine plot
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|WATCH: South Yorkshire Police officers uncover million pound drugs farm in former Rotherham snooker hall

The mother was arrested when she arrived at the airport to collect her children who were carrying 180kg of cocaine
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A Bradford mum is now behind bars after she used her own children to smuggle millions of pounds worth of cocaine into the UK.
Farzana Kauser, 54, has been jailed for 13 years and four months after a National Crime Agency investigation.
Kauser worked with an unidentified accomplice in Pakistan known as ‘Uncle’ to mastermind the smuggling of cocaine from Cancun, Mexico to Britain.
She was arrested on November 11, 2024 at Birmingham Airport and was only there to collect her children who were carrying 180kg of cocaine with a street value of around £14.4 million.
NCA
|Farzana Kauser, 54, has been jailed for 13 years and four months after a National Crime Agency investigation
Some of it was due to be passed to a courier from another organised crime group, with the remainder taken back to Kauser’s home on Waterlily Road in Manningham and then moved on.
The National Crime Agency found that despite Kauser appearing to be a "loving mum", she pushed her children into "huge danger" and "destroyed" their lives, with her youngest son only 17-years-old when he was encouraged to play a major role in couriering drugs into the country.
Kauser's arrest was the fifth time the crime group, which included Kauser’s four sons, one daughter, and daughter-in-law, had couriered high purity cocaine into Birmingham Airport between August and November 2024.
The offenders booked short one or two-night trips to Amsterdam or Dublin and travelled without any luggage.
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They timed their return flights to Birmingham to coincide with flights from Cancun, where a corrupt insider loaded suitcases full of drugs onto the UK-bound flight.
After landing, Kauser’s children headed to the Cancun baggage carousel. They had received photographs of the suitcases from an unidentified member of the crime group.
They were full of cocaine and had been loaded unaccompanied onto the Mexico flight. The family would then walk through customs as though returning with their own bags.
Kauser pleaded guilty to importing 180 kilograms of cocaine at a previous hearing. Her four eldest children admitted their roles in the conspiracy.
Her youngest son and daughter-in-law pleaded guilty to participating in the activities of an organised crime group. They were all sentenced at Birmingham Crown Court, other than her youngest son who will be sentenced in October.
Rick Mackenzie, National Crime Agency (NCA) Senior Investigating Officer, said: “To her friends and people who thought they knew her, Farzana Kauser was a thoughtful, loving mum who seemed very normal.
“She was very well practised in her life as a high-end cocaine trafficker and she took great pains to delete any trail of evidence.
“She led this crime group with dedication and determination, often instructing her children on how to smuggle the drugs effectively and on what techniques to employ.
NCA
|Farzana Kauser worked with an unidentified accomplice in Pakistan known as ‘Uncle’ to mastermind the smuggling of cocaine from Cancun, Mexico to Britain
“She pushed her children into huge danger and has allowed their futures to be effectively destroyed.
“Her youngest son was just 17 when he was encouraged to play a major role in couriering drugs into the country, drugs that wreck countless lives across the UK in their links to violence, addiction and other crimes.
“The NCA works side by side with partners at home and abroad to combat the threat Class A drugs pose to the UK.”
Sarah Ingram, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said that the operation was sophisticated and well-planned with the aim to flood the UK with high-purity cocaine worth millions of pounds.
“What makes this case particularly concerning is the family nature of the conspiracy, with a mother recruiting her own children to participate in serious organised crime," she said.
"The defendants thought they had devised a foolproof method to import drugs, but thanks to the vigilance and thorough investigation by the National Crime Agency and our prosecution, their criminal enterprise was brought to an end.
“By taking this organised crime group out of action, large amounts of drugs have been removed from circulation and can no longer reach our streets.
"This case demonstrates the commitment of the Crown Prosecution Service and law enforcement partners to disrupting drug supply chains and bringing those involved in serious organised crime to justice."