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29 October 2014
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10.10.03


SOUTH EAST TV


Inside Out exposes Kent 'mules' scam


Monday's Inside Out (91Èȱ¬ ONE South East, 13 October) investigates the extraordinary story of the people of Deal in Kent being targeted as 'mules' to smuggle a drug, which is legal in the UK, into the United States, where it is not.


The drug, Khat, is a Class 1 narcotic in the US with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.


This spring, US enforcement officers were surprised to find 12 young, white males - all from Deal - locked up in New York's notorious Rikers Island jail.


One of them, 17-year-old David McGahan, was targeted in a pub and offered £500 to take a couple of suitcases over to America.


His parents thought he was at a party in Dover when they got the call.


His mother, Majorie, recalls: "We had no idea he had left the country even. He said 'Mum, I'm really sorry. I didn't realise I'd get myself into so much trouble.' He was in tears."


Now turned 18, David McGahan has put the incident behind him and has promised his parents never to do anything like this again.


Khat is a shrub that grows in the Yemen and Ethiopia and is chewed by users. It is popular in those communities in the UK. Users claim the drug lifts spirits, sharpens thinking and increases energy.


The effects aren't as potent as cocaine or uppers, but are similar. However long term use can cause heart attacks and high blood pressure.


Legal in Britain, it can be bought in certain greengrocers and markets for about £5 a bunch – but it can command high sums of money in America.


Banned in most countries, including mainland Europe, it is legally imported into the UK where the smugglers dupe people in to acting as couriers.


State Defence Attorney, Elizabeth Pruser, has defended most of the cases and was surprised at the Deal connection - a place of which she had never previously heard.


She says: "These kids are being used. It's the kids being prosecuted, not the big guys."


Special Agent Thomas Maniface tells the programme: "We are looking at the funding, the money, where's it going? It could be that it's being used to fund terrorism because it's being sent back to countries that support terrorism like Yemen and others."


During the programme, under the close supervision of leading Khat expert, Dr Iain Murray-Lyon, presenter Paul Ross tries Khat himself. Grimacing as he chews, after about an hour he describes the effects:


"I feel trembly and a bit hyper, like I've had too much coffee, and a bit hot."


Inside Out, 91Èȱ¬ ONE South East, Monday 13 October, 7.30pm


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