Passenger at Dublin Airport imported cocaine by swallowing 90 pellets of drug, court hears

Uber driver was under pressure to ‘wipe debt’ incurred back home in Brazil

Jonathan Vieira told gardaí he worked as an Uber driver in Brazil and had borrowed money to buy the vehicle for his work, court heard
Jonathan Vieira told gardaí he worked as an Uber driver in Brazil and had borrowed money to buy the vehicle for his work, court heard

A Brazilian national who imported cocaine into Ireland by swallowing 90 pellets of the drug has been sentenced to two years in prison.

Jonathan Vieira (31) came forward to Dublin Circuit Criminal Court on signed pleas of guilty from the District Court.

He admitted possession of cocaine for sale, possession of cocaine and importation of cocaine at Dublin Airport on March 16th.

Garda Avril Owens told the court Mr Vieira was stopped by customs officers, after he flew in from Brazil into Dublin, because it was felt that he was “acting suspiciously”.

Vieira later admitted to gardaí he had swallowed pellets of cocaine. He said he had swallowed 90 pellets in all and had passed a few on the flight.

He passed a total of 71 pellets while in garda custody. The pellets contained cocaine with an estimated street value of €48,825.

Gda Owens agreed that Vieira told gardaí he worked as an Uber driver in Brazil and had borrowed money from a debt collector to buy the vehicle for his work.

He was told he had to pay off the loan in three days or do the trip of transporting the cocaine into Ireland.

It was agreed he had borrowed the equivalent of €2,000 from this debt collector. He said he was aware what he was doing was illegal, but he felt under pressure.

Gda Owens agreed with Fionnuala O’Sullivan SC, defending, that gardaí accepted that Vieira’s account to officers was genuine.

Ms O’Sullivan said her client, who is married with two children, was unable to pay back his debt. The debt was doubled and his family, including his parents, were threatened.

She said Vieira felt he had no option but to import the cocaine to allow him to “wipe the debt”.

She said he continued to be in fear because of the drugs that have now been lost due to his detection in Dublin Airport.

Judge Martin Nolan accepted this was a “crime of desperation” and Vieira was “unlikely to reoffend”. He accepted Vieira was under pressure.

The judge jailed him for two years. The sentence was backdated to when Vieira first went into custody on the day of his arrest in March.

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