UPS Supervisor Jailed for 12 Years in £10M Cocaine Smuggling Operation

July 9, 2026
UPS Supervisor Jailed for 12 Years in £10M Cocaine Smuggling Operation
  • Court heard that Archbold’s involvement escalated to high-level criminality, with the judge noting a risk-reward balance in his path into crime.

  • Archbold leveraged his supervisory role to ensure shipments passed undetected and reached the assigned lorries, as he moved from debt to active involvement.

  • A UPS supervisor nicknamed “King”, Zak Archbold, 30, has been jailed for 12 years for organizing cocaine imports into the UK via a Stanford-le-Hope depot, enabling about 290 kilograms of cocaine to be shipped from the Netherlands.

  • Investigations show the 290 kilos were smuggled through the Stanford-le-Hope depot in spring 2020, with drugs bought for about £2,000 per kilo and a total street value around £10 million.

  • Archbold helped move roughly 28 parcels, each containing up to 12kg, through the depot and was paid about £750 per kilo smuggled.

  • International cooperation across the UK, Spain, France, and the National Crime Agency led to extraditions and prosecutions, with three suspects still at large.

  • The case grew out of NCA investigations tied to Operation Venetic, following the EncroChat takedown in France and the Netherlands, with support from Spanish police.

  • Law enforcement collaboration among the UK, Spain, and France, including the NCA, was pivotal in exposing the network, securing extraditions, and bringing charges against Archbold.

  • EncroChat was a key source for the smuggling operation; both Archbold and Bullen were convicted of conspiracy to import cocaine, with Bullen additionally convicted of conspiracy to supply cocaine, MDMA, and produce amphetamine.

  • The gang used EncroChat for secure communications; Archbold, known as “King,” directed shipments from the depot, while Bullen coordinated operations from Spain and arranged for drugs to reach designated lorries.

  • Archbold was convicted on April 2, 2026, after a trial at the relevant court.

  • Archbold joined the scheme after falling into debt and then vigorously participated, while Bullen allegedly led the gang’s hierarchy and operations.

Summary based on 4 sources


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