A criminal network masquerading as National Health Service patient transport workers has been dismantled for moving substantial quantities of class A narcotics throughout the country.
The outfit employed a system of criminal couriers to shift class A drugs and cash in private hire vehicles, business automobiles, and vans that were made to appear as official NHS transport in order to avoid police detection.
A notable photograph displays a white Ford transit van adorned with signage reading NHS patient transport that was deployed during the COVID-19 restrictions for their unlawful activities, the court heard.
The operation was directed by Ritesh Patel, aged 43, who received a twenty-year custodial sentence at Newport Crown Court after being returned from Thailand following a South Wales Police investigation codenamed Operation Oberon.
Patel operated the enterprise known as Mr Recovery from the United Arab Emirates believing this would prevent law enforcement from locating him, however after officers gained access to his organisation he escaped to Thailand where he was taken into custody and sent back for travelling on a fraudulent passport.
Investigators estimate the syndicate moved approximately 102 kilograms of cocaine and heroin, valued at three million pounds, throughout the nation from Liverpool into South Wales, with operations coordinated from multiple locations in the United Arab Emirates, southern Spain, Liverpool and South Wales.
The organisation constructed elaborate and intricate concealed compartments within delivery vehicles to evade discovery, the court was informed.
Patel maintained multiple safe premises in Cardiff Bay, Radyr, Newport and Liverpool where enormous sums of money were hidden, counted and prepared for distribution to the drug importers to settle accounts.
Caroline Hughes, a Specialist Prosecutor with the Crown Prosecution Service’s Serious Economic and Organised and International Directorate, explained that Patel believed his location in the United Arab Emirates would prevent his criminal activities from catching up with him. She noted that when he journeyed from the United Arab Emirates to Thailand and was detained for possessing a falsified passport, the Thai justice system moved quickly to support the extradition process, resulting in his return to Britain to answer for his crimes.
Patel faced charges from the Crown Prosecution Service in June 2022. Later that same month he was apprehended in Thailand for holding an fraudulent passport. The CPS sought his return from Thailand.
A Thai judicial authority approved the extradition request. Patel challenged this decision but in August 2025 a definitive extradition order was issued and Patel was brought back to Britain in October 2025.
Patel was formally accused of participating in the conspiracy to supply cocaine and heroin.
He admitted his guilt at Cardiff Crown Court to both charges and received his prison sentence on 16 March 2026.
Detective Chief Inspector Lloyd Williams of Tarian ROCU stated that officers would persist in hunting down criminals and bringing them before the courts.
