Two drugs couriers who were caught bringing almost £6m worth of cocaine into Scotland have been caged.
David Murdoch, 56, and Graham McCulloch, 39, pled guilty to supplying drugs and possessing criminal property in connection with serious organised crime.
Following an operation carried out by cops the pair were caught with 48 blocks of cocaine weighing over 52 kilos and a suitcase full of sterling and Euro notes, totalling £409,595 and €289,500.

The duo were each sentenced to 10 years behind bars and were issued with a Serious Crime Prevention Order that will remain in place for three years after release.

The pair came to the attention of cops after an intelligence led operation carried out between Police Scotland and Metropolitan Police on May 12 last year.

Officers watched Murdoch and McCulloch dropping off heavy bags, presumed to contain large sums of money, in central London.
A few days later officers carried out a cross-border surveillance operation and followed Murdoch as he drove from Stonehouse in Lanarkshire to London.
At a service station on the outskirts of the capital he met McCulloch, who was driving a BMW, and the pair drove in convoy to central London.
Murdoch again unloaded heavy bags containing money in payment for drugs at the same location while McCulloch remained nearby.
Murdoch then went to two other locations, in London and Kent, where he picked up bags containing cocaine before meeting McCulloch in a hotel car park, where a bag was placed into the boot of McCulloch’s car.

The two vehicles headed back to Scotland before they were intercepted by Police Scotland at a service station at Ecclefechan.
In the van, police found 43 blocks of cocaine weighing 52 kilos hidden in a specially built ‘hide’ operated with a hydraulic system.
In the BMW, there were five blocks of cocaine and a suitcase full of sterling and Euro notes, totalling £409,595 and €289,500.
The cocaine found would be worth up to £5,900,000 when cut for sale.

Officers searched the men’s homes before finding a mobile with notes detailing drugs deliveries between 21 April and 8 May 2020 and at McCulloch’s home.
At Murdoch’s house they found another van with a ‘hide’.
Jennifer Harrower, Procurator Fiscal for Specialist Casework, said: "I hope these convictions and sentences send a strong message to others involved in bringing drugs into the country.
"It is thanks to intelligence that we were able to stop these drugs from reaching Scotland’s streets, and this kind of operation is invaluable to us as prosecutors working with our partners."
Detective Chief Superintendent Stuart Houston, Police Scotland's Head of Organised Crime and Counter Terrorism Unit, said: "Our continued success in seizing drugs is a huge blow to the activities of organised criminals.
"Making Scotland a hostile environment for criminals to operate remains an absolute priority for Police Scotland and underlines our commitment to the country’s Serious Organised Crime Strategy and Taskforce.
"I welcome their convictions, and the sentences handed to Murdoch and McCulloch today as well as take the opportunity to show my appreciation to the officers for the work involved.
"This also shows the value and importance of our continued partnership working with other police forces and law enforcement agencies including the National Crime Agency."