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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
National
Phoebe Ram

Two Notts couples convicted after posting assault rifle home from Florida

Two men from Nottinghamshire have been jailed for a total of five years after being found guilty of posting component parts of an AR15 assault rifle home while on holiday in Florida.

Carlos Sen, 26 and half-brother, Stephen Gibson, 46 were convicted along with their partners, Rebekah Simons, 25 and Louise Caswell, 39, of conspiring to import and possess a firearm at Nottingham Crown Court on Wednesday, October 23.

On Thursday, October 24 Sen of London Road, Retford, was jailed for three years and Gibson, now at Westhill Road, Retford received a two-year sentence.

Simons, of Nightingale Way, Retford was handed a suspended sentence of 21 months and 200 hours community service.

Caswell, now at Westhill Road, Retford was given a 15 month suspended sentence.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) has been investigating the importation since June 2017 after Homeland Security agents in the US intercepted a package about to be shipped to Caswell in Retford

It contained the lower receiver, barrel shroud, magazines and stock of the AR15.

NCA officers, working with Border Force, then intercepted a second package in the UK which contained the barrel of the rifle, also addressed to Caswell.

The group had attempted to disguise the packages as personal fishing equipment, and included a fishing rod reel along with the barrel.

Investigators discovered that while in Florida, Sen and Simons recruited a US resident to purchase the weapon on their behalf from a legitimate firearms collector.

Stephen Gibson, Carlos Sen and Louise Caswell. Right, the component parts of the AR15. (National Crime Agency)

They then worked with Caswell and Gibson to send it back to the UK in parts.

Days after the importation, Caswell and Gibson were arrested by NCA officers at their home at the time, in Old London Road, West Drayton close to Heathrow Airport. Officers established they were able to go on the trip, despite being unemployed, as it had been paid for by Sen.

Sen, who also had no legitimate source of income but claimed to be a professional gambler, subsequently fled to Italy. He was arrested, along with Simons, a nursery nurse, after returning to the UK.



Prior to his arrest, Sen destroyed his sim card and deleted the contents of his phone. During the trial, he claimed he did so to remove evidence of a one night stand he had in Italy.

In a bid to defend their actions, the group told the jury they had wanted to go shooting on their trip but heard it was expensive.

Sen therefore arranged to purchase the firearm, with a US citizen, for around $450 to save them money.

However, enquiries made as part of the investigation showed it costs around $20 to hire a rifle at a shooting range in Florida.


Adam Warnock, NCA Branch Commander, said: “This group made a youtant attempt to import a potentially lethal weapon into the country.

“Although gun crime in the UK remains relatively low compared to the US or mainland Europe, we know illegal firearms are used in acts of serious violence and by crime groups to coerce and intimidate.

“Working with international partners in countries where these weapons are legal to suppress their availability in the UK is a priority for the NCA.

“Post and fast parcels remain one of the most popular methods of illegally importing firearms into the UK, and this is also something we, along with Border Force, are actively targeting.”

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