EYES WIDE OPEN
8th September 2013, 14:35
There is more to this story me thinks.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/09/07/french-consulate-worker-arrested-at-israeli-border-with-69-pounds-of-gold-and-2-million-in-checks/
Atlas
9th September 2013, 07:03
I don't think there's much more to the story. French foreign affairs ministry said that he was the consulate's garage chief and that he was on a private trip.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sounds like Gordon Malloch's story to me:
Gordon Malloch worked by day as a chef in the Gulf but by night he was arranging massive illegal shipments of whisky into the alcohol-free Islamic state. The black market booze was drunk in secret desert parties arranged for expats.
For six years, Gordon, 58, hid whisky and gin inside fake generators and even had an industrial-grade still stashed at home.
He was the go-to man for booze in the alcohol-free state – until he was grassed up by a royal aide. Sentenced to more than three years in jail and 480 lashes, he was shocked to be shipped off to a filth-covered prison for his crimes until the British embassy secured his release 17 months later.
http://i1.dailyrecord.co.uk/incoming/article926682.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/gordon-malloch-image-1-789187722-926682.jpg
He said: “It took me about three weeks of living in Saudi Arabia to get started. I was a real entrepreneur because there wasn’t any taste and quality before I arrived.
“I was nearly six years doing it and the reason I lasted so long is there was a lot of fake whisky and gin coming from Bulgaria, the kind people would go blind from. I never touched that, I always stayed with the genuine article.
“We held parties in the desert reached by motorbike, there was nothing we couldn’t do, it was synonymous with the feel of the 80s.
“I have never had any regrets. I’m very nostalgic for those days –I made and spent two fortunes. You never think about what might happen because you never think they could catch you.”
Gordon moved to Saudi in 1978 from Aviemore. He took a job in Riyadh running a catering operation, and realised he was in the ideal position. Other expats either imported or brewed their own hooch, so he started making homemade wine.
As he got better at it, he made more and more for sale, and he realised that his job as a catering boss meant he could get ingredients without alerting suspicion. He was soon making hundreds of litres a week, charging £50 per container, making huge amounts of cash.
He also ran a £5000 still he kept in a secret room behind a fake wall in his villa. The money afforded him lavish holidays and on one such break to Bahrain, he hooked up with some businessmen who were looking to bring named brands into Saudi.
He said: “These guys had the capital to buy up 400 to 600 cases at a time and I had the idea of bringing it into the country in generators. I was shipping out a quarter of a million dollars at a time.”
The profits meant he bought a 1977 Ferrari to keep back home in Scotland, while he was living the life of a prince in Riyadh. Fearing he was pushing his luck, he made an exit plan – but as he was preparing his last delivery, he was sold out by a customer’s aide.
Full story: dailyrecord.co.uk/scot-made-millions-making-moonshine (http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/scot-made-millions-making-moonshine-1083886)
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.