Police raid Welsh Guard barracks near Queen’s Windsor Castle home
[ad_1]
Drug raid on Queen’s guard barracks uncovers traces of cocaine and ecstasy as soldiers are warned they will face regular tests
- Royal Military and civilian police officers raided the barracks of the Welsh Guard
- The joint team swabbed the cards and wallets of as many as 200 soldiers
- Five soldier’s possessions tested positive for traces of cocaine and ecstasy
A drugs raid on the Welsh Guard’s barracks has uncovered traces of cocaine and ecstasy.
A stop-and-search operation was conducted by 30 Royal Military and civilian police officers on as many as 200 guardsmen from 1st Battalion The Welsh Guards.
The joint team, who were accompanied by a drug detection dog, tested the cards and wallets of the soldiers.
Five bank cards belonging to five soldiers tested positive for traces of ecstasy and cocaine.
The five soldiers were not arrested but given a warning and are now subject to drug testing, the Mirror reports.
Military and civilian police swabbed the possessions of 200 members of the Welsh Guard (pictured) and found traces of cocaine and ecstasy
A senior military source told the Mirror: ‘The Queen has been made aware of the situation and takes a great deal of interest in her guardsmen.’
Last week, it was revealed that 13 soldiers who guard Windsor Castle and protect the Queen have been jailed for breaking lockdown rules.
They were among a group of 16 guardsmen who attended a booze and cocaine-fuelled ‘mini-rave’ at a riverside park.
They partied with members of the public which meant they had broken a ‘bubble’ put in place as the Queen and Prince Philip were shielding inside.
The first 13 troops from the Welsh Guards were sentenced last week.
A senior military source told the Mirror: ‘The Queen has been made aware of the situation and takes a great deal of interest in her guardsmen’
Their punishments ranged from 14 to 28 days at the military’s Glasshouse prison in Colchester.
It is thought to be the largest number of troops jailed for a single crime at the same time.
Four of the men also tested positive for cocaine and will be kicked out of the Army after serving their sentences.
The guardsmen were based at Combermere Barracks in Windsor.
The party took place in late June, less than two weeks after the Queen attended a socially distanced Trooping the Colour – the first time the ceremony had taken place at Windsor since 1895.
During lockdown the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh were protected at the castle by what became known as the ‘HMS Bubble’.
At the height of the pandemic, her band of 24 servants were split into two teams of 12 who worked three weeks on and then three weeks off.
They also had to spend a week in quarantine before they got back from leave.
The guardsman were treated as a single household and under the rules they were banned from mixing with other people.
They could not even meet their families to make sure that the Royals were protected. But at the party they broke these rules by mixing with locals, sources said.
An Army source added: ‘There was never any danger to the Queen and Prince Philip. They would have had absolutely no contact with the royals or members of the royal household.’
The other three guardsmen, including a more senior lance sergeant, will be told of their punishment in the coming days.
[ad_2]
Source link