A FORMER milkman who masterminded a plot to smuggle ten million illicit cigarettes into the country has been jailed.

Paul Joyce, 41, originally from Consett, County Durham, was extradited from Thailand by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to face justice in the region.

He fled to the Far East in 2008, hours before the other members of his gang answered bail for the £1.7m excise duty evasion.

With his criminal empire in tatters, the one-time crime boss began building a new life in Asia.

Months later, his six associates were handed jail sentences totalling 12 years.

But, in April 2015, after more than six years on the run, Joyce was captured at a luxury hotel in the coastal resort of Hua Hin in a joint operation between HMRC and Thai police.

Cheryl Burr, assistant director of the Fraud Investigation Service at HMRC, said: “Paul Joyce thought he could dodge justice by running away to Thailand, leaving his accomplices to serve their time while he soaked up the sunshine, but now he’s swapped the exotic beaches of Thailand for a prison cell.

“We will always seek to track down, detain and escort criminals like Joyce back to this country to have their day in court.

“Disrupting criminal trade is at the heart of our strategy to clamp down on the illicit tobacco market, which costs the UK around £2.1 billion a year.”

Evidence against Joyce, who previously ran a milk round business, began to mount following his disappearance.

Turning to airline records, HMRC investigators revealed he had jetted to Bangkok in December 2008.

With the net closing in, HMRC secured a warrant for his extradition and, on April 22 this year, he was arrested by the Royal Thai Police in the car park of the plush Sea-Cret hotel.

After serving ten weeks in a Thai jail, Joyce was escorted back to Newcastle by HMRC officers.

Newcastle Crown Court heard today (Monday, October 26) how, during the fraud, Joyce had presided over a gang that was caught red-handed, on six occasions, with a total of ten million non-duty paid cigarettes, passing off their illicit cargo on import paperwork as everything from clothing to dog food.

In May 2008, three of Joyce’s associates were caught unloading a shipment of almost six million cigarettes at a warehouse in Billingham, Teesside.

But, unruffled by the seizure, the men continued to operate, moving further large quantities of contraband across the North-East.

Joyce’s status as the gang’s kingpin was confirmed by mobile phone evidence linking him to his co-conspirators, proving he was in charge and pinpointing his whereabouts to key geographical locations.

Joyce pleaded guilty to the fraudulent evasion of excise duty and was jailed for two years and eleven months by Recorder Euan Duff.