Two men who were busted in a Dorset hotel with numerous wraps of cocaine and heroin have been jailed.

Gideon Yeboah, 19, and Mohammed Khan, 18, both of no fixed address, pleaded guilty to two counts of being concerned in the supply of class A drugs.

A sentencing hearing at Bournemouth Crown Court on Tuesday, February 21, heard how the pair – originally from Watford – were caught red handed in a room at the Ocean Beach Hotel in Boscombe on November 30 last year.

Yeboah and Khan were at the hotel along with two 16-year-olds with special educational needs, one of whom alerted his sister to their whereabouts. The sister contacted the Metropolitan Police who in turn alerted Dorset Police.

Officers entered the hotel room in East Overcliff Drive before Yeboah and Khan attempted to flee. Yeboah engaged in a struggle with one of the officers before assaulting him.

Dorset Echo: Ocean Beach Hotel in East Overcliff Drive, Bournemouth.Ocean Beach Hotel in East Overcliff Drive, Bournemouth. (Image: Google)

Prosecuting barrister Stuart Ellacott told the court how Yeboah punched the officer “several times” in the head and face resulting in the officer sustaining a bloodied nose.

Khan, meanwhile, attempted to flee down the fire escape stairs but was apprehended after a short chase.

Mr Ellacott added a search for drugs “didn’t require much looking”, with evidence of cocaine and heroin scattered across the room. A hotel tea and coffee tray was used to help wrap the drugs.

In total, police found nine wraps of cocaine and 18 wraps of heroin within the room.

Yeboah and Khan were defended by Philomena Murphy and Kevin Hill, respectively. Ms Murphy stated while Yeboah should be punished, she stressed he was a pawn to a wider network.

“There is certainly a bigger operation at play here,” she said.

“This young man was barely just 19 at the time. There is a degree of immaturity and vulnerability about him.”

Dorset Echo: Bournemouth Crown CourtBournemouth Crown Court (Image: Newsquest)

Mr Hill too directed Judge Stephen Climie’s attention to the maturity of Khan. He said: “It’s clear that he entirely accepts his involvement. He is not trying to minimise what he has done in any way.

“This is not the life he wanted to live, and does not want to live.”

Judge Climie agreed the defendants represented “classic recruitment” for county lines and stated their age was a “very important factor” in his sentencing.

Khan was sentenced to two years in prison, plus a further six months for an earlier offence relating to carrying a knife in public to which he pleaded guilty.

Yeboah was sentenced to two years, plus a further two months for the assault of the police officer, which he also admitted.

In his sentencing remarks, Judge Climie said: “Understand this gentlemen, if you come back and it’s Class A drugs [again], you’ll very soon find yourself serving sentences in double figures. Hopefully, the beginning of a corner being turned is going to be turned full force.”