Lavish wedding of notorious drug baron attended by crime lords with tables named after jails

Edinburgh, England: This is the lavish wedding of a convicted heroin dealer who is now being hounded for tens of thousands of pounds of ill-gotten gains.

Grinning Terry Scott, pictured on the left above, was jailed last month for six years after an undercover police operation targeted his multi-million-pound trafficking network.

Decked out in white tie, dress jacket and kilt, the 32-year-old was already on the police radar when this snap was taken at the reception, held in a posh city hotel.

Unrepentant Scott – who was previously jailed for his role as the getaway driver in a pub shooting – even named the tables after Scottish prisons where he has served time, the Daily Record reports.

Champagne-guzzling guests ate at 'Shotts', 'Saughton', 'Perth' and 'Addiewell', while the top table, where he sat with new bride Gillian, 32, was called the 'High Court'.

Sitting alongside Scott in the centre is best man Michael Wright, 30, who was also arrested over the bar shooting, while seated to the right is Don Webley – a reputed gangland enforcer and the first person to be banned from every nightclub in Edinburgh for life.

Sources say Webley’s younger brother Marc – jailed for gunning down a rival in a motorbike ambush during a drugs war – was supposed to be best man but had to miss the event because consorting with criminals could see his licence revoked.

Scott is said to have put a 'four or five-figure' sum behind the bar at the Norton House Hotel and Spa in Ingliston, Edinburgh, to pay for drinks during the celebrations. Hotel staff were said to have been terrified by the guests’ behaviour, which included snorting cocaine.

Police were aware of the nuptials, attended by many of Edinburgh’s most notorious gangsters.

The Crown Office confirmed that Scott is being pursued under the Proceeds of Crime Act for money he is believed to have amassed from drug peddling.

His wife Gillian works as the e-commerce boss for government agency Historic Scotland, and was arrested during a police probe into her husband’s illegal activities.

The mother of one, who manages the agency’s website, was initially reported to the Crown Office over money laundering claims but the case was later dropped.

It is understood that staff at Historic Scotland – who run sites like Edinburgh Castle – were visited by detectives from the Organised Crime and Counter Terrorism Unit on several occasions and quizzed over phone calls made to a mobile phone belonging to the agency.

A source said: “It was a Who’s Who of Edinburgh criminals at the reception. The only person who wasn’t there was Marc Webley as he was out on licence. He would’ve been returned to jail for mixing with criminals.