On the run former Doncaster prisoner flies back to UK - and taunts cops by filming himself outside police station
Notorious gangster Sam Walker, who fled the UK to Africa, was smuggled back in on a secret helicopter flight - and brazenly shared a video of him near a police station with patrol cars whizzing past him.
The convicted drug dealer, who spent time at Doncaster's Marsghate jail, last month gloated on camera with a guide to how to escape the country, revealing how he had fled to Sierra Leone.
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Hide AdAccording to the Daily Mail, Walker, 34, of Liverpool, was last week flown into a field in northern England before being driven away in a waiting car.
He then spent the night in a plush £250-a-night Hilton hotel room, overlooking the headquarters of Merseyside Police, as revealed in another 'step-by-step' video put on YouTube.
Walker, who has more than 100 offences under his belt, is wanted for failing to show up for court for driving without a licence.
To get back to the UK, he crossed the border from Sierra Leone to Guinea, chartered a plane to Dubai, took another plane to north Africa, crossed the Mediterranean on speedboat to Italy and took a flight to Barcelona.
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Hide AdHe then boarded a boat to Portugal, crossed the border to north-west Spain, took a helicopter to France and continued to northern England by helicopter
Parked up outside a Cheshire police HQ, in Winsford, he laughs at the camera as patrol cars with blue lights pull out of the station and challenges: 'Cheshire Police, Merseyside Police, catch me if you can."
Last month, he released a step-by-step video guide on how to flee the country after fleeing more than 5,000 miles to Sierra Leone.
After his arrival in the country's capital, Freetown, Walker taunted police in a video telling them: 'Better luck trying to catch me when I go out of the country next time, Merseyside Police.'
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Hide AdWalker was cleared in 2013 of being involved in a plan to smuggle drugs and mobile phones into Doncaster prison - where he was an inmate at the time - after which he unveiled a black T-shirt bearing the slogan 'Not Guilty'
He claims he has been in Sierra Leone delivering charity donations to people living in slums in the city's capital.