More than £800,000 seized from a group of men trying to smuggle the cash out of the UK at Stansted Airport will be returned to the public purse.
The money was found stuffed into the checked-in luggage of six Italians, who were stopped by Border Force officers just before boarding a flight from Stansted to Podgorica, Montenegro, on February 2, 2019.
When questioned, Pietro Doca, William Cerri, Giuseppino Anfosso, Giovanni Piazza, Angelo Inferrera and Nicola Anfosso all claimed they traded in the sale and purchase of high value watches, such as Rolexes and Audemars Piguets.
However, nobody from the group could provide evidence - such as receipts or bank statements - that the money was linked to watch sales.
They were also unable to confirm how much the watches had sold for, despite claiming this had happened the day before the seizure.
The group additionally claimed to be carrying a total of £676,000 in cash, a difference of £142,025 from the £818,025 seized from them by officers.
The National Crime Agency (NCA) has now secured a forfeiture order on the cash seized.
The NCA’s case, heard at Folkestone Magistrates’ Court on Thursday, was that the cash was derived from money laundering and/or intended for use in unlawful conduct, and therefore recoverable.
The NCA believes the cash was being couriered by the group for an unknown third party to avoid transferring it via legitimate means, such as through the banking system, which would have provided an audit trail.
None of the men attended the hearing, at which the court ordered the forfeiture of all the cash seized, plus interest accrued, and legal costs of £5,099.
Mark Howes, NCA branch commander, said: “The accounts given by these men regarding the origins of this cash just weren’t credible.
“Not only did they fail to declare the money, despite being given numerous opportunities to do so, but the way it had been stuffed into the suitcases clearly suggested it hadn’t come from a legitimate source.
“The use of civil powers in cases like this allow us to target suspected criminal cash, which really helps deprive suspected criminals of their profits.”
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