logo
EU Cracks Down on $700M Customs Fraud Ring Tied to Chinese Imports

EU Cracks Down on $700M Customs Fraud Ring Tied to Chinese Imports

Yahoo30-06-2025
A coordinated raid by the European Public Prosecutor's Office (EPPO) across four major cities earlier this week saw the arrest of 10 suspects—including two customs officers—for fraudulently importing goods from China as part of a wider crime ring responsible for 700 million euros ($820 million) in total damages.
The customs fraud scheme was allegedly conducted mainly through Greece's Port of Piraeus, and enabled the perpetrators to evade customs duties and the E.U.'s value-added tax (VAT).
More from Sourcing Journal
China Trade Deal Solidified As Talks With Canada Devolve
Tariffs Upend Fashion Sourcing and Disrupt Cash Flow Amid Widening Trade Gap
FedEx Faces $170M in Tariff Headwinds as US Cracks Down on De Minimis
Textiles, footwear, e-scooters and e-bikes are among the goods flooding the E.U. market that have been seized as part of the raid, called 'Calypso' by the authorities.
Identities of the suspects have not been released.
The raids took place across Athens; Madrid; Paris; and Sofia, Bulgaria; and encompassed 101 searches at the offices of customs brokers, companies controlled by the organized criminal groups under investigation and the premises of the suspects. The bust extended to offices of tax advisors, lawyers, accounts and transportation companies.
As part of the raids, law enforcement agents seized 5.8 million euros ($6.8 million) in different currencies, including Hong Kong dollars, euros in digital wallets and cryptocurrencies.
Greek authorities have conducted more than 20 raids, including the home of the alleged ringleader, a Chinese national, according to a report from Athens-based publication eKathimerini. Freezing orders were also issued in the country to seize real estate, boats and bank accounts.
And in Spain, 11 real estate assets were also seized, as well as 27 vehicles and luxury items such as bags, watches and jewelry.
Across the four major cities, law enforcement also confiscated 7,133 e-bikes and 3,696 e-scooters, as well as 480 containers for further checks and verification in the Port of Piraeus. Firearms and cold weapons were found and seized in the houses of three of the suspects.
According to the EPPO, the alleged criminal enterprise is mainly controlled by Chinese nationals, with several separate organizations handling different links of the scheme, including distribution to the market's different member states, as well as sales to end customers.
The criminal activity focused on exploiting Customs Procedure 42 (CP42), a mechanism designed to simplify cross-border trade by exempting importers from paying VAT in the country of import, if the imported goods are subsequently transported to another E.U. country.
A network of professional enablers including customs brokers, service providers and accounting firms helped facilitate the initial clearance at the Piraeus customs entry point.
To evade customs duties, the actors would use false documents to either undervalue or misclassify the goods, and produce false invoices and transport documents to conceal the real destination of the goods.
This enabled the actors to evade CP42, as the goods were not forwarded to the declared destinations. Instead, they stored the imports in secret warehouses controlled by the separate criminal organizations and distributed them via illicit channels.
From there, the organizations recruited a large network of sham companies used for the fake sales and deliveries to hide the fraudulent chain. This allowed the groups to sell the products at a competitive price—and for cash—since the VAT remained unpaid and customs duties and anti-dumping fees are largely evaded.
When the final sale is made, the groups launder the money and send the profits back to China.
The investigation was carried out across 14 countries: Bulgaria, China, Czechia, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain.
Of the 700 million euros ($820 million) in total estimated damages, more than 250 million euros ($292.5 million) came from evaded customs duties—which contribute directly to the E.U. budget. Another nearly 450 million euros ($526.5 million) came from the unpaid VAT.
The total damage caused by the fraudulent scheme under investigation is likely much higher, the EPPO says.
The Port of Piraeus is majority owned and operated by China-based Cosco Shipping. EPPO did not indicate whether there were any ties to the Chinese national suspect arrested in Greece.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI Startup Perplexity makes $34.5 billion bid for Google's Chrome browser
AI Startup Perplexity makes $34.5 billion bid for Google's Chrome browser

Los Angeles Times

timea minute ago

  • Los Angeles Times

AI Startup Perplexity makes $34.5 billion bid for Google's Chrome browser

AI startup Perplexity made a formal offer to acquire Google's Chrome browser for $34.5 billion, an audacious bid to get ahead of a potential requirement for the search giant to sell the web browser in US antitrust proceedings. The unsolicited bid, which Perplexity intends to fund with the help of outside investors, was sent to Alphabet Inc.'s Google on Tuesday morning, a Perplexity spokesperson said. It comes not long after rival artificial intelligence startup OpenAI also expressed interest in acquiring Chrome, which together with the open-source Chromium software is the main way people access the web on PCs. Google didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. After a federal judge found last year that Google has an illegal monopoly in internet search, the US government has said it wants Google to sell the Chrome browser and license search data to competitors, among other proposed changes. US District Judge Amit Mehta, who heard the case, is expected to issue a ruling in the coming days with remedies to prevent the company from monopolizing the online search market. San Francisco-based startup Perplexity, which has sought to woo users from Google by offering search powered by AI, earlier this year raised $100 million in a round of funding that valued it at $18 billion, Bloomberg News reported. That raises the question of how Perplexity could afford to follow through on its Chrome offer. 'Multiple large investment funds have agreed to finance the transaction in full,' Perplexity Chief Business Officer Dmitry Shevelenko said. Perplexity declined to name the firms. It isn't the first time Perplexity has made an offer for a major internet property ahead of a forced transition. Earlier this year, the company also submitted a bid to TikTok parent ByteDance Ltd., to merge with its US operations and create a new entity. TikTok is facing a US ban without a deal. The field of web browsers has seen renewed interest as AI companies seek to build agents that can complete online shopping and other tasks for users. Perplexity has said it is preparing to release a browser called Comet that features an AI agent. The company added that it would not make any 'stealth modifications' to Chrome. 'This is part of our commitment to continuity and choice for users, and will likely be seen as having the benefit of stability for Google and its many advertisers,' the spokesperson wrote. If the bid is accepted and a deal is approved, Perplexity said it would invest $3 billion over the next two years in Chrome and Chromium and 'extend offers to a substantial portion of Chrome talent.' The company added that its offer to Google did not include any equity in Perplexity — to avoid any antitrust concerns. Love writes for Bloomberg.

Maine Township National Night Out included farm animals, food collection for community food pantry
Maine Township National Night Out included farm animals, food collection for community food pantry

Chicago Tribune

timea minute ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Maine Township National Night Out included farm animals, food collection for community food pantry

Maine Township joined other municipalities and police departments nationwide to host a National Night Out event, and the township's is billed as one of the oldest celebrations. The township National Night Out Against Crime event took place Aug. 5 at Dee Park in unincorporated Des Plaines. It was among many events presented on the first Tuesday in August across the country for the annual campaign aimed at promoting police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie. Maine Township Clerk Peter Gialamas told Pioneer Press the celebration was coordinated with the Cook County sheriff's office, the Niles-based Golf Maine Park District and the Des Plaines-based North Maine Fire Protection District. 'One of the goals of National Night Out is to really bring the community and the local law enforcement together, and we've found that National Night Out does a great job of that,' said Gialamas who has chaired Maine Township's National Night Out committee for about 12 years. According to the township website, the NNO theme this year was, 'From Patrols to Partnerships, We Are In This Together.' The night offered games, entertainment, raffle prizes, activities, demos, JG's Reptile Road Show, a petting zoo, popcorn, popsicles, representatives from Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge and a safety walk. 'They get to see the police officers that are patrolling the streets on a daily basis, get to talk to them, get to see the vehicles that we use, and it really is a great way for the community to interact,' Gialamas said. Penny Mateck, from the sheriff's community relations unit, told Pioneer Press the partnership to bring National Night Out to Maine Township goes back more than 30 years. 'We want the community to feel safe. We want them to feel comfortable coming to us with questions or whatever their concerns may be,' Mateck said. 'This is a really great way in a non-enforcement kind of event to connect with the community and let them know who we are.' According to Mateck, the sheriff's office offered activities such as 911 trivia as a teaching element especially for younger children and brought out vehicles including those used by the bomb unit, police and the Special Weapons and Tactics, or SWAT, team. 'The kids can sit in the squad cars. They can sit where the police sit. They can sit in the back seat where bad guys sit,' Mateck said about how the community is engaged. 'For some reason, the kids like to sit in the back seat and check that out.' Mateck said the sheriff's office also brings one of its bomb-sniffing canine officers and some of its partner agencies bringing their K-9s. 'We're out here every year on the first Tuesday of August and it's a time where the police and the community can come together,' Mateck said. 'It's really in an effort to keep the community safe and fight crime.' The event also featured the 'Stuff the Squad' fundraising effort, which Mateck said accepts grocery donations for the Maine Township food pantry that is located in Park Ridge. 'A lot of times donations are low, so this is a way to try to help them through the summer months,' Mateck said. Maine Township includes parts of Des Plaines, Park Ridge, Niles, Glenview, Morton Grove and Rosemont. According to Maine Township's website, National Night Out, which also was sponsored by Neighborhood Watch and community businesses, Gialamas said NNO is part of an effort to educate residents on crime prevention and safety. 'It's very important that they trust the law officers that are patrolling the streets,' Gialamas said. 'Especially the young kids, if they can see them, meet them and understand they're here to help them, that is just something that continues to grow and builds trust in the community.' Mateck explained that the police and the community collaborate to combat crime. 'The community is really the eyes and ears for the police department,' Mateck said. 'They will call the police when they see something suspicious. They will tell us things that help solve crime so that partnership is really important because they're really the other portion of the team that works together to keep the community safe.'

Iconic US film company Kodak warns it may go out of business
Iconic US film company Kodak warns it may go out of business

USA Today

timea minute ago

  • USA Today

Iconic US film company Kodak warns it may go out of business

The American company credited with revolutionizing amateur photography is warning it could go out of business after more than 130 years. The Rochester, New York-based Eastman Kodak Co. offered a bleak picture of its financials in earnings reports and filings, tracking a second quarter loss and sending shares tumbling in early trading Tuesday, Aug. 12. The iconic brand said in Monday, Aug. 11 government filings that there is "substantial doubt" about the company's ability to continue, as it faces more than $470 million in debt and slashes its pension plan in an attempt to remain afloat. "Kodak has debt coming due within twelve months and does not have committed financing or available liquidity to meet such debt obligations if they were to become due in accordance with their current terms," the company said in its filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Kodak became one of the most iconic American companies in the late 19th century with the introducton of the Kodak #1 camera in 1888, credited with making photography accessible to the everyday person. Though it rose to prominence for its film photography products, it struggled to adapt to the changing industry as digital imaging took over, with the company filing for bankruptcy in 2012. In recent years, it has pursued specialty chemicals and pharmaceuticals. This camera revolutionized photography: Whatever happened to the Kodak Instamatic? Tariffs had no 'material impact' In its most recent earnings report, Kodak said its consolidated revenues were $263 million at the end of the quarter on June 30, a decrease of $4 million since the same period last year. Gross profit decreased 12% compared to last year's second quarter end, Kodak disclosed, and its cash balance sits at $155 million, marking a loss of just under 23% since the end of December. Jim Continenza, Kodak's Executive Chairman and CEO, said tariffs have not had a "material impact" on its businesses, noting the domestic production of many of its products such as printing plates, film, inkjet presses and inks and pharmaceutical ingredients. What's next for Kodak? Kodak's chief financial officer David Bullwinkle said in the company's Aug. 11 statement it plans to focus on its advanced chemicals and materials sector moving forward, and said the cut to its retirement program is going toward paying down its debt. He said the company expects to "have a clear understanding" by Friday, Aug. 15 of how it will meet its debt obligations. "For the second half of the year, we will continue to focus on reducing costs today and converting our investments into long-term growth," Bullwinkle said. The company was founded by George Eastman in 1889 and renamed a few years later to the Eastman Kodak Company. Eastman's Kodak Brownie camera introduced in 1900 made photography accessible to everyday Americans, later introducing color versions in the 1920s and 1930s, and offering the world's first digital camera in 1975. Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@ and on X @KathrynPlmr.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store