Criminals driving Lamborghinis abroad to sell – and police can't touch them
Lamborghinis and other luxury cars bought with the proceeds of crime are being driven abroad to be sold, the National Crime Agency (NCA) has warned ministers.
The agency said a gap in the law meant police officers could not intervene to seize the vehicles unless there was direct evidence to link them to a crime.
It said the loophole meant criminals were being left free to launder their illicit gains by selling the cars and using the proceeds to either fund further crime or their lifestyles.
The NCA has asked the Government to legislate to add cars to the group of 'listed assets' – which already include items such as fine art and jewellery – that can be seized by officers on suspicion that they have been bought with unlawful funds.
Expensive cars such as Lamborghinis have been a traditional asset used by criminals to launder their profits. One, with the numberplates 'crime pays', was among £6 million of assets seized from county lines dealers who flooded the UK with cocaine.
Three members of the gang – Leon Ley, 34, Dale Martin, 28, and Daniel Harris, 40 – saw assets also including a Range Rover, luxury caravans and cash confiscated after they were caught trafficking 50kg of drugs from London and Essex to Wales.
The proposed law change would give officers the power to detain the cars before they leave the country and to later pursue forfeiture proceedings at court to take ownership of them.
To avoid this, the owner would have to convince a judge that the car had been bought with legally earned money and counter the agency's case that it had instead been acquired as a way of laundering the proceeds of crime.
The NCA's push for a legal change followed a succession of cases in which officers have had to watch high-value vehicles being driven abroad despite concerns about the criminal background of their owners.
In one example in August last year, a Lamborghini with a value of £130,000 was spotted leaving the country to be delivered to the EU by two people with extensive criminal records.
It was supposedly being driven abroad for 'diagnostic engine work' on behalf of the absent owner. But there was no evidence of bookings for accommodation, garage or return travel, and officers believed the true reason was to launder criminal proceeds by selling the vehicle.
In another case, in June last year, a Lamborghini with a trade value of £182,000, which was driven by the target of a law enforcement investigation, was transported out of the UK via Dover on a trailer. It has not returned.
Officers were unable to act because there was no direct evidence of criminality and no border offence was committed. That meant the vehicles could not be seized.
A source said similar cases involving high-end vehicles being taken out of the UK in suspicious circumstances were 'regularly' seen by other agencies including Border Force, HMRC, Immigration Enforcement and Home Office Intelligence.
By adding cars to the 'listed assets' in the Criminal Finances Act of 2017, they could be seized.
The latest Home Office asset recovery bulletin, published in September last year, showed a total of 163 'listed asset seizures' with a value of £7 million in the financial year to the end of last March – the highest annual total since the seizure power was introduced.
Among those who have laundered criminal assets into cars is Alexander Surin, a fugitive crime lord from London who was dubbed 'Don Car-leone' because he owned so many expensive cars.
Surin was forced to hand over four – three Ferraris and a Rolls-Royce – as well as the profits from the sale of a Bugatti Veyron after admitting in High Court litigation brought by the NCA that they were bought with the proceeds of crime.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
More than £1 billion paid to those wronged by Horizon scandal, Government says
More than £1 billion has been paid in financial redress to subpostmasters wronged by the Horizon IT scandal, the Government has said. The Department for Business and Trade (DBT) said money has now been paid out to more than 7,300 subpostmasters across all Horizon-related redress schemes. The announcement comes just weeks after lead campaigner and former subpostmaster Sir Alan Bates said the schemes had 'turned into quasi-kangaroo courts'. Sir Alan told the Sunday Times last month that DBT 'sits in judgement of the claims and alters the goal posts as and when it chooses'. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 subpostmasters were prosecuted after faulty Horizon accounting software made it look as though money was missing from their accounts. Many are still awaiting compensation. In figures published on Monday, DBT said £559 million has been paid out to 6,337 claimants from the Horizon shortfall scheme. The data also says that of the 555 people who joined Sir Alan Bates in taking the Post Office to court between 2017 and 2019, also known as the Group Litigation Order Scheme (GLO), 488 have received £167 million between them. Elsewhere, £245 million has been paid out to 463 subpostmasters who had their convictions quashed by legislation put in place last summer, and £68 million has been paid to those who have had their convictions quashed in the courts, DBT said. Post Office minister Gareth Thomas said: 'Since entering Government, it has been our priority to speed up the delivery of compensation to victims of the Horizon scandal and today's milestone shows how much progress has been made. 'We are settling cases every day and getting compensation out more quickly for the most complex cases, but the job isn't done until every postmaster has received fair and just redress.' Post Office chief executive Neil Brocklehurst said: 'I welcome the news that over £1 billion has been paid to victims of the Horizon IT Scandal. 'Each week we are seeing more people receive their final settlements so they can begin to look beyond this painful chapter of their lives. 'However, I am also aware that more work remains to be done so that all victims receive full redress as quickly as possible and this is an absolute priority for the Post Office. 'And finally, to anyone else who thinks they may have been affected, I encourage you to come forward and apply for redress.'


Fox News
6 hours ago
- Fox News
FBI searching for suspect who allegedly assaulted federal officer during anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is searching for a suspect accused of assaulting a federal officer and damaging government property during the anti-ICE demonstrations in Los Angeles. The agency is seeking the public's assistance, offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the suspect. On Saturday at about 3:30 p.m., the suspect allegedly threw rocks at law enforcement vehicles on Alondra Blvd. in Paramount, California, resulting in injury to a federal officer and damage to government vehicles. The suspect is considered armed and dangerous. FBI Director Kash Patel warned Saturday night, "if you assault a law enforcement officer, you're going to jail—period." "It doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what cause you claim to represent," Patel told Fox News Digital. "If local jurisdictions won't stand behind the men and women who wear the badge, the FBI will." Patel also issued similar warnings on social media. "Doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you. If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will," Patel wrote Saturday night on X. On Sunday, the FBI head said Los Angeles is "under siege" amid the demonstrations against deportations and ICE raids targeting migrant workers at local businesses. "Just so we are clear, this FBI needs no one's permission to enforce the constitution'" Patel wrote on X. "My responsibility is to the American people, not political punch lines. LA is under siege by marauding criminals, and we will restore law and order. I'm not asking you, I'm telling you." FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino also warned protesters who engage in violence that the agency will be pursuing "all available leads for assault on a federal officer, in addition to the many arrests already made." "Although we'll pursue every case, we don't need to catch every single perp, we just need to catch you," Bongino wrote Sunday on X. "A short time ago, the Director and I notified our teams to use all of our investigative and technological tools to pursue you long after order is firmly established. We will not forget. Even after you try to." The Trump administration has also taken over the National Guard and deployed troops in Los Angeles to respond to demonstrations. The president has also threatened to send active-duty Marines. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, has denounced the federal government's move to deploy the National Guard and has requested that the administration rescind its deployment of troops and return them to his command. The governor said the state will file a lawsuit against the administration over the federal deployment. "Trump is trying to manufacture a crisis in LA County — deploying troops not for order, but to create chaos," Newsom wrote Sunday on X. "Don't take the bait. Never use violence or harm law enforcement." "President Trump is escalating the situation by threatening to deploy roughly 500 active-duty Marines to the streets of Los Angeles," he said in another post. "Los Angeles: Remain peaceful. Don't fall into the trap that extremists are hoping for." Newsom added in another post that Trump "wants chaos and he's instigated violence." "Those who assault law enforcement or cause property damage will risk arrest," he wrote. "Stay peaceful. Stay focused. Don't give him the excuse he's looking for." Los Angeles Democrat mayor Karen Bass has also urged the administration to end the federal deployment.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
He told investigators that he was a male escort and ended up getting 21 years
He told investigators that he earned his money through being a male escort alongside a martial arts teacher and personal trainer. But in fact, Kulvir Shergill headed up an organised crime group (OCG that imported millions of pounds of cocaine into the United Kingdom. Around 250kg of the Class A drug was imported into the country between February 26 and April 24 in 2020. READ MORE: Gangsters who used drill rap videos to lure children into drug dealing network jailed Get breaking news on BirminghamLive WhatsApp, click the link to join That had a whopping street value of £20 million. Using the now-defunct encrypted communications platform EncroChat, Shergill and other OCG members would arrange deals. Shergill used the handle 'orderlyswarmer' and liaised with contacts in Netherlands to find out when delivering would be coming over. Then Shergill would distribute them to other OCGs around the country. But his downfall came when he and his other accomplices were arrested in 2020. Shergill denied smuggling Class A drugs but eventually admitted the offence. On 20 September last year, the 43-year-old, of Bhullar Way in Oldbury, was jailed for 21 years at Birmingham Crown Court. Meanwhile, on Thursday afternoon (June 5), the final member of the OCG was jailed for the same offences. Jagdeep Singh, aged 43, of Bloomfield Road, Tipton, worked as an electrician by trade. He was tasked with taking receipt of drugs deliveries and acted as a warehouseman. During his arrest on April 23, 2020, he had 30kg worth of high purity cocaine in his possession. Singh is now behind bars, serving a six year and eight month sentence. Elsewhere, three other members of the OCG were sent to locked up in September. Shergill's second-in-command was Khurram Mohammed, aged 37, of Barker Street, Oldbury, who was a trusted worker. He was jailed for 14 years and four months. While Shakfat Ali, aged 38, travelled around the UK on the OCG's behalf and is believed to have delivered drugs. Ali, from Oldbury, was jailed for 16 years and nine months. While Mohammed Sajad, 44, of Norton Crescent, Birmingham, who was a trusted member of the group, was jailed for 16 years. He was already serving a seven-year sentence before these offences after West Midlands Police found six firearms, a large amount of ammunition and a quantity of Class A drugs at his house in May 2020. Rick Mackenzie, NCA operations manager, said: "These offenders formed a significant crime group in the West Midlands and had far-reaching contacts to help them peddle drugs all around the UK. "Shergill and his accomplices are directly responsible for the horrendous consequences Class A drugs have among our communities. "The NCA and partners at home and abroad will continue to fight the threat of illegal drugs. "Proceeds of crime proceedings have been started and all identified assets owned by the defendants have been frozen and are currently under restraint. "The NCA will work with our partners at the CPS to ensure that any money made from their drug enterprise is recovered." The NCA lead Operation Venetic, the UK response to the takedown of EncroChat.