Latest news with #DaleMartin
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Mysterious boat anchors itself off Flagler Beach, officials investigate
FLAGLER BEACH — Officials are trying to figure out what a boat is doing planted off shore south of the Flagler Beach Pier. The vessel had elevated itself off the surf Thursday evening a few hundred yards south of the city's shuttered pier. But Flagler Beach City Manager Dale Martin said Friday the vessel had nothing to do with the pier. He thinks the boat is related to an undersea cable project that is supposed to come ashore in the area, but he's working to confirm that. The vessel is a dive boat named the Polly L, according to It is 22 meters long and 12 meters wide or 72 feet by 39 feet. The boat left St. Augustine and headed south earlier Thursday. Now open in Flagler Beach: The Compass Hotel by Margaritaville 'It's 5 O'clock somewhere': Flagler Beach restaurant opens at Compass Hotel by Margaritaville As for the pier, Martin said crews are expected to start mobilizing in two weeks to begin taking down the battered Flagler Beach Pier. Once it's removed, they will start building the new pier. The project should take about 18 months, so the new pier is projected to be open by December 2026. While there has been news about changes at FEMA under the Trump administration, there is no indication that the $18 million in funding for the Flagler Beach Pier project is at risk. FEMA will fund 75% of the project while the Department of Emergency Management will fund 12.5% and the Department of Environmental Protection will fund another 12.5% . 'The city hasn't had any word that that funding is in jeopardy or has been reduced or anything at all,' Martin said. City Commissioner Scott Spradley also said he did not anticipate any issues with federal funding for the pier project. Spradley said in a phone interview Thursday that the money was already designated for the pier and it was highly unlikely that would change. This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Flagler Beach queries mysterious boat rising off surf near pier
Yahoo
25-04-2025
- Yahoo
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.


Telegraph
25-04-2025
- Business
- Telegraph
‘Crime pays': Criminals driving Lamborghinis abroad to sell thanks to legal loophole
Lamborghinis and other luxury cars bought with the proceeds of crime are being driven abroad to be sold off, the National Crime Agency (NCA) has warned ministers. The agency said a gap in the law means police officers cannot intervene to seize the vehicles unless there is direct evidence to link them to a crime. It said the loophole means criminals are being left free to launder their illicit gains by selling the cars and using the cash receipts 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 being targeted by the NCA 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 declared value of £130,000 was spotted leaving the country to be delivered to the EU by two people with extensive criminal records for serious offending. 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 to stop them from leaving the UK. 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. Items already included on this list also include precious metals, precious stones and watches. The latest Home Office asset recovery bulletin, published in September last year, showed there was 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.