Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Jobless Londoner To Spend 46 Months In Jail For Dodging Tax On Smuggled Tobacco

A jobless Londoner who enjoyed a sociable lifestyle of golf and exotic holidays by dodging tax on smuggled tobacco has been jailed for 46 months.

Dhanji Varsani, 56, from Mill Hill, North West London, shipped in 6,930 kilograms of hand-rolling tobacco worth £1.2 million in unpaid excise duty, an investigation by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) revealed.


Varsani pleaded guilty to evading excise duty at Harrow Crown Court on November 6, 2018, and was sentenced on Thursday (11) to three years and 10 months in jail.

The tobacco- hidden in a shipment of pocket tissues- arrived in a trailer on a container ship into Purfleet in Essex, but was traced to a storage company, IFL Sea & Air in Southall, West London and to Varsani.

Despite claiming to be unemployed, Varsani lived a lifestyle of driving high-powered vehicles, playing at top golf courses and enjoying holidays in places like Dubai.

Matt Palmer, Assistant Director, Fraud Investigation Service, HMRC, said, “Varsani thought he was above the law and could flout his wealth playing at top golf courses - but now he’s in the bunker. He is paying the price for denying a living for decent, hard-working retailers who don’t trade in such dodgy tobacco and have to fight against an unfair playing field.

“Varsani cheated the public purse of the equivalent of the annual salary of 43 New London nurses. HMRC continues to work with other enforcement agencies to reduce the availability of illicit tobacco, which costs the UK around £2.5 billion a year,” Palmer added.

More For You

JLR

JLR experienced a £1.5 billion fall in sales

Getty Images

JLR resumes UK production after cyberattack halts plants for weeks

INDIA's Tata Motors-owned Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has returned to normal production in the UK after a major cyberattack forced the company to shut down its factories for several weeks, hitting sales, supply chains and the wider economy.

The British carmaker halted its systems in early September to contain the attack. Production restarted in phases from October, and the company confirmed on Friday (14) that operations are now back to normal across its UK sites in Solihull, Halewood and Wolverhampton.

Keep ReadingShow less