Pubdate: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2000 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Author: Jon Ungoed-Thomas and Mark Macaskill DRUG GANGS SMUGGLE CIGARETTES BY BILLION Drug syndicates are turning to cigarette smuggling because the profits are greater and the risks, if caught, are smaller. The gangs are shipping billions of illegal cigarettes through Britain's eastern ports, which customs investigators have discovered are the biggest gateway used by tobacco smugglers. New figures reveal that the illegal trade, which mainly targets Felixstowe in Suffolk and uses freight containers and lorries, dwarfs the imports by tobacco gangs at Dover who use van drivers and foot passengers with holdall bags. Profits of more than UKP1m a day can be made in cigarette smuggling and several criminals are now known to have built up international property portfolios from the trade. One smuggler, who had a brandy distillery in Cognac and a flat in Cannes, even continued his smuggling operation after being jailed for bootlegging. Seizures of contraband cigarettes at Britain's eastern ports rose from 31m in 1998 to more than 350m last year. Customs officers admit that billions more cigarettes have passed undetected through the ports with the majority smuggled from Egypt, China, Singapore and eastern Europe. Contraband cigarettes are usually concealed within the cargo or inside a lorry frame. Others are openly transported with forged paperwork. Gangs - some of which have been involved in the drug trade - smuggle up to 15m cigarettes in each shipment. One gang due to appear in court this week smuggled cigarettes from Lithuania, through Harwich in Essex, to a Norfolk farm used as a makeshift distribution centre. In one shipment more than 1m cigarettes were hidden in clothing and another 500,000 were concealed in the floor of a lorry. After Gordon Brown's budget increase of 25p on a packet of cigarettes last week, the government announced a UKP209m programme to combat smugglers. But Britain's retailers believe Customs will be unable to stem the massive increase in contraband cigarettes. Customs officers last week said organised crime using freight accounts for about 80% of smuggled cigarettes. "White van man has been seen off," said a customs spokesman. "Most smugglers are backed by organised gangs who have financial backing and more sophisticated techniques." Smugglers who import cigarettes transport them to a distribution point, usually a warehouse. Couriers then transport the cigarettes to "wholesalers" around the country. They are subsequently sold in shops, pubs and street markets. At a south London market last week, it took less than 20 minutes to find a wholesale supplier. The seller, dressed in a baseball cap and designer jeans, offered an undercover reporter 200 cigarettes for UKP25 - just UKP2.50 a packet. "You can have 1,000 cigarettes now, then I can do as many as you want on a weekly basis," he said. The trade is so profitable that some of the country's biggest crime gangs have moved into tobacco. "On some occasions we have been targeting gangs for drugs and have found they're dealing in cigarettes instead," said Tim Mahony, of the National Crime Squad. Ellis Martin, who ran the so-called A-gang in East Anglia, found the freight trade so lucrative that he kept the business going even after he was sent to jail. In two years, Martin generated profits of UKP18m while serving a sentence for smuggling. Martin, 41, used offshore accounts to fund the operation and built up an extensive property portfolio with the profits. In December he was sentenced to another nine years in jail and was ordered to repay the public purse UKP10m. Another East Anglian cigarette smuggling ring was smashed by Customs after a two-month surveillance operation. The gang, which included two Lithuanian lorry drivers, removed the insulation materials from refrigerated trucks to create false floors and ceilings. Blackberry Farm in Long Stratton, Norfolk, was used as the distribution centre for an estimated 7m cigarettes which were smuggled in through Harwich. Six men have pleaded guilty and are due to be sentenced at Norwich crown court this week. Other importers falsify the paperwork and openly import the cigarettes. "I make about 65% profit on each carton," said one last week. "Some of the big boys are making UKP1m a day. There is no way it can be stopped, it is too big." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson