Pubdate: 2 October 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: John Steele, Crime Correspondent COURT ORDERS SEIZURE OF POUNDS 3M 'DRUG MONEY' A COURT yesterday ruled that almost pounds 3 million in cash brought into Britain from Nigeria by a businessman could be kept by the Government as it was likely to have come from drug trafficking. The cash was forfeited under civil law and the man who brought it in did not face criminal prosecution. Customs and Excise said the case was by far the largest it had mounted under the 1994 Drug Trafficking Act - which allows it to detain cash and apply to a court for its forfeiture if there is a suspicion that it comes from drug trafficking. The man who lost the money in a ruling by magistrates at Uxbridge in west London had contested the case. Alhaji Daura claimed the pounds 2,998,700 - in pounds 50 notes in three pieces of luggage which he brought from Nigeria to Heathrow on his private jet on March 15 last year - was to buy a consignment of rice he intended to export to Nigeria. Customs investigators, who suspected that the money was the proceeds of drug trafficking, produced evidence discrediting his story. A spokesman said it was shown that documents put forward by Mr Daura were forgeries. They purported to show he had obtained the money from transactions at a bureau de change in Lagos, Nigeria. But Customs investigators found the bureau did not issue the cash. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart