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| Tuesday, 17 April, 2001, 17:19 GMT 18:19 UK Smuggler jailed for cigarette scam ![]() A haul of 6m cigarettes was found by customs officers A "major player" in a scam involving the Russian mafia to smuggle millions of cigarettes into Scotland has been jailed for three-and-a-half-years. James McCaffrey, 55, from Glasgow, set up a fake Lada car dealership to work with Russian mobsters and bring over 2m cigarettes from the former Soviet Union to Scotland. But the fraud was discovered by HM Customs officers who found a total of 6m cigarettes hidden in scrap metal consignments at Felixstowe Docks in Suffolk. Officers then raided McCaffrey's home in the east end of Glasgow and found �115,000 in cash.
He admitted the smuggling charge at an earlier court appearance, and sentence had been deferred for reports. A second accused Robert Murchie, 35, from, Airdrie was sentenced to 200 hours community service for being caught with 50,000 of the cigarettes. He was intending to sell them on in pubs and clubs in the west of Scotland and evade paying over �6000 worth of duty. 'Honest taxpayers' The convictions follow the trial from last month of 39-year-old former police officer James Jardine, of Baillieston, Glasgow, who was found not proven on the same charges. On Tuesday, judge Lord Dawson said McCaffrey had been a major player in a well prepared plan to smuggle 2m cigarettes from Russia into Scotland and depriving the Exchequer of �250,000. At the High Court in Glasgow, Lord Dawson said: "The plan to deprive honest taxpayers of this amount of revenue was only prevented by the dedicated efforts of the Customs and Excise officers who are to be praised in this long involved case." The judge said that Murchie was a lesser player in the smuggling racket and sentenced him to carry out 200 hours community service. International smuggling gang Lord Dawson said he had planned to impose a heavy fine on McCaffrey on top of his jail sentence, but did not do so because of the moves by the Crown to confiscate the �115,000 found in his home. After the sentence the Customs officer responsible for the case, Alan Dryden said: "This is not just the seizure of 6m cigarettes but the destruction of a much wider sophisticated international smuggling gang. "It shows our determination to crack down on this serious criminal activity and disrupt the flow of illegal tobacco. "The convictions were a triumph for Scots Customs investigators who smashed the smuggling scam after a major surveillance operation codenamed Operation Avon." |
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