Counterfeit tobacco gang

A gang found with millions of counterfeit cigarettes at a Lincolnshire farm has been handed prison sentences totalling 26 years.

The six men were caught with more than 6.5millon cigarettes, worth more than £1.8m in evaded duty.

Officers from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) arrested Marcin Kopec, and Wojciech Rymarczuk as they unloaded three large shipping containers at the farm in June 2019.

Gang leader, Tomasz Skubis, 37, and co-conspirators, Idrees Ahmed, 44 and Ali Tofiq, 45, were arrested on the same day 19 miles away on the A58 near Baumber in a hire car that had been linked to the gang. A sixth gang member, 32-year-old Ihtesham Khalid, was linked to the smuggling operation through surveillance, phone calls and text messages.

All six men were convicted of conspiracy to evade excise duty following a four-week trial at Nottingham Crown Court. The seized Richmond cigarettes were tested and found to be counterfeit.

Richard Paris, assistant director in HMRC’s Fraud Investigation Service, said: “This gang was large, organised, sophisticated, and determined to break the law. Illegal cigarettes come at a huge cost stealing money from our vital public services.”

Wojciech Rymarczuk, Marcin Kopec, and Tomasz Skubis did not attend the trial and were convicted and sentenced in absence to a total of 16-and-a-half years. Warrants have been issued for their arrest.

Tofiq, from Littleover, Derby, and Ahmed, from Longsight, Manchester were each jailed for three years. Khalid, from Rowley Regis, West Mids, was handed a three-and-a-half-year sentence.