Ripon pair guilty of smuggling £100 million from UK to Dubai

Two people from near Ripon have been found guilty of helping to smuggle more than £100 million from the UK to Dubai following a major national investigation.

Jonathan Johnson, 54, and Jo-Emma Larvin, 43, a model and former girlfriend of boxer Joe Calzaghe, were found guilty yesterday following a trial at Isleworth Crown Court.

The pair, both of Grantley near Ripon, were charged with removal of cash from England and Wales which they knew or suspected was acquired through criminal conduct.

Both acted as couriers and were convicted alongside Beatrice Auty, 26, from London and Amy Harrison, 27, from Worcester Park in Surrey.

An investigation led by the National Crime Agency has so far seen eleven of the couriers in the network convicted.

£104 million smuggled to Dubai

The network smuggled more than £104 million from the UK to Dubai during 83 separate trips between November 2019 and October 2020, overseen by ringleader Abdullah Alfalsi, 47, who was jailed for more than nine years in July last year.

The couriers, who were paid around £3,000 for each trip and would be booked on business class flights due to the extra luggage allowance, communicated on a Whatsapp group entitled ’Sunshine and lollipops’.

Larvin made two trips to Dubai in August and September 2020.

One trip was with Amy Harrison when they took seven cases between them containing £2.2 million and another with her partner Jonathan Johnson, when they took eight suitcases containing £2.8 million.

Larvin and Johnson were arrested at Manchester Airport in March 2022.

The network collected cash from criminal groups around the UK, which was believed to be the profits of drug dealing, and took it to counting houses, usually rented apartments in central London.


Read more:


The money was then vacuum-packed and separated into suitcases which would typically each contain around £500,000, weighing around 40 kilos. They were sprayed with coffee or air fresheners in an effort to prevent them being found by Border Force detection dogs.

Ian Truby, senior investigating officer at the National Crime Agency, said: 

“These couriers were important cogs in a large money laundering wheel.

“The crime group they belonged to was responsible for smuggling eye-watering amounts of criminal cash out of the UK.

“This simply wouldn’t have been possible without couriers doing their bidding, in return for a sunshine holiday and a slice of the profit.

“Cash is the lifeblood of organised crime groups, which they re-invest into activities such as drug trafficking. This fuels violence and insecurity around the world, which is why our investigation into other cash couriers continues.”

Larvin and Johnson will be sentenced later alongside five other couriers who have pleaded guilty at previous hearings.

 

Petrol station in Harrogate district has joint most expensive fuel in country

Wetherby Services on the A1 has the joint highest petrol price in England — costing an eye-watering 202.9p per litre to fill up.

Prices at the pump have risen yet again this week due to increases in the cost of crude oil, which is used to make petrol and diesel.

The website PetrolPrices publishes up-to-date fuel prices at sites across the country.

It shows the BP station at Wetherby Services has passed the £2 per litre threshold and is now the joint highest petrol price in the country.

It’s the same price as other BP motorway petrol stations in Cumbria, Sunderland and Wiltshire.

It was announced today that it now costs over £100 to fill up a 55-litre family car, which the motoring body RAC called a “truly dark day” for motorists.


Read more:


In Harrogate, PetrolPrices says the most expensive place to fill up is Texaco on Skipton Road where it costs 197.9p a litre for petrol and 194.9p for diesel.

The cheapest place for petrol is Morrisons in Starbeck, where it’s 170.4p.

For diesel, it’s Asda where it currently costs 181.7p

In Ripon’s three petrol stations, the most expensive is BP where it costs 183.9p for petrol. The cheapest is Morrisons at 180.9p.

In Knaresborough, the Co-op on Manse Road has the most expensive petrol at 184.9p.

Harrogate named UK’s best place to work from home

Harrogate has been named as the UK’s best place to work from home in a survey published today.

The Uswitch Remote Working Index 2020 ranked 106 of the UK’s biggest towns and cities by seven factors. 

Harrogate’s superfast broadband, green space, and low crime rates earned it top spot ahead of Bath.

Large cities fared poorly. York was eighth, London 88th and Manchester 100th.

The seven factors ranked were: average property prices, green spaces, crime rates, broadband speed, air quality, number of GPs and average Ofsted ratings. 

Covid has forced many people to work from home and a fifth of people said they wanted to do it more often when the pandemic is over.

Adelana Carty, broadband expert at Uswitch.com, said: 

“The pandemic has turned our working routines upside down and given many of us a taste for what our lives could be like if we worked from home on a more permanent basis.

“Unsurprisingly, this has resulted in millions of people dreaming of ditching the rat race and moving away from the big city.”


Read more: 


Pollsters Opinium surveyed 2,003 UK adults for the survey.

It found the increase in home working has shifted attitudes away from living in large cities.

One in four people currently live in a city with a population in excess of 500,000 people but only one in nine wish to do so in future.