The fight at the TEG roundabout / Who is Fatjon Dauti, the Albanian boss from Has who was banned from entering the UK

2024-08-24 10:39:54 / AKTUALITET ALFA PRESS

The fight at the TEG roundabout / Who is Fatjon Dauti, the Albanian boss from

Fatjon Dauti was banned from entering the United Kingdom because he was involved in the importation of cocaine and the production of cannabis in "bar houses".

The 39-year-old was granted a temporary residence permit in 2012 after marrying a Latvian EU citizen.

In August 2017, he received his permanent permit, which was revoked by the Home Office based on information from the NCA, which was investigating his network. According to them, his attitude would constitute a "serious threat to public safety".

Dauti himself denied involvement in the crime and said during the appeal that he had social and family relations with some of the gang members, which included his cousin, Alket Dauti, who was arrested by NCA officers in June 2018, in Penge, south London, two months after meeting Daut, before being extradited to Belgium in January 2019 to serve 10 years in prison for people smuggling.

The appeal heard that he only had one bank account in the UK, funded by cash payments and limited profits from a business. However, the 39-year-old lived a life of luxury and owned Bentleys, Range Rovers and Jaguars, taken from a drug dealer's car rental business.

The hearing also discussed a knife attack on a Bulgarian security guard outside a nightclub in 2012, who survived the attack. Immediately after this incident, Dauti returned to Albania.

He was arrested and charged with grievous bodily harm, but during the hearing it was said that the guard retracted the statements claiming that they were afraid of Dauti and that they had been paid not to cooperate with the police.

Dauti appeared at Blackfriars Crown Court in 2013, but the prosecution was withdrawn due to a lack of evidence. Also, during the hearing, it was said that pictures of a Kalashnikov assault rifle and a pistol were found on his phone during a border check in Dover.

The " Sunday Express " newspaper wrote that Dauti's name was in public records related to organized crime in Albania since 2013. It was also argued that it was in the public interest that his identity be known, due to his connections to pretended to be with other people.

The NCA failed for more than two years to gather evidence. The NCA's deputy director of investigations, Chris Farrimond, said: "We believe this individual was a high-ranking member of a significant organized crime group involved in a number of serious crimes." This assessment was made after a long investigation and supported by the court's decision.

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