Close X
Sunday, December 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sacked British-Indian cop says didn't know of husband's drug-dealing

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Dec, 2022 03:41 PM
  • Sacked British-Indian cop says didn't know of husband's drug-dealing

An Indian-origin Met police officer, who was sacked from the force last month, claimed that she was unaware that her husband was a drug dealer.

Constable Rasvinder Agalliu, a former model who enjoyed a lavish lifestyle with her drug dealer husband Julian Agalliu, thought the money came from working as a chef to professional footballers, the Evening Standard reported.

The couple lived in a property which cost them 5,000 pounds a month, splashed out on a 70,000-pound Audi, designer clothes, and homes in the upmarket Hadley Wood enclave of Barnet, north London.

During her misconduct hearing, Rasvinder, a constable for 15 years, told the disciplinary tribunal that her husband, who earned between 1,000-4,000 pounds a week, did not pay taxes because he earned in cash.

Unconvinced, the tribunal rejected Rasvinder's claims and said that her "defence lacked credibility".

"Agalliu in our view was not hiding his drug use within the home. There were drugs and the means to supply them clearly evident in her home and we are satisfied she knew they were there," as she was "more likely than not to have had a good idea" about Julian's earnings given the couple's "lavish lifestyle", the tribunal concluded.

Her claims that drugs were planted at her home were also rejected by the tribunal, which concluded she was guilty of gross misconduct.

During raids at the couple's North London home twice in 2020, police found messages referring to 100 kg packages, cocaine parcels, evidence of drug exchanges, and a conversation about a possible gun deal, the Evening Standard reported.

Cops also found drugs in a Louis Vuitton box under the couple's bed, as well as 27,000 pounds in cash at his home, apart from cannabis cultivation at the property.

A mother-of-three, Rasvinder was sacked, but did not face any criminal charges following the raid on her home.

Julian sold drugs packaged with the luxury Hublot brand via EncroChat communication system, according to the paper.

He was convicted at Woolwich crown court last week, and his sentencing will take place on February 9, 2023.

MORE International ARTICLES

U.S. lawmakers press DHS on Canada-U.S. border

U.S. lawmakers press DHS on Canada-U.S. border
Montana Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat, wants the Department of Homeland Security to lift the vaccine requirement for truck drivers and other travellers. In a letter to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Tester says vaccine mandates at the border are making cross-border trade harder and more expensive.

U.S. lawmakers press DHS on Canada-U.S. border

Iran witnesses worst unrest in years as anti-hijab protests spread

Iran witnesses worst unrest in years as anti-hijab protests spread
Anger erupted after Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman from the north-western city of Saqez, died at a hospital in Tehran last Friday following three days in a coma. She was visiting the capital with her family on September 13 when she was arrested by morality police officers, who accused her of violating the law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab and their arms and legs with loose clothing. 

Iran witnesses worst unrest in years as anti-hijab protests spread

Continuity and change expected for King's rule

Continuity and change expected for King's rule
It's a high bar to clear for the King, who in both his private and public life, has raised eyebrows for conduct that his critics see as unbecoming of a royal. But this generational divide could be prove both an asset and a liability, experts say, positioning the King to make changes befitting of a modern monarch, while maintaining the continuity of dynastic power.

Continuity and change expected for King's rule

Death toll in catastrophic Pakistan flooding reaches 1,559

Death toll in catastrophic Pakistan flooding reaches 1,559
In the last 24 hours, 15 new fatalities were reported, all in the worst-hit Sindh province, reports Xinhua news agency citing the NDMA as saying. The victims included a child and three women. 12,716 km of roads and 374 bridges were damaged.

Death toll in catastrophic Pakistan flooding reaches 1,559

Father burns 12-year-old son to death in Karachi for not doing homework

Father burns 12-year-old son to death in Karachi for not doing homework
His father, Nazir Khan, reportedly poured kerosene over Shaheer and lit a match in an attempt to terrify the boy into completing his homework, but the flame ignited the oil and set the child ablaze, the report said. 

Father burns 12-year-old son to death in Karachi for not doing homework

Our world is in big trouble, says UN chief Guterres

Our world is in big trouble, says UN chief Guterres
With those explosive words, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres opened the high-level meeting of the General Assembly on Tuesday listing the crisis upon crisis piled upon the world. He listed them: war, conflicts, climate change, hunger, financial crises, challenges of runaway technology developments, hate speech, global divisions and inequalities, and massive human rights violations.

Our world is in big trouble, says UN chief Guterres