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Socialite James Stunt on trial over £266,000,000 money-laundering operation

Socialite James Stunt on trial over £266,000,000 money-laundering operation
James Stunt denies money laundering and forgery (Pictures: PA)

James Stunt, the former husband of heiress Petra Ecclestone, has gone on trial accused of being part of a £266 million money-laundering operation. 

The socialite, 40, is one of eight defendants charged with money laundering involving depositing cash in the account of Bradford gold dealer Fowler Oldfield. 

Prosecutors say the cash was brought into business addresses owned or managed by the defendants between January 2014 and September 2016. 

Opening the case to jurors at Leeds Cloth Hall Court on Tuesday, prosecutor Nicholas Clarke QC said it was ‘blindingly obvious this was criminal cash’. 

Jurors heard the money was carried in sports bags, carrier bags and holdalls in hundreds of thousands of pounds at a time – and all paid into the bank account of Fowler Oldfield. 

Five defendants from Fowler Oldfield – Greg Frankel, 44, Daniel Rawson, 45, Paul Miller, 45, Heidi Buckler, 45, and Haroon ‘Harry’ Rashid, 51 – all say the prosecution cannot prove that any of the cash was criminal property. 

The other defendants – Stunt, Alexander Tulloch, 41, and Francesca Sota, 34 – say they ‘don’t know whether it was’, Mr Clarke said. 

He told jurors: ‘The prosecution say this is nonsense. 

‘Each of them must at the very least have suspected that the source of the money was criminal in origin – it could not have come from a legitimate source and no legitimate source has ever been identified for it.’ 

Socialite James Stunt makes a hand gesture as he arrives at Leeds Crown Court to appear on money-laundering charges. Picture date: Wednesday January 5, 2022. PA Photo. Bernie Ecclestone's former son-in-law was charged as part of what has been described as Britain's biggest money laundering case. Stunt is one of 13 people charged with money laundering linked to Bradford-based gold merchant Fowler Oldfield. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire
Stunt is one of eight defendants charged with money laundering involving depositing cash in the account of Bradford gold dealer Fowler Oldfield (Picture: PA)

The prosecutor said cash from ‘a lot of criminal activity’ was collected together and taken to Fowler Oldfield in Bradford, West Yorkshire, sometimes via businesses in London. 

Mr Clarke said: ‘These defendants then hid its origin by washing it through a company bank account and using the proceeds to buy gold.’ 

Jurors were told West Yorkshire Police launched Operation Larkshot – an investigation into large amounts of cash being credited to the bank account of Fowler Oldfield collected from three sites – Fowler Oldfield’s own premises, the offices of James Stunt in central London and a new company called Pure Nines in Hatton Garden. 

Mr Clarke said substantial amounts of cash were being paid into a bank account of Fowler Oldfield Limited from 2014. 

He told jurors they aroused the suspicions of bank staff because ‘they were of such an amount, on a daily basis, as may come from a Premier League football stadium on a match day or similar size venue or event’, adding: ‘They were in volumes that exceed collections from busy high street banks.  

‘The payments were getting much bigger in 2016. On some days, well over a million pounds in used notes was being paid into the Fowler Oldfield account.’ 

The account was referred to police, who found that between August and September 2016, daily cash deposits ranged between £787,540 and £2,424,380, with an average of £1,706,823, jurors heard. 

Socialite James Stunt arrives at Leeds Crown Court to appear on money-laundering charges. Picture date: Wednesday January 5, 2022. PA Photo. Bernie Ecclestone's former son-in-law was charged as part of what has been described as Britain's biggest money laundering case. Stunt is one of 13 people charged with money laundering linked to Bradford-based gold merchant Fowler Oldfield. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire
Stunt arrives at Leeds Crown Court (Picture: PA)

The wider investigation discovered that from January 1, 2014, until September 16, 2016, more than £266 million in cash and unknown deposits were paid into the Fowler Oldfield bank account. 

Jurors were told that after the cash had credited the bank account it was transferred mainly to two Birmingham gold suppliers, Cookson Precious Metals Limited and Metalor Technologies (UK) Limited to buy gold. 

Some £46 million was also transferred into an account in the name of James Stunt’s company, Stunt & Co Ltd. 

Mr Clarke said CCTV footage shows that during August and September 2016, couriers from all over the UK attended Fowler Oldfield with heavy bags of cash. 

In one case it was inside two toy boxes wrapped in paper disguised as a birthday present. 

The court heard Fowler Oldfield was a small family jewellery company that used to buy, in relatively modest amounts, scrap gold from the jewellery trade which would then be melted down or refined into larger amounts. 

But Mr Clarke said: ‘There was a dramatic transformation as Fowler Oldfield moved from that legitimate trade to becoming a vehicle for very substantial money laundering of criminal cash. 

‘From the end of 2013, the bank account of Fowler Oldfield began to receive huge sums in cash deposits. 

‘The significant and marked change in the business of Fowler Oldfield from buyer of scrap gold involving paying out cash to very substantial receiver of cash, the escalation in the turnover of the business, the sheer value of cash involved, the number of Scottish notes among the cash received and the circumstances of its receipt and being counted, are all clear indications that the cash that was being delivered by the couriers had its origins in crime. 

‘It is obvious from the totality of the evidence, and especially the CCTV recordings, that this was a sophisticated clandestine operation to receive criminal cash in such a way that Fowler Oldfield could then persuade NatWest that it was just part of their ordinary business operations.’ 

Socialite James Stunt arrives at Leeds Crown Court to appear on money-laundering charges. Picture date: Wednesday January 5, 2022. PA Photo. Bernie Ecclestone's former son-in-law was charged as part of what has been described as Britain's biggest money laundering case. Stunt is one of 13 people charged with money laundering linked to Bradford-based gold merchant Fowler Oldfield. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire
Stunt married Ms Ecclestone, daughter of F1 tycoon Bernie Ecclestone, in Italy in 2011(Picture: PA)

Mr Clarke said the money laundering then ‘went national’ as one of Fowler Oldfield’s directors, Greg Frankel, became a Vice President of Stunt & Co. 

He told the court: ‘New premises in the south became centres of operation for receiving cash. 

‘Stunt’s offices are higher up in a tower block and it became more difficult to manage the sheer volume of bags of cash that had to be paid into the Fowler Oldfield account, and there were issues over the security of the collections. 

‘They then got access to a new company with no history at all, Pure Nines. which could also help in the trade side of legitimising the cash.’ 

Buckler, Frankel, Miller, Rashid, Rawson, Sota, Stunt, and Tulloch, all deny money laundering. Stunt and Sota also deny forgery. 

Stunt married Ms Ecclestone, daughter of F1 tycoon Bernie Ecclestone, in Italy in 2011. They had three children together but divorced in 2017. 

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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