Livio Mazzarello freed from jail after £46m tax dodge
Livio Mazzarello skipped bail during his Old Bailey trial in
2017 and fled the UK before he could be sentenced to 14 years imprisonment. The
light-footed accused, of Cricklewood, North London, sent an email addressed to
“the most illustrious judge” claiming that he urgently needed to visit his
mother, but instead escaped to the Italian port city of Genoa.
Mazzarello was found guilty in his absence of one count of
fraudulent evasion of VAT, and issued a 14-year jail term in in July of that
year.
However, after being intercepted in Italy, his birth
country, an Italian court reduced Mazarello’s sentence to just eight years, a
Proceeds Of Crime Act hearing heard.
The amendment meant Mazzarello was released from prison in
Genoa in June 2021 after serving less than four years behind bars.
Prosecutor David Hughes told Judge Philip Katz QC that the
Italian court: “took over the enforcement of the sentence but at the time of
the indictment the money laundering he was convicted of here (in the UK) was
not an offence in Italy.
“The sentence for money laundering was knocked off, and the
sentence for VAT was less in Italy than in the United Kingdom.”
Mazzarello’s release under Italian law comes under the
condition that he stay at a specified address in the Alessandria region, with a
curfew.
Livio Mazzarello and Louisa Mbadugha ran The Italian Wine
Company Ltd from premises in Neasden, and used false paperwork and re-used import
documents to smuggle large quantities of wine into the UK from Italy. The pair
evaded £46.5m in VAT and excise duty, before selling the wine to retailers
across the UK.
Mazzarello laundered the proceeds of the fraud through the
company using a string of bank accounts and HMRC officers seized 70,000 litres
of duty free wine and around £350,000 in cash, hidden in a concealed floor safe
and above ceiling tiles at the company’s warehouse.



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