A LUXURY Hampshire hotel has been handed over to an anti-crime agency following an eight year investigation into money laundering.

The award-winning White Horse in Romsey has been taken off alleged members of an international money laundering group following a probe by the National Crime Agency.

It was part of a £6 million haul recovered from three defendants, including a practising barrister who agreed to hand over assets rather than face a 15 day trial.

Daily Echo:

The orders are the culmination of a complex civil recovery investigation into prominent Romsey businessman Jonathan Nuttall.

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As part of the investigation, the NCA uncovered an international money laundering network that saw hundreds of millions of pounds transferred through more than 100 bank accounts held globally including in the UK, Russia, Hong Kong, and Switzerland.

Nuttall’s activities first came to light during another NCA civil recovery investigation involving convicted drug smuggler Amir Azam where £4million in assets were recovered.

Nuttall, 46, amassed a fortune but structured his wealth so it was in the name of his wife, Amanda, with whom he shared a London flat.

Daily Echo:

The couple hired a private jet for a foreign trip, holidayed in Cannes and Dubai and built a swimming pool at their country pad.

Mrs Nuttall, 45, won more than £2.5m on the National Lottery in 2008, but could not give the NCA a consistent account of how the money was spent.

The High Court endorsed consent orders agreed by the NCA and Mrs Nuttall, property developer Eric Grove, 89, of Lapworth near Solihull, and barrister Timothy Becker, 55, from, London, who between them held some of the proceeds of crime including the £100k Bentley Mulsanne.

Eleven properties will be handed over including the White Horse Hotel and Brasserie in Romsey and property in prime London locations.

NCA investigators, who analysed around 100,000 financial transactions, collected a vast amount of evidence of money laundering through a series of companies.

Daily Echo:

The NCA’s evidence was that it is likely that funds embezzled from the Russian state or from frauds committed in the UK were passed through these companies in countries including the UK, USA, and the British Virgin Islands.

The judge, The Hon Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb DBE, described the NCA investigation as exemplary.

Andy Lewis, Head of Asset Denial at the NCA, said: “Jonathan Nuttall amassed considerable wealth as a result of his and others’ unlawful conduct.

“He is not himself a party to the claim. That is because he structured his business affairs so that he didn’t hold any of the recoverable property himself, leaving everything in the name of his wife and others.

“Recovering assets that have been illegally obtained is a priority for the NCA and we are pleased that our commitment to this investigation into Mr Nuttall and his associates has paid off in agreeing this settlement.

“The defendants were of high standing within their communities with interest in local properties and businesses. Crime most certainly has not paid in this case.”

Graeme Biggar, Director General of the National Economic Crime Centre (NECC), said: “Professional enablers such as barristers play a pivotal role in facilitating the movement and concealment of criminal finance, as seen from our many high-value investigations into illicit finance and asset denial.

“This brilliant result is part of the UK’s response to illicit finance. We will continue to be relentless in targeting criminals’ wealth regardless of where, and through whom, they choose to try to hide it.”

A spokesperson for the NCA said that although no decision has yet been made of the hotel's future, that the usual process is to put the asset into receivership on behalf of the UK Treasury.

The spokesperson added that assets are then commonly sold at auction.