Smuggling of 60 guns through Dover admitted by Robert Keogh of Clonee, Ireland
Published: 13:16, 06 September 2019
Updated: 17:20, 06 September 2019
A man who was stopped at a Kent port with 60 firearms crammed inside his Volkswagen Passat has admitted smuggling guns.
Irish national Robert Keogh was stopped at 5am on Friday, August 2, by Border Force officers at Dover Eastern Docks en route from Calais.
Keogh had left the UK through Dover several days earlier.
He told officers he was returning from Europe and had “just been driving around.”
An initial search of his Volkswagen Passat, recovered a Turkish-manufactured Zoraki blank firing handgun, with its barrel converted to fire live bullets.
The pistol was concealed in the car’s rear-left quarter panel.
The National Crime Agency took on the investigation.
Subsequent searches by assisting Border Force officers unearthed another 59 firearms concealed deep inside the car’s bumper and both rear quarter panels.
Keogh, 37, from Clonee, County Meath in the Irish Republic, admitted illegally importing firearms at Canterbury Crown Court yesterday.
He will be sentenced on October 11.
In interview, he told NCA officers that he had a 3,000 Euro gambling debt.
He said he didn’t know there was anything secreted in the car on the return journey.
Andrea Wilson, NCA Head of Regional Investigations, said after the court hearing: “We have deprived an organised crime group of a huge haul of firearms and significantly disrupted their plans.
“These weapons would have been moved onto the criminal market and into the hands of extremely dangerous offenders.
“Although the UK’s level of gun crime is one of the lowest in the world, firearms pose massive potential for harm making their criminal use a priority for the NCA and wider UK law enforcement.
“We work at home and abroad to prevent the flow of guns trafficked to the UK and Border Force is a vital partner in our work to protect the nation.
“This seizure is a great example of that partnership working.
Dave Hutchinson, Deputy Director Border Force South East and Europe, added: “Keogh had made use of hidden spaces to conceal a significant number of firearms.
"The first gun was found within an hour, but it took several hours for my officers, who are all highly trained to conduct technical vehicle searches, to recover the remaining 59 weapons.
“By making this detection Border Force not only kept all of these lethal weapons off the UK’s streets, keeping people safe and protecting lives, but also took the vital first step in securing his guilty plea.
“We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners at the NCA to bring offenders like Keogh to justice and to disrupt the workings of organised criminal groups in the UK."
Read more: All the latest news from Dover
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Sam Lennon