A request from British authorities to find stolen cars believed to have been transported to Thailand has led to the seizure of 122 vehicles imported by Thai dealerships.
Of those, 15 were found to be stolen in the UK Thai customs officials say they are investigating about 300 other vehicles suspected to have been illegally imported.
Customs officials displayed a Mercedes GLE 350 and a Nissan GTR at a news briefing today, part of the batch sought by Britain.
Kulit Sombatsiri, director-general of Thai customs, said the vehicles that British authorities are seeking were partially paid for in monthly installments by UK buyers before being sold on the black market.
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"The buyers only paid around 5 or 10 per cent of the car's cost and they would then sell it," he said. "In the United Kingdom, they classify these cars as stolen."
Police raids on May 18 and 22 resulted in the seizure of 122 cars that included luxury brands such as Lamborghini, Rolls Royce, McClaren and Lotus.
Further investigations revealed that eight of 11 Lamborghini Aventadors imported from the UK were registered with Thai customs as the cheaper Gallardo model.
Two other Lamborghinis were registered as being shipped partially assembled from the UK and later assembled in Thailand. Police suspect the cars were fully assembled before they were shipped.
Cars that are delivered in parts to be assembled in Thailand can be taxed up to 80 per cent of their value while authorities can tax fully assembled imports up to 328 per cent.
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