HomeNewsWorldUK couple escaped extradition to India, now face charge of exporting 550 kg cocaine to Sydney

UK couple escaped extradition to India, now face charge of exporting 550 kg cocaine to Sydney

Kaval Raizada and Arti Dhir will appear at Southwark Crown Court on October 30, 2023. In 2019, they avoided extradition to India in connection with the murder of a Gujarati child they had adopted.

October 01, 2023 / 09:42 IST
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Kaval Raizada, 35, and Arti Dhir, 58, outside the Westminster Magistrates' Court in July 2019. The Indian-origin couple was arrested in June 2021 after authorities in Australia seized cocaine at Sydney airport which was shipped from Heathrow. (File photo by Danish Khan)
Kaval Raizada, 35, and Arti Dhir, 58, outside the Westminster Magistrates' Court in July 2019. The Indian-origin couple was arrested in June 2021 after authorities in Australia seized cocaine at Sydney airport which was shipped from Heathrow. (File photo by Danish Khan)

A London-based couple that escaped extradition to India on charges of ordering the murder of an orphan they adopted in Gujarat due to a technicality, are now awaiting trial on charges of exporting 550 kilograms of cocaine to Sydney. In the first instance, Kaval Raizada, 35, and Arti Dhir, 58, make for an unlikely couple, given the difference in age and background. But on October 30, 2023, they will appear together at Southwark crown court, just like they did between 2017 and 2019 at Westminster magistrates’ court. This will be the second run-in with the law for the couple after they just about managed to wriggle out from being extradited to India.

On June 21, 2021, the couple was arrested from their home in Hanwell, London, after authorities in Australia seized cocaine at Sydney airport which was shipped from Heathrow. A gold bullion worth £250,000 and keys to a safe deposit box containing £60,000 cash were seized. “The defendants have both been charged with one count of exporting cocaine to Australia and 12 counts of money laundering,” a National Crime Agency (NCA) spokesperson confirmed. Both remain in custody and will be produced on October 30, when the trial is set to begin at Southwark Crown Court.

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On Friday (September 29, 2023), His Honour Judge Edward Connell at the Southwark crown court presided over a pre-trial review when counsels representing both the defendants and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) were present. The defendants were due to appear in court, but didn’t arrive because of procedural issues.

“I would like to reserve the right to cross-examine NCA officers,” said Chris Meredith, the barrister representing Raizada. He told the court that “no connection has been established” between his client and “those arrested in Australia”. Meredith also sought further disclosure of documents by the NCA to prepare for the trial.