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Loughborough businessman accused of money laundering agrees to hand over assets worth £500,000

National Crime Agency suspected the man of running a “large scale money laundering scheme” moving funds out of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Loughborough town centre(Image: Debbie Allen)

The National Crime Agency says a Loughborough-based businessman has agreed to hand over assets worth £500,000 to settle a civil recovery claim following alleged links to money laundering.

The agency said Leicestershire Police began investigating in 2009, after it became aware of funds being paid through a money service business account called ‘Route of Asia’.

It said that led them to suspect the owner, Salim Miah – who, according to Companies House, was born in January 1974, and who previously owned the Warwick Arms in Loughborough – was operating a “large scale money laundering scheme”, moving funds out of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

It said its officers identified the proceeds of a mortgage fraud totalling almost £420,000 into the Route of Asia account.

A spokesman said: “In 2009 Miah used almost £300,000 of this money towards the purchase of the Warwick Arms, a restaurant he owned in Loughborough.

“He sold the business five years later and used the proceeds to purchase another four properties.

“Those properties were collectively valued at £1.08 million and eventually became the subject of the NCA’s civil recovery claim in 2019.

“Approximately £650,000 of the property value is believed to have originated from the mortgage fraud.”