Routine seatbelt stop led police to £1m drugs cash

Bags of banknotes laid out on the floor, in plastic bags, in a property linked to DunneImage source, Merseyside Police
Image caption,

Officers uncovered the cash and 1kg (2.2 lbs) of cocaine

  • Published

Stopping a driver who was not wearing his seatbelt led police to a £1m pile of drug money.

Daniel Dunne, 28, was pulled over on Linfield Close in Liverpool on 20 June last year because he had not buckled up.

As he got out of the car, a wrap of cocaine fell out, and searches of an address linked to him uncovered the cash and 1kg (2.2 lbs) of cocaine.

At Liverpool Crown Court on Friday, Dunne, of Greenbank Drive in the city, was jailed for seven years after admitting possession with intent to supply cocaine, and acquiring, using and possessing criminal property.

Daniel Dunne's police mugshot. He has thinning ginger hair and a ginger beard.Image source, Merseyside Police
Image caption,

Daniel Dunne's decision to drive without a seatbelt led police to £1m cash and 1kg of cocaine

Dunne was driving his Nissan Qashqai when he was pulled over.

As well as the cocaine, police found £600 in cash inside the car.

At the property they searched, detectives found £1,066,382 in cash, more drugs, weighing scales and a machine used to count the money.

The cash was the subject of a Proceeds of Crime hearing at Liverpool Magistrates' Court on Tuesday 3 September 2024.

The hearing ruled the cash was recoverable property.

It will be sent to the Home Office, and some of it will go back to Merseyside Police to be put towards policing and community projects.

Det Ch Insp Mike Dalton said: "We know all too well how drugs cause widespread misery and devastation in our communities and we are committed to stamping it out and bringing offenders to justice."

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover on Merseyside

Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, external, X, external, and Instagram, external. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.