A Southend shop owner has been convicted of 43 offences after Trading Standards officers uncovered a large stash of illegal cigarettes and vapes stored inside two vehicles hidden behind his business.
The investigation, carried out by Southend City Council’s Trading Standards team, revealed a set-up that reflects growing concerns nationwide about the criminal exploitation of the vape market.
A recent BBC investigation uncovered how organised crime groups have been establishing or taking over vape shops across the UK, using them as fronts to circulate counterfeit or dangerous products. The BBC also reported that asylum seekers were sometimes placed in these shops to run them and create distance between senior criminals and frontline activity.
While the Southend case is separate, the scale and sophistication uncovered locally shows clear similarities with those national trends.
Kamal was running The Vape Store at 69 Southchurch Road when Trading Standards officers visited in June 2024. Test purchases confirmed that illegal goods were being sold openly. This prompted a deeper investigation, leading officers to discover that the main stockpile was not inside the shop at all but concealed within two vehicles parked behind the premises on Essex Street. Both vehicles were seized and later crushed.

A specialist sniffer dog team located a secret shelving system inside one of the vehicles packed with illegal vapes. Many of these disposable vapes were capable of up to 15,000 puffs, far exceeding the UK legal limit of 600.
Officers seized a total of:
- 25,000 cigarettes
- 325 pouches of hand rolling tobacco
- 1,000 disposable vapes
- Estimated street value: £45,000
The cigarettes were counterfeit, smuggled to avoid paying excise duty, and failed essential fire safety standards designed to prevent fires if left unattended. Trading Standards officers also confirmed that Kamal repeatedly ignored attempts to contact him throughout the investigation.
At Southend Magistrates’ Court on Thursday 20 November, Dana Kamal, of Fort Road in Northampton, received a four month prison sentence suspended for one year and was ordered to pay £3,000 in costs. He pleaded guilty to 43 offences involving counterfeit cigarettes, illegal hand rolling tobacco and non compliant vaping devices.

Councillor Martin Terry, cabinet member for community safety and regulatory services, said: “This successful prosecution shows that we take illegal trading in Southend extremely seriously. These counterfeit products are dangerous, harm people’s health, and undermine honest local businesses. I want to personally commend our Trading Standards officers for their outstanding professionalism and persistence in this investigation. Their work has protected residents, removed harmful products from circulation, and delivered a clear message that such criminal activity will not be tolerated in our city.”
Local residents have become increasingly concerned about the rapid rise of vape shops across the city and the role some of them play in feeding organised crime networks. One resident living in Southchurch Road said they were “not surprised” by the scale of the discovery, adding that they “would always see a lot of people going in and out of that shop – many more than you would expect for such a small store”.
This case is one of the largest seizures of its kind in Southend and further highlights how illegal tobacco and vape activity is no longer confined to low level offenders but is increasingly connected to well organised criminal groups operating across the UK.
