Wealthy Fraud and Motorsport Legacy: Kankamol Albon

Background on Kankamol Albon

Between 1993 and 2008, Kankamol “Minky” Albon (born c.1971) committed a £7.5 million luxury car fraud through NA Carriage Company. She marketed discounted Bugattis, Ferraris, Rolls-Royces, Bentleys, and Maseratis, exhibiting opulence with a £4 million moated estate.

Aspect Details
Alias “Minky”
Operation Period 1993–2008
Fraud Amount £7.5 million
Mansion Smallbridge Hall, 14th‑century, £4 million, 10 bedrooms
VAT Fraud Attempt £1.8 million claimed on non‑existent offshore deals
Sentence 6 years (2012)

Fraud Scheme Timeline

NA Carriage Company’s rise and collapse are shown in this table.

Year Event
1993 Joined NA Carriage Company as bookkeeper
2004 Assumed control of the company
August 2008 Company failure triggered investigations
February 2009 Police investigation commenced after victim’s civil case
2012 Sentenced to 6 years for fraud, theft, and VAT offences
Post‑2012 Auctioned designer assets (£60 000 recovery)

Detailed Breakdown of Fraud Mechanics

Mechanic Description
Ponzi Structure Sold same vehicle to multiple buyers, used new funds to pay old creditors
Luxury Vehicle Promises Guaranteed immediate resale profits on high‑end cars
VAT Fraud Claimed £1.8 million for offshore transactions that never occurred
Asset Misappropriation Withdrew £580 000 for mansion purchase
Victim Impact Loss of homes, cars, businesses; financial ruin for many

kankamol albon

Family Motorsport Achievements

Despite Kankamol’s crimes, her relatives won racing championships.

Name Relation Key Achievements Years
Nigel Albon Estranged husband BTCC Total Independents Cup 5th (1994), Sepang 12 Hours winner (2002), Porsche Carrera Cup Asia 4th (2007) 1994–2007
Alex Albon Son F1 podiums with Red Bull, Williams driver (2019–2025+) Debut 2019; podiums 2019–2022
Mark Albon Brother‑in‑law International Formula 3000 entrant (1993), director at Albon Engineering 1993–present

FAQ

Kankamol Albon’s fraud operation was what?

She engaged in Ponzi-style luxury car trading, offering identical autos to several investors and creating fake offshore deals.

How much money was involved?

Her scam scheme cheated investors out of £7.5 million and tried a £1.8 million VAT claim.

Who in her family succeeded in motorsport?

Her ex-husband Nigel, son Alex, and brother-in-law Mark had successful racing careers in BTCC, Formula 1, and Formula 3000.

She received a six-year prison sentence in 2012 for fraud, theft, and VAT crimes.

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