(thesun.co.uk)
THIS is the moment an Albanian burglar the Home Office is struggling to deport parties in a VIP club and shows off a £300,000 Rolls Royce.
Smug criminal Dorian Puka posted a series of taunts on social media after creeping back into the UK despite being deported twice.
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The career crook, 31, filmed himself partying the night away in the VIP section of a Mayfair nightclub in London – seemingly not bothered about keeping his head down.
He has previously been jailed and deported twice after a raft of burglaries.
He was locked up in 2016 for nine months, and then deported a year later after trying to break in to a house.
The homeowner spotted him on their webcam while on holiday in France.
But within a year of being kicked out, the determined crook snuck back in to the UK, evading border controls.
He then carried out a string of burglaries in London, before undercover cops snared him.
Asked on his social media account if he was sorry for his crimes, he replied: “Serious crime? U call that serious crime?”
And in broken English, he ranted: “Im by the law here.”
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In 2020, he crept back in to the UK yet again – but this time he is trying to claim asylum.
The Albanian has been on immigration bail and attached to an electronic tag since 2023 until his tribunal.
And until his case is heard, the Home Office cannot deport him.
In the past year of freedom, he has posted about his lavish lifestyle in a mockery of the asylum system.
One video showed his £10,000 hybrid Savannah cat sitting on a Rolls-Royce Cullinan.
HIs pet is a cross between a domestic and wild cat, and they cost from £700 to over £10,000 in the UK.
The closer that the cat is to a wild cat genetically, the more expensive and exotic it is.
Puka often posts Instagram stories of him smoking from a shisha pipe and drinking champagne.
Others boast of his watch collection, ranging from a Rolex Day-Date worth £53,000 to a watch priced at between £5,000 and £10,000.
A Home Office spokesperson told The Sun: “This government will not allow foreign criminals and illegal migrants to exploit our laws, which is why we are reforming human rights laws and replacing the broken appeals system, allowing us to scale up deportations.
“The Home Secretary has announced the most sweeping reforms to tackle illegal migration in modern times which will make Britain a less attractive destination for illegal migrants and will make it easier to remove and deport them.”
The crafty burglar is not the only criminal to sneak back into the country after being deported.
Convicted Czech drug dealer Patrik Durac, 27, was expelled from the country indefinitely in 2023 following a string of offences including violent disorder and supplying Class A drugs.
But he was back in Britain within months, flaunting his return on social media while strutting around Stoke-on-Trent in ripped jeans and a £1,500 designer jacket.
Images have emerged showing Durac making hand gestures while hiding his face despite his previous deportation and repeated prison sentences in the UK.
The 27-year-old posing defiantly and even flashed a two-finger salute in a case critics say shows how Britain’s borders are being treated like a “revolving door”.
Durac sparked anger after it emerged he later attempted to re-enter Britain again using false identity documents, a court heard.
And when he was finally stopped again, the jobless thug tried to exploit a notorious migrant “back door” by catching a ferry from Ireland into the Welsh port of Holyhead using false documents, a court heard.
Border staff challenged him – only for Durac to sneer: “I know my rights.”
Despite being refused asylum and having an EU Settlement Scheme application rejected, Durac – who claimed an “incurable” condition made him unfit for work – set up home in Stoke-on-Trent.
In 2019, he and his younger brother were part of a gang that launched a vicious attack, punching and kicking a man in front of terrified children and elderly bystanders.
Durac admitted affray over what a judge called an “ugly” revenge assault at Hanley Bus Station on a busy Saturday afternoon and the thug was jailed for ten months.
Just two years later, he was back in the dock after cops stopped a car he was travelling in and found £1,490 worth of heroin and cocaine, along with cash.
Though he claimed he wasn’t actively dealing, Durac pleaded guilty to being concerned in the supply of Class A drugs and was jailed for 14 months in 2021.
After his release, he was arrested again in October 2022 trying to re-enter the UK at Holyhead and handed a further eight-month sentence.
In 2023, he was deported indefinitely.
Yet by 2024, his own social media showed him swaggering around the Potteries once more.
Durac was finally nicked in March last year and removed again for immigration offences.
It is believed he legally changed his name in the Czech Republic following his latest removal from Britain.






