An Albanian burglar who is living in the UK despite being deported twice has flaunted his wealth by posing with a £185,000 Lamborghini and several luxury watches.
Gucci wearing Dorian Puka, 29, has twice been jailed and evicted from the country after committing a string of robberies in London, but managed to worm his way back to Britain at the end of 2020.
Frustratingly for the Home Office, he cannot be evicted from the country a third time until his latest asylum application is dealt with - and each one costs the taxpayer £12,000 on average.
Since returning to the UK, Puka has shared several videos on social media boasting about his lavish lifestyle as he waits for his case to be processed.
In his latest string of TikTok posts, the Albanian national filmed himself driving a 2022 Lamborghini Urus V8, valued at around £184,950, with a £45,000 Patek Philippe Aquanaut watch on his wrist.
Another showed the burglar behind the wheel of a Mercedes while wearing a £24,000 Rolex Daytona. Other watches showboated in his videos include a Rolex Day-Date, worth up to £53,000, and a £17,000 Rolex GMT-Master II.
Puka has also previously shown off other luxury cars including a £75,000 Porsche Cayenne; a £130,000 Mercedes G-Wagon; £155,000 Bentley Bentayga; a £55,000 BMW X5; a £46,000 Mercedes AMG; and a £35,000 Jaguar XF.
While Puka cannot currently be deported, the Home Office has warned that foreign criminals should be 'in no doubt that the law will be enforced'.
Puka was first jailed in 2016 for nine months and then deported the following year for attempting to break into a home in Twickenham when the owner caught him on a webcam whilst on holiday in France.
However, within a year Puka managed to dodge border control and wormed his way back into Britain where he continued to raid and rob homes in Greater London.
He was eventually apprehended, wearing an expensive stolen watch, by a plain clothes officer in Surbiton, south-west London.
Puka was jailed for three-and-a-half years but his offending did not stop once behind bars as he gained notoriety posting photos on a smuggled phone with prisoners associated with organised crime groups.
He was deported in March 2020, but was back by the following January. Social media posts showed he had travelled via Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Despite this, the Home Office said he cannot be deported until his asylum claim has been fully considered.
This process could take months or even years due to the huge and ever-growing backlog of immigration tribunal appeals.
Last October, Puka uploaded a picture of himself raising a toast and tucking into a meal next to a doctored photo of Nigel Farage.
And it's not the first time Puka has taunted the British public on his TikTok account.
At the start of the year, he posted a video of himself welcoming in 2025 while smoking a shisha pipe in front of a belly dancer.
The three minute video, which was posted to his Tik Tok, ended with a shot of the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben, overlaid with the words: 'Happy New Year everyone!...Wish the best for all!'
And in October he posted another video of himself driving a £300,000 red Ferrari around the streets of the capital.
In the same month, Puka also trolled Nigel Farage after posting a picture of himself raising a toast and tucking into a meal next to a doctored photo of the Reform UK leader.
Mr Farage labelled him 'a proper wrong'un' and said we are 'literally being walked all over' by the convicted criminal.
Other social media posts showed him enjoying evenings at local shisha bars, treating relatives to high-end meals, and unboxing a brand-new Patek Philippe watch.
Regarding Puka, a Home Office spokesperson previously said: 'Foreign nationals who commit crimes should be in no doubt that the law will be enforced.
'Mr Puka has been deported by the UK before. It is UK law that we cannot deport individuals where there are claims or representations still awaiting decision.
'We have already begun delivering a major surge in immigration enforcement and returns activity to remove people with no right to be in the UK, with 3,000 returned since the new government came into power.'