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Iceland is making major change to checkouts and 'will expand' to more stores

Iceland is making major change to checkouts and 'will expand' to more stores

Daily Mirror5 hours ago

The cameras check customers faces against a database of known offenders, it then triggers an alert to staff to the store when a match is made
Iceland is set to install facial recognition in stores as part of a major change to its checkouts. It comes as part of a crackdown on theft and violence against staff, with two stores already testing the technology.
The cameras check customers faces against a database of known offenders, it then triggers an alert to staff to the store when a match is made. If successful, the technology could be rolled out to more Iceland stores.

Facewatch is also used by Home Bargains, B&M and Frasers Group – including Flannels, House of Fraser, Sports Direct and Evans Cycles.

An Iceland spokesperson said: "Following a robust due diligence process, we can confirm that our facial recognition trial is now live in two stores and will expand further this year.
"This is part of our continued investment into tackling violent retail crime and protecting the safety of our colleagues and customers."
It comes after Iceland closed its store in Margate, Kent, last weekend, with its store in Inverness, Scotland, following on July 12.
Shoppers have reacted to the news on social media. One said: 'Wow they been there as long as I can remember they one of the original shops in that area such a shame.'
Another commented: 'This is awful all the elderly people that use this and Morrisons to do the weekly shops will now suffer once again.' A third said: 'Such a shame I remember when it opened.'
Iceland, which has over 900 stores across the UK, has not confirmed the reason behind the closures. The supermarket has closed a handful of stores over the last few months, including its Welling branch in London.
Its shops in Shenley Road, Borehamwood and Alphington Road Retail Park in Exeter have also been shut down. But it isn't all bad news.
The retailer has also opened new stores. Last month, Iceland opened a new city centre supermarket in Derby and another shop at Victoria Chambers on London Road.
Earlier this year, the company announced plans to open 20 Iceland and Food Warehouse stores, and the supermarket has also opened a new 500,000 square foot £100million distribution centre in Warrington.
The Omega Park Site in Warrington - which opened in partnership with GXO in February - supplies around 350 Iceland stores across the north west of England, the Scottish borders and Wales.

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Fraudster who conned luxury brands into buying fake Scottish tea jailed
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Thomas Robinson, 55, claimed to have cultivated the tea at his Perthshire estate using innovative techniques, but in reality it was bought from wholesalers and grown outside of Scotland. Operating under the business name The Wee Tea Plantation, Robinson fraudulently sold the tea to high-profile clients in the hospitality sector between January 2014 and February 2019. Representatives of the Balmoral Hotel, the Dorchester Hotel and a company acting on behalf of Fortnum & Mason were among those tricked by the fraudster, who had claimed to have sold tea to customers including Kensington Palace. A Food Standards Scotland (FSS) investigation found Robinson also misled genuine Scottish tea growers by selling them plants under the false pretence they were a unique, locally-grown variety. On May 25, he was found guilty of two counts of fraud to a value of almost £553,000 after a trial at Falkirk Sheriff Court, which followed an investigation by FSS. 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Fraudster jailed for duping luxury hotels into buying his fake Scottish tea
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A man has been jailed for three and a half years after being found guilty of a tea fraud scheme, from which he earned over £500,000. Thomas Robinson, 55, who also went by Thomas O'Brien or Tam O'Braan, was found guilt of deceiving luxury stores and hotel groups into buying his 'unique' Scottish-grown tea that was in fact wholesale leaves he had imported from around the world and repackaged. His victims included five-star hotels like London's Dorchester and Edinburgh's Balmoral which are known for their grand afternoon tea experiences. The tea menu at the Balmoral's Palm Court included names like Scottish Antlers Tea and Highland Green and based on descriptions Robinson gave them, boasted 'Our Scottish-grown teas come from gardens in our farming heartlands in Perthshire and Dumfries and Galloway'. He even claimed his Scottish tea was 'the Queen's favourite'. He also defrauded a group of genuine Scottish tea growers by selling them plants under false pretences. Operating under the business name The Wee Tea Plantation, he pretended to cultivate unique Scottish tea plants on his Perthshire estate but prosecutors proved the product had been purchased elsewhere before being repackaged. Robinson then fraudulently sold the plants to high-profile clients in the hospitality and retailers between January 2014 and February 2019 for five times the cost. The court heard he was importing the plants for three Euros each – around £2.50 - and collecting them from a mailbox in Glasgow and then selling them for £12.50. Robinson also fabricated his academic status by falsely claiming he had qualifications in agronomy and agriculture and had obtained awards for his tea from industry bodies. He claimed to have found a way to make his tea grow in half the usual time – using a 'special biodegradable polymer' which the prosecution said looked like black bin liner – and claimed to have given a presentation on his methods to the Royal Horticultural Society. He was sentenced at Stirling Sheriff Court after a jury found him guilty of two charges of being concerned in a fraudulent scheme following an investigation by Food Standards Scotland. He will now be subject to confiscation proceedings under Proceeds of Crime legislation to recover monies illegally obtained. Ron McNaughton, Head of the Scottish Food Crime and Incidents Unit (SFCIU) at Food Standards Scotland, said: 'We welcome today's sentencing as a clear signal that food fraud is a serious crime with serious consequences. 'A three-and-a-half year custodial sentence reflects the scale and impact of Mr Robinson's deception. His actions caused real financial and reputational harm to individuals, businesses and a developing sector of genuine Scottish tea producers. 'This outcome is the result of a complex and painstaking investigation involving a dedicated team at FSS and the cooperation of partner agencies and key witnesses. 'It demonstrates that those who set out to mislead consumers and defraud businesses will be held accountable. 'Food fraud undermines consumer trust and damages the integrity of Scotland's globally respected food and drink sector. We remain committed to detecting and disrupting criminal activity of this nature.' Helen Nisbet, Procurator Fiscal for Tayside, Central and Fife, said: 'This was a planned and deliberate fraud. 'Thomas Robinson misled genuine Scottish tea growers by selling them plants he falsely claimed were a unique, locally grown variety. 'Fraud is not a victimless crime. Individuals, businesses, and genuine Scottish tea growers suffered financial and reputational harm as a consequence of Robinson's deceit. 'But thanks to partnership working between Food Standards Scotland, Police Scotland and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, he has been brought to account for his crimes. 'We are committed to tackling financial crime of this kind.'

Fraudster made £500,000 by conning luxury brands into buying fake 'Scottish tea'
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A fraudster who made more than £500,000 by conning luxury businesses into buying 'Scottish-grown tea' that actually came from wholesalers abroad has been jailed. Thomas Robinson, 55, operating under the business name The Wee Tea Plantation, claimed to have cultivated the tea at his Perthshire estate using innovative techniques. He flogged it to high profile clients including representatives of the Balmoral Hotel, the Dorchester Hotel and a company acting on behalf of Fortnum & Mason. Robinson, also known as Tam O'Braan and Thomas O'Brien, bolstered his credibility by fabricating academic qualifications and industry awards. He claimed to have worked for the Obama administration in America on a maize project, served in the British Army in bomb disposal and invented the 'bag for life'. But the reality was he had bought over a tonne of tea grown abroad, repacked it, and sold it on. He disguised what he was doing by getting the foreign tea delivered to a mailbox address in Glasgow and paying for it though a private bank account. The court heard a kilo of African tea could be sold for 100 times its cost if passed as grown in Scotland. Robinson also claimed to have produced tea plants at Amulree from cuttings and seed. Between 2015 and 2018 he supplied 22,000 plants to a dozen other growers in Scotland and one in Jersey at £12.50 each. Over the same period he was actually importing tea plants at €3 each from a horticulturalist in Italy. He either passed them off as Scottish-grown or allowed his customers to assume they were. Representing himself, Robinson begged for 'compassion' as he appeared by videolink from HMP Low Moss, wearing a green sweatshirt. Sheriff Keith O'Mahony refused a bid to defer sentence and said it was in the public interest that it went ahead, as Robinson was 'articulate' enough to represent himself. He was found guilty of two counts of fraud, spanning January 2014 and February 2019, to a value of almost £553,000 after a trial at Falkirk Sheriff Court. Robinson, who told the court he has four children and attends church, claimed he awoke every morning in his cell plagued with guilt about the 'reputational damage' caused to genuine Scottish tea growers. 'I've had time to wrestle with this over sleepless nights, coming to realise how wrong and stupid I've been,' he told the court. 'The damage this has on all concerned, the stigma of misleading others… I should have been much more transparent and owned up to the situation. Hubris and arrogance made me believe I did my best. 'The method by which you could grow tea in Scotland, something I was told you couldn't do… I didn't know the best, I didn't act as I should have. I go to church, I'm perfectly aware that a sin is not only to do something, but also not to do the right thing. 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Helen Nisbet, procurator fiscal for Tayside, Central and Fife, said: 'Individuals, businesses, and genuine Scottish tea growers suffered financial and reputational harm as a consequence of Robinson's deceit. 'But thanks to partnership working between Food Standards Scotland, Police Scotland and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, he has been brought to account for his crimes. 'We are committed to tackling financial crime of this kind.' Ron McNaughton, of Food Standards Scotland (FSS), said: 'We welcome today's sentencing as a clear signal that food fraud is a serious crime with serious consequences. More Trending 'A three-and-a-half year custodial sentence reflects the scale and impact of Mr Robinson's deception. His actions caused real financial and reputational harm to individuals, businesses and a developing sector of genuine Scottish tea producers. 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