
Warrant issued for the arrest of Viking hoard thief
A warrant has been issued for the arrest of a man found guilty of stealing a Viking hoard of gold worth £3 million. Metal detectorist George Powell, from Newport, failed to appear at Birmingham Magistrates Court on 8 January. He was due to have been sentenced for failing to repay £600,000, the money a judge had earlier decided was his share of the missing coins and jewellery. His fellow detectorist, Layton Davies, from Pontypridd, is serving an extra five years and three months in prison for failing to pay his share.
In 2015, George Powell and Layton Davies uncovered 300 coins and gold jewellery in a field in Eye, near Leominster, Herefordshire.Instead of declaring the treasure, as required by law, they sold the valuables to dealers.In 2019, they were both found guilty of theft, conspiring to conceal criminal property, and converting criminal property by selling it.George Powell was sentenced to 10 years in prison, later reduced to six and a half years on appeal.Layton Davies was sentenced to eight and a half years in prison, later reduced to five years on appeal.At the time of the trial, just 31 of the estimated 300 coins that they found had been recovered.
Experts believed the coins were Anglo-Saxon and to have been hidden by a Viking. One of them was a double-headed coin, showing two rulers of England. Alfred the Great, who ruled Wessex, and Ceolwulf II of Mercia. Historians said this showed there was an alliance previously not thought to exist between the kings, changing what we know about the unification of England.The hoard also included a 9th-century gold ring, a crystal rock pendant, a dragon's head bracelet and an ingot.At the trial, the judge told the men they were guilty of stealing the nation's history.
In 2022, both George Powell and Layton Davies appeared at Worcester Crown Court.Judge Nicholas Cartwright told the men he believed about 270 coins were still being deliberately hidden by them.They were given a confiscation order and each told to repay £600,000 or go back to jail. George Powell appealed against that order, but his attempts to stay out of prison were rejected twice by an appeal judge and also the Court of Appeal in London.He was due to be sentenced at Birmingham Magistrates Court in January, but he failed to appear, so a warrant was issued for his arrest. Hereford Museum raised £776,250 to buy the jewellery, the ingot, and 29 coins from the owner of the field where they were found. The Museum and Art Gallery is undergoing a £22 million refurbishment and is due to reopen with a purpose-built space where the coins and jewellery will be on permanent display. In May 2023, two further men, Craig Best, from County Durham, and Roger Pilling, from Lancashire, were each jailed for five years and two months after trying to sell 44 rare Anglo-Saxon coins worth £766,000.The coins were thought to be part of the hoard uncovered in Herefordshire by George Powell and Layton Davies. The rest of the hoard is still missing.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Paedophile NHS anaesthetist, 37, who took indecent photos of unconscious patients including girl, five, loses bid to shorten jail sentence
An anaesthetist who took indecent photos of a five-year-old girl while she lay unconscious has lost a bid to shorten his sentence. Edward Finn committed 'about as egregious breach of trust as can be imagined' when he captured the pictures of four female victims. The 37-year-old made indecent images of a five-year-old girl and an adult patient after he anaesthetised them. And he also took photos of his wife while she was asleep, as well as a three-year-old daughter of a family friend. Finn was sentenced in June 2024 to eight years in jail with an extended licence of four years after pleading guilty at Nottingham Crown Court. He subsequently challenged the length of his sentence - though the Court of Appeal in London has now dismissed this. Mr Justice Johnson, sitting with Lord Justice Fraser and Judge Martin Picton, said Finn's offences took place between 2014 and 2023. He was caught after his wife found images of naked children on an old iPad, in a folder labelled 'hidden', the judge said. Further investigations into all of Finn's devices revealed thousands of indecent images of children, including more than a hundred in the most serious category, and images of an adult and a child taken during the course of his work. Finn, from Cotgrave in Nottinghamshire, told officers he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after a girl he was treating had died. He also tried to take his own life before he was arrested and charged, the court heard. Andrew Wesley, for Finn, said at the appeal hearing on Friday that the sentence was too long because of 'the mathematics' of how it was reached. But the judges dismissed the appeal, with Mr Justice Johnson adding: 'This was about as egregious a breach of trust as can be imagined.' He continued: 'We conclude that the sentence imposed was not wrong in principle or manifestly excessive. 'We therefore dismiss the appeal.'


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Serial York drink-driver banned after neighbour crash
A serial drink and drug driver has been banned from the roads after crashing his BMW into a neighbour's parked car while over the Jason Starkie, 33, crashed into the parked Hyundai on Tang Hall Lane in York in the early hours of 5 tested, he was above the drink-drive limit and also had cocaine and cannabis in his system, North Yorkshire Police had admitted two charges of drug driving and one of being above the limit for alcohol at an earlier hearing and was banned from the roads for 40 months at York Magistrates ' Court on Thursday. Starkie was also given a year-long community order, ordered to complete 150 days of unpaid work and 20 days of rehabilitation. He was also ordered to pay £114 victim surcharge and £85 court Yorkshire Police said this was Starkie's third conviction of driving under the influence of drink and Constable Joseph Schramm said: "The defendant clearly has no regard for other road users."Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North or tell us a story you think we should be covering here.


BBC News
10 hours ago
- BBC News
Paedophile anaesthetist's sentence appeal dismissed
An anaesthetist who took indecent images of an unconscious young girl in hospital has had an appeal against the length of his jail term Court of Appeal heard Edward Finn, 37, committed "about as egregious a breach of trust as can be imagined" when he took pictures of the girl and of an adult patient while anaesthetised under his admitted one count of sexual assault of a child under 13, three counts of making indecent photographs of children, three counts of taking indecent photographs of children, and two counts of pleading guilty at Nottingham Crown Court, Finn was sentenced in June 2024 to eight years in jail with an extended licence of four years. His appeal against the sentence was dismissed at the Court of Appeal in Justice Johnson, sitting with Lord Justice Fraser and Judge Martin Picton, said Finn's offences took place between 2014 and was discovered after his wife found images of naked children on an old iPad, in a folder labelled "hidden", the judge investigations into all of Finn's devices revealed thousands of indecent images of children, including more than a hundred in the most serious category, and images of an adult and a child taken during the course of his work. 'Breach of trust' Finn, from Hollygate Lane, Cotgrave, told officers he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after a girl he was treating had Wesley, for Finn, said at the appeal hearing on Friday the sentence was too long because of "the mathematics" of how it was the judges dismissed the Justice Johnson, dismissing the appeal, said the sentence was "not wrong in principle or manifestly excessive" and added: "This was about as egregious a breach of trust as can be imagined."