
Metal detectorists who tried to flog rare Anglo-Saxon coins worth £766k to undercover cop are forced to repay £100,000
A METAL detectorist who was jailed for trying to sell Anglo-Saxon coins to an undercover cop has been ordered to repay £103,000.
Roger Pilling, 77, thought he was flogging the find to an expert working for a wealthy American buyer.
Advertisement
3
Roger Pilling, 75, who along with Craig Best, 46, were convicted of conspiring to sell criminal property worth £766,000
Credit: PA
3
The coins were believed to have been buried by a Viking and were never declared as Treasure
Credit: PA
3
Forty-four coins were recovered in the following sting operation but two - that Pilling claimed he had broken - were never found
Credit: PA
Instead the man from Loveclough, Lancashire, has three months to repay the money or he could face another 12-month prison sentence.
He was convicted with a second man of conspiring to sell 44 ninth century coins worth £766,000 and jailed for five years and two months at Durham Crown Court in May 2023.
The coins, which were never declared as treasure, were believed to have been buried by a Viking and included two extremely rare examples of two-headed coins, showing Alfred of Wessex and Ceolwulf II of Mercia.
Pilling and his co-defendant Craig Best, 48, previously of Bishop Auckland, County Durham, tried to sell the coins to a real American collector, who contacted UK experts about how such rare pieces were available for sale, and police were called in.
Advertisement
Read more News
Forty-four coins were recovered in the following sting operation but two - that Pilling claimed he had broken - were never found.
On April 24, Pilling was ordered to repay £103,000 after a confiscation order was granted at Teeside Crown Court.
He has three months to make the payment or he could face another 12-month prison sentence.
Adrian Foster, Chief Crown Prosecutor for the CPS Proceeds of Crime Division, said: "Roger Pilling intended to sell these rare and important coins for his own gain.
Advertisement
Most read in The Sun
Live Blog
"He knew that these coins were stolen treasure and instead of choosing to report a crime, he chose to try and profit from it.
"The CPS worked with the police to value his criminal benefit from the attempted selling of these rare Anglo-Saxon coins, which should have been given to the Crown.
RARE £1 COIN
"The Confiscation Order set by the Judge reflects all the assets available to the defendants.
"We will always work to ensure that crime does not pay, and criminals cannot benefit from their ill-gotten gains."
Advertisement
The coins were estimated to have been made between 874 CE and 879 CE.
The sentencing judge found that the 44 coins were part of a larger, undeclared find known as the Herefordshire or Leominster Hoard, which was discovered in 2015 and is worth millions of pounds, but which was also not declared.
, then 46, and Roger Pilling hatching a plot to flog the 44
ninth-century coins
, which are believed to have been buried by a Viking.
In 2023, Best and Pilling were jailed after they were convicted of conspiracy to convert criminal property.
Advertisement
The coin enthusiasts were also found guilty of possession of criminal property following a trial.
Durham Crown Court was told the coins were likely part of a larger, undeclared find known as the Herefordshire or Leominster Hoard.
Sentencing, Judge James Adkin said: "Had they left this country, they would have been likely to be lost to this nation for ever."
Jurors heard how an undercover police sting was set up in 2019 when Best tried to sell the coins to an American collector, who then alerted the UK authorities.
Advertisement
He was arrested with three coins at a Durham hotel after he travelled to meet what he believed was a wealthy US buyer.
Pilling, who according to the judge acquired the collection from the "black market", was arrested at his home in Loveclough, Lancashire.
They included two extremely rare examples of two-headed coins, showing Alfred of Wessex and Ceolwulf II of Mercia.
Experts say the discovery fills a historical gap from the time - revealing Ceolwulf was an ally or peer, rather than the 'puppet' of the Vikings he was previously believed to be.
Advertisement
The coins are believed to have been found in Leominster, Herefordshire, in 2015 as part of a multi-million pound hoard.
Under the
"Treasure" has a number of definitions but key requirements are that it's up to 200-years-old and over 10 per cent of its weight is precious metal.
Advertisement
If a reward is paid for a find it is normally shared equally between the finder and landowner.
Hashtags

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


Irish Independent
24 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Several people arrested in Bali on drugs charges that could carry death penalty
Firdia Lisnawati and Edna Tarigan ©Associated Press Several foreign nationals - including an Australian, an Indian and an American - have been arrested on the tourist island of Bali on suspicion of possessing drugs, charges that could carry the death penalty. The move comes after three British nationals accused of smuggling nearly a kilogram of cocaine into Indonesia were charged on Tuesday in a court on Bali.


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Pope meets child protection advisory board amid call for zero tolerance on abuse
Pope Leo XIV met with members of the Vatican's child protection advisory commission on Thursday for the first time amid questions about his past handling of clergy sex abuse cases. There are also demands from survivors that he enacts a true policy of zero tolerance for abuse across the Catholic Church. The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, which is made up of religious and lay experts in fighting abuse as well as survivors, called the hour-ong audience a 'significant moment of reflection, dialogue, and renewal of the church's unwavering commitment to the safeguarding of children and vulnerable people'. The group said it updated history's first American pope on its activities, including an initiative to help church communities in poorer parts of the world prevent abuse and care for victims. The Vatican did not provide the text of Leo's remarks or make the audio of the audience available to reporters. Pope Francis created the commission early on in his pontificate to advise the church on best practices and placed a trusted official, Boston's then-archbishop, Cardinal Sean O'Malley, in charge. But as the abuse scandal spread globally during Francis' 12-year pontificate, the commission lost its influence its crowning recommendation — the creation of a tribunal to judge bishops who covered up for predator priests — went nowhere. After many years of reform and new members, it has become a place where victims can go to be heard and bishops can get advice on crafting guidelines to fight abuse. Cardinal O'Malley turned 80 last year and retired as archbishop of Boston, but he remains president of the commission and headed the delegation meeting with Leo in the Apostolic Palace. It has often fallen to Cardinal O'Malley to speak out on cases that have arrived at the Vatican, including one that remains on Leo's desk: The fate of the ex-Jesuit artist, the Rev Marko Rupnik, who has been accused by two dozen women of sexual, psychological and spiritual abuse over decades. After coming under criticism that a fellow Jesuit had apparently received preferential treatment, Francis in 2023 ordered the Vatican to waive the statute of limitations on the case and prosecute him canonically. But as recently as March, the Vatican still had not found judges to open the trial. Meanwhile, the victims are still waiting for justice and Rev Rupnik continues to minister, with his supporters defending him and denouncing a 'media lynching' campaign against him. Leo, the Chicago-born former Cardinal Robert Prevost, has been credited by victims of helping to dismantle an abusive Catholic movement in Peru, where he served as bishop for many years. But other survivors have asked him to account for other cases while he was a superior in the Augustinian religious order, bishop in Peru and head of the Vatican's bishops' office. The main US survivor group, Snap, has also called for Leo to adopt the US policy calling for any priest who has been credibly accused of abuse to be permanently removed from ministry.


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Several people arrested in Bali on drugs charges that could carry death penalty
Several foreign nationals – including an Australian, an Indian and an American – have been arrested on the tourist island of Bali on suspicion of possessing drugs, charges that could carry the death penalty. The move comes after three British nationals accused of smuggling nearly a kilogram of cocaine into Indonesia were charged on Tuesday in a court on Bali. Customs officers at Bali's Ngurah Rai International Airport arrested an Indian national with the initials HV, who was carrying a duffel bag, in the customs and excise inspection area on May 29. The officers found narcotic-related items in his belongings, authorities said. Following up on the interrogation of HV, later that day officers from the National Narcotics Agency of Bali Province arrested an Australian man with the initials PR, who has been visiting Bali since 1988. PR asked HV to bring the duffel bag from Los Angeles to Bali, said I Made Sinar Subawa, an official from the narcotics agency, at a news conference. The accused pair are presented to the media with other drug suspects following their arrests (Firdia Lisnawati/AP) During a search at a house where he stayed, officers found drugs in the form of hashish, a cannabis concentrate product, that belonged to PR and had been purchased over the Telegram messaging app. The hashish was shipped from Los Angeles and Philippines before finally being received in Bali, Mr Subawa said. Officers seized 191 grams of hashish along with some candies consisting of tetrahydrocannabinol, and 488 grams of marijuana. Both PR and HV are now suspected of dealing in narcotics, based on the evidence that was found with them, Mr Subawa said. 'PR is suspected of violating Indonesia's Narcotics Law which carries the death penalty, life imprisonment, or imprisonment for a minimum of four years and a maximum of 12 years,' said Mr Subawa. Along with HV and PR, the agency also arrested WM, an American, on May 23 while he was collecting a package from a post office in Bali. (Firdia Lisnawati/AP) An officer opened the package carried by WM and found seven pieces of silver packaging containing a total of 99 orange amphetamine pills and secured one white Apple iPhone. The agency, at a news conference in the city of Denpasar on Thursday, presented the evidence, including marijuana and hashish, seized from the suspects. All suspects will undergo legal proceedings in Indonesia, including trial and sentencing. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says Indonesia is a major drug-smuggling hub despite having some of the strictest drug laws in the world, in part because international drug syndicates target its young population. The south-east Asian country has extremely strict drug laws, and convicted smugglers can face severe penalties, including the possibility of execution by firing squad. About 530 people, including 96 foreigners, are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug-related crimes, latest figures from the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections show. Indonesia's last executions, of an Indonesian and three foreigners, were carried out in July 2016.