
'Vital cogs' in UK crime gang caught by police at Welsh builders merchants
The criminals who police intercepted had travelled 250 miles from Lancashire as part of a 'large-scale and well-organised criminal enterprise'
Benjamin Poyton
(Image: South Wales Police )
Members of a "large-scale and well-organised criminal enterprise" were caught by police in a builders merchants, a court has heard. The men - who had travelled more than 250 miles to the Swansea area - were part of a criminal network which was using bank details stolen from elderly victims to buy copper piping and other items from unsuspecting suppliers which it then quickly sold on for cash at scrap yards.
A judge at Swansea Crown Court described Benjamin Poyton and Liam jones as "vital cogs" in the conspiracy, though the identity of those higher up the chain in the organised crime group remains unknown. When he travelled to Wales one of the defendants was being investigated for similar offending in London.
Dean Pulling, prosecuting, told the court that between March 19 and March 26 this year a series of orders were placed with two building supply firms in Swansea and the Swansea Valley - LBS in Landore and JA Daly in Ystradgynlais - for thousands of pounds worth of copper tubes and nails in the names of a various companies. The goods were then collected by the defendants in vans.
The prosecutor said in reality all the company names given when the orders were placed were bogus, and the card details used to make the payments over the phone had previously been stolen from elderly and vulnerable people around the UK. For the latest court reports sign up to our crime newsletter
The court heard that when another order was placed with LBS on March 26 the manager became suspicious at what was going on and contacted the police who attended the premises and lay in wait for the order to be collected. When Poyton turned up to collect the order in a Citroen Berlingo van he was arrested, and his reply to being cautioned was "I knew I was running on thin ice". The officers seized the defendant's phone but he refused to reveal the PIN telling officers: "No, I would rather that than chance what I have on that."
The court heard that later the same day another phone order was placed with LBS, and the unknown caller also checked whether the first one had been successfully collected - the manager of the firm "played along" and said everything was fine. The manager again alerted the police and when Jones attended in a VW Crafter van at just after 5pm he was arrested by waiting officers.
Article continues below
The court heard that when officers searched Poyton's van they found a receipt for £824 from EMR scrap yard in Roath Dock in Cardiff and when police checked CCTV from the metal business they saw Poyton dropping off copper pipes on March 18, 19, 20 and 21. Further checks showed the two defendants had been staying in a hotel in the Swansea area.
The court heard that the total value of the fraudulently-obtained items was just under £10,000.
Benjamin Poyton, aged 36, of Blackburn Road, Darwen, Blackburn, and 28-year-old Liam Jones, of Norfolk Street, Blackburn, had previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud when they appeared in the dock for sentencing. Poyton had also previously pleaded guilty to driving otherwise than in accordance with a licence and driving without insurance while Jones had also previously pleaded guilty to driving while disqualified and driving with no insurance.
Poyton has previous convictions for 28 offences including drugs, dishonesty, violence, and public disorder matters. Jones has no previous convictions but at the time of the Welsh offending was being investigated by City of London Police in relation to similar matters. The court heard that in January this year he was disqualified from driving as a "totter" after accumulating 12 points on his licence.
Dan Griffiths, for Poyton, said the pre-sentence report detailed how the defendant was being paid £200 by others for each trip he made with the money going to discharge a drugs debt. He said his client was at pains to point out that he had not been involved in obtaining the bank details of the elderly victims nor in placing the orders with the builders merchants, and said while others had done those things the two men in the dock were the ones who had been "taking the risk" and collecting the goods.
David Singh, for Jones, asked the court to take into account the defendant's lack of previous convictions, his previous military service, and his good work ethic. He said the father-of-four was concerned about being absent from his children and his partner, and said the reality was "there must have been others above him in the chain".
Judge Paul Thomas KC told the defendants they had been part of a "large-scale and well-organised criminal enterprise" to use payments details stolen from elderly and vulnerable individuals to fraudulently obtain building materials which were quickly sold on. He said it had been a "wide-ranging conspiracy" and said while others not before the court had been involved Payton and Jones had been "vital cogs" in the operation.
The judge said while there was nothing to distinguish the offenders in terms of their involvement in the offending they could be distinguished in terms of their previous convictions and the prospect of rehabilitation, though he noted Jones had taken part in the Welsh offending after being released under investigation by police in London.
With 20 per cent discounts for their guilty pleas each defendant was sentenced to 14 months in prison - Poyton will have to serve his sentence immediately but Jones' sentence was suspended for 18 months and he was ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work and do a rehabilitation course.
Article continues below
Judge Thomas told Jones he had avoided immediate imprisonment "by the skin of your teeth" and he noted while the defendant said he was concerned about the impact on his children if he were to be sent to prison, he obviously hadn't been so concerned about them when he involved himself in the fraud.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Tata Steel fined £1.5m following death of contractor at Welsh steelworks
Tata Steel has been fined more than £1.5m following the death of a contractor at the Port Talbot steelworks in 2019. Justin Day, 44, from Llansamlet, Swansea, died from injuries he sustained while working at the South Wales site in September 2019. At a sentencing hearing on Thursday, Swansea Crown Court heard Mr Day died while working as a contractor, carrying out repairs to Tata's steelworks. While a conveyor system, which should be isolated from workers except during maintenance, was in the process of being put back into service, a hydraulic leak was found on the lower floor. Mr Day was called on the radio with a request to bring tools. However, he was not warned that machinery in the area above had been restarted. When Mr Day entered, he triggered sensors that activated a moving beam in a live section, fatally injuring him. The family learned of his death while Mr Day's family were watching his youngest son play in a school rugby match. Nuhu Gobir, appearing for the prosecution, argued Tata had failed to ensure the conveyor system was properly isolated and guarded, and did not take sufficient steps to manage the safety of the ongoing work. Judge Geraint Walters fined Tata £1.5 million and ordered them to pay prosecution costs of £26,318.67. The company pleaded guilty to two charges, failing to ensure the health and safety of its employees, and a mirroring offence covering contractors. Judge Walters described the area Mr Day was working in as 'dangerous,' adding: 'He should have been told that the call was cancelled or told that the system was at least partly live.' Passing on his condolences to Mr Day's family, he said: 'It's perfectly plain that Mr Day was a family man, who has left many people bereft to have lost someone so precious. 'No fine I impose today can alleviate the suffering of those who have lost a loved one, no fine I impose today can restore life.' In a victim impact statement read to the court by Mr Gobir, Zoe Day, Mr Day's wife, spoke of her struggles since her husband died, saying she suffered 'constant flashbacks to that day'. She described her husband as a 'wonderful man' who was bubbly and happy, with a passion for rugby. 'Since losing Justin I am not the same person I was,' she said. 'I have struggled since that day, mentally, I am lost and don't know where I'm going with life. It's shattered my whole world. 'We had done everything together for 23 years. I can't put into words how much this has affected me. 'I am a shadow of my former self, and from the day of the incident, my world fell apart.' She added: 'Justin's passion was rugby – he loved coaching and watching our boys play. 'He was their biggest fan. The day he died, we were waiting for him to arrive at the pitch. I never imagined I'd be receiving the news that he had been crushed to death at work. 'Justin would have been 50 this year. Instead of celebrating, we are still mourning his needless death. 'I pray no other family must go through what we've endured. He went to work and never came home – an accident that should never have happened.' Gethyn Jones, an inspector for the Health and Safety Executive, said: 'Justin Day's death could so easily have been prevented. 'A much-loved family man is not here because of failures in health and safety basics. 'Employers have a responsibility to make sure sufficient procedures are in place to protect workers – both employees and contractors – and that those procedures are understood and followed. 'The dangers of moving machinery are well known. Sufficient risk assessments must be carried out and access to dangerous areas must be properly guarded and controlled. 'This has been a long and thorough investigation, and we believe this is the right outcome. It is clear that Justin's death has had a devastating impact on his family, his friends and the wider community. Our thoughts remain with them.' A spokesman for Tata Steel UK said: 'We wish to express again our sincere condolences to Mr Day's bereaved family, friends and workmates.'


North Wales Live
7 hours ago
- North Wales Live
Former Wales boxer caught plotting to import cannabis from Thailand to North Wales after tip off
A former Wales boxer was caught plotting to import cannabis from Thailand to North Wales. UK Border Force officials intercepted two packages with two Welsh addresses on them. Police swooped on Harvey Williams at a Llandudno guesthouse and found drugs along with Williams' partner "cooking" cocaine on a stove to turn it into crack cocaine. Williams and his partner Sophie Williams-Roberts pleaded guilty to drugs offences. Today a judge at Caernarfon Crown Court gave them suspended sentences. An accomplice Thomas Braganca received a 12-month community order. You can sign up for all the latest court stories here Prosecutor Richard Edwards said last year Harvey Williams, 21, and Braganca, 30, had conspired to import cannabis from Thailand. On June 7 last year Harvey Williams had been staying in the Bella Vista Guest House in Llandudno. Police arrived and found both Williams and partner Sophie Williams-Roberts, 30, in a room. She was "cooking crack cocaine on a stove", the court heard. Officers also discovered 17.7g of heroin worth £1,600 and 174 wraps of crack cocaine worth £1,700. They also found scales and evidence the couple been involved in drug dealing. On May 26 Harvey had sent a message about "Thai weed" with the words "I'll have proper cheap. Nice". The court also heard that later on August 6 last year the UK Border Force told North Wales Police about two suspect packages they found containing about a kilo of herbal cannabis with two local addresses. Police arrested the three defendants. Enquiries established Harvey Williams had travelled to Thailand and that Braganca had supplied him with the two addresses for the packages to be sent to. Elen Owen, defending Harvey Williams, said he had had his own drug habit and was paying off drug debts. He had been a boxer for the Welsh national team. She said: "It appears sadly like so many thousands of others (life) unravelled during the Covid period when the positive influences of daily training were taken away from him and he associated with older, negative influences on him, leading to him taking drugs." At one stage, when he was a teenager, his mobility was affected and he went into hospital, she added. He tried to keep away from dealers but he and his family were threatened and he felt he had no choice but to continue his offending, said Ms Owen. But his time on remand in custody has taught him a "salutary lesson". Jemma Gordon, for Sophie Williams-Roberts, said it was "unfortunate" that the mother of three has found herself convicted of such a number of offences. She had suffered trauma and had been using drugs from a young age. Harvey Williams, of Queen's Avenue, Maesgeirchen, Bangor, was given a 24-month jail term, suspended for 24 months, for conspiracy to supply crack cocaine and conspiracy to supply heroin. He also received a concurrent, nine- month suspended sentence for the importation of cannabis. Sophie Williams-Roberts, of Tan-y-Coed, Maesgeirchen, Bangor, was given a 16-month jail term, suspended for 18 months, for conspiracy to supply crack cocaine and heroin. She must wear a trail monitoring tag for six months and attend 15 sessions of rehabilitation activity. Braganca, of Glyn Road, Bangor, was given a 12-month community order for the importation of cannabis. He must do 20 days of rehabilitation activity.


BBC News
10 hours ago
- BBC News
Tributes to Timmy Matthews who died after Swansea pub incident
The family of a 63-year-old man who died after an incident outside a pub in Swansea have paid tribute to Matthews, from Townhill, was found unconscious outside The Mill, Brynymor Road in Brynmill, at about 20:15 BST on Friday and was taken to the city's Morriston Hospital, where he died on Vonk, 51, from Westbury St, Brynmill, appeared at Swansea Magistrates' Court on Monday morning charged with murder. South Wales Police is appealing for anyone with information to come forward. Mr Matthews was described as a "loving character" by his family, who said "everyone in the community is in shock at what has happened".He will be deeply missed by his daughter, sister, and all his friends in Swansea, they added.