
Robert Bush: Funeral director in court after investigation into remains found at his premises
A funeral director has appeared in court charged with 63 offences, spanning more than a decade, after a major investigation into human remains found at his premises.
Robert Bush, 47, faces 30 counts of preventing a lawful burial and 30 counts of fraud by false representation, relating to bodies found at the Legacy Independent Funeral Directors site on Hessle Road in Hull, in March last year.
Those charges date from between April 2023 and March 2024.
He has also been charged with one count of fraudulent trading in relation to funeral plans and one count of fraud by false representation in relation to human ashes.
These charges are between May 2012 and March 2024, and August 2017 and March 2024, respectively.
The 47-year-old is also accused of theft from 12 charities: the Salvation Army, Macmillan Cancer Support, CHIEF, the Dogs Trust, Dove House, Help for Heroes, Maister Lodge, Oakwood Dog Rescue, RNLI, Sailors Children's Charity, WISHH and Hull Fishing Heritage Charity.
Bush, formerly of Kirk Ella, East Yorkshire, but now of Otley, West Yorkshire, attended a five-minute hearing at Hull Magistrates' Court on Tuesday, where he spoke only to confirm his name, date of birth, and address.
He was not asked to indicate any pleas as the charges and names of 30 alleged victims were read out.
Bush was told 30 of the charges could only be dealt with at a crown court, and his case was adjourned until 13 August, when he will appear at Hull Crown Court.
He was bailed with conditions to attend a local police station every day from Monday to Friday.
The charges of fraud - relating to named victims - allege that Bush falsely claimed:
• He would "properly care for the remains of the deceased in accordance with the normal expected practices of a competent funeral director"
• Bush would "arrange for the cremation of those remains to take place immediately or soon after the conclusion of the funeral service"
• And he would ensure "the ashes presented to the customer were the remains of the deceased person after cremation".
Humberside Police launched its investigation into Legacy Independent Funeral Directors across three premises in Hull and East Yorkshire in March last year.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Australia News LIVE: Suburban home peppered with bullets in suspected drive-by shooting
Welcome to Daily Mail Australia's live news blog. A home has been sprayed with bullets in a suspected drive-by shooting in Sydney 's north-west. 21:43 Sydney home sprayed with bullets A home in Sydney's north-west has been peppered with bullets in a late-night drive-by shooting. Police were called to Nangar Crescent in North Kellyville shortly after 11pm after reports of shots fired at a home. Two men and a woman were inside the home at the time but weren't injured. Footage from the scene showed damage to the front door and shattered windows. An abandoned car was found on fire in nearby Rouse Hill a short time later. The blaze is being treated as suspicious. Police believe the two incidents may be linked. Detectives are also investigating whether the home was the intended target of the shooting. Anyone with information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers.


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
The device sparking surge in scam text messages
Police are warning about the SMS Blaster, a new device used by criminals to commit fraud by sending fake text messages. The device functions as an illegitimate phone mast, tricking nearby mobile phones into connecting to it instead of legitimate networks. Once connected, the SMS Blaster sends fraudulent messages designed to appear genuine, often from government bodies or other trusted organizations. These scam texts prompt victims to click on malicious links, leading to websites that harvest their personal and financial details. The Dedicated Card and Payment Crime Unit (DCPCU) has arrested seven people and seized seven SMS blasters, urging the public to report suspicious texts and contact their banks if scammed.


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The great Scottish tea swindler: Conman who bought tea from around the world and sold it to luxury shops and hotels as Scottish-grown is jailed for three years
A conman who bought tea from around the world and sold it on to luxury shops and hotels as Scottish-grown has been jailed for three-and-a-half years. Thomas Robinson, 55, rented land on a former sheep farm near Loch Tay and began supplying the Balmoral Hotel in Edinburgh with what he described as authentic Scottish tea. He claimed he had been told that tea he supplied to London 's five-star Dorchester Hotel was 'the Queen's favourite'. He even bought tea plants from a nursery in Sussex and planted them for show in a former kitchen garden at Dalreoch Farm, Amulree, Perthshire, shortly before a visit from a buyer acting for the food store Fortnum & Mason. Robinson said he had found a way to make his tea grow in half the usual time by 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. Robinson was found guilty last month of defrauding tea growers of £274,354 and the hotels and tea companies of £278,634 - a total of nearly £553,000 - between January 1, 2014, and end of February 2019. He had maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings, claiming that paperwork he could have used in his defence had been destroyed in a flood and his electronic records wiped. Imposing the jail sentence at Stirling Sheriff Court today, Sheriff Keith O'Mahony told him he had 'repeatedly made false statements that were self-promotional, designed to offer assurances that he should be regarded honest and trustworthy'. Robinson's trial previously heard that he told elaborate tales to customers while trading as 'The Wee Tea Plantation' and had what the prosecution described as the 'CV of a fantasist'. He secured deals to supply his tea products from his own plants and other tea gardens in Scotland to France's oldest tea house Mariage Frères, as well as the Balmoral, The Dorchester, Fortnum & Mason and a Dunfermline-based firm called The Wee Tea Company. The court heard Robinson bought more than a ton of tea grown abroad, repacked it and sold it on. One expert said a kilogram of top tea from Africa could be sold for 100 times its cost if passed off as grown in Scotland. 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 £2.50 each from Italy. He either passed them off as Scottish-grown or allowed his customers to assume they were. Many died or did not thrive, and yields were a fraction of what he led his customers to expect. His is other 'elaborate lies' included that he'd sold tea to Kensington Palace, played rugby for Blackheath, was a multi-millionaire, a landowner, a polymer scientist, had invented the 'Bag For Life', had served in the British Army in bomb disposal, and had worked for the Obama administration in America. He sowed success stories in the Press and appeared on a BBC podcast, saying he'd learned to force tea plants 'like rhubarb under a sink'. An expert said this would actually kill them. Robinson later claimed that with the exception of 15,000 plants sold to the grower in Jersey, all the Italian plants had been in Scottish ground for a period and that made them Scottish. The scam began to unravel early in 2017 after Perth and Kinross Council checked whether Robinson had a food processing licence and a government adviser visited to explain about plant passports. The food crime and incidents unit of Food Standards Scotland (FSS) was called in, and a probe was launched. He told the advisor the only plants he had were for his own use, then, in what the Crown said was an attempted cover-up, he sent out a story to the local Press claiming thousands of plants had been stolen. The Food Crime and Incidents Unit of Food Standards Scotland launched an investigation, headed by a retired police inspector. Representing himself, Robinson, who has been remanded in custody since being convicted, continued to insist it was possible to grow tea commercially in Scotland. He told the court: 'I've time to wrestle with this over sleepless nights in my cell. 'Hubris and arrogance led me to believe I did my best. I hope my actions have not detracted from the truthful success that can be achieved for people who want to grow tea in Scotland. 'I apologise if my actions have besmirched the reputation of that capability.'Sheriff O'Mahony said: 'Witness after witness gave evidence that they would not have transacted with Mr O'Brien had they known the true position regarding the providence of the plants and the tealeaves. 'Numerous individuals keen to develop a possible tea-growing occupation were persuaded by him on the basis of false pretences to hand over significant sums of money.'Robinson nodded as the sentence was announced, before the video link to the prison where he is being held was cut. He also faces proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act. Following the hearing, Helen Nisbet, Procurator Fiscal for Tayside, Central and Fife, said: '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.' Ron McNaughton, head of the Scottish Food Crime and Incidents Unit at Food Standards Scotland, added: 'His actions caused real financial and reputational harm to individuals, businesses and a developing sector of genuine Scottish tea produce.'