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Fraudster conned luxury hotels and retailers out of £580k by selling fake Scottish tea
Fraudster conned luxury hotels and retailers out of £580k by selling fake Scottish tea

Sky News

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News

Fraudster conned luxury hotels and retailers out of £580k by selling fake Scottish tea

A man has been found guilty of fraud totalling almost £600,000 after he passed off ordinary tea as a premium product grown in Scotland. Thomas Robinson, 52, claimed the tea was a unique variety he had grown at his Perthshire estate using innovative techniques. Operating as The Wee Tea Plantation, he then fraudulently sold it to high-profile clients in the hospitality sector, including luxury hotels and retailers, between January 2014 and February 2019. Varieties listed on the website - which touted partnerships with train operator Caledonian Sleeper and the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh - include Dalreoch White, Silver Needles, Scottish Antlers Tea, and Highland Green. Also known as Tam O'Braan and Thomas O'Brien, Robinson was found to have misled genuine Scottish tea growers by selling them plants he falsely claimed were a unique, locally-grown variety. He also bolstered his credibility by fabricating academic qualifications and industry awards. An investigation by Food Standards Scotland (FSS) found Robinson's misrepresentations led to his clients losing a total of £584,783. He was found guilty of two counts of fraud by a jury at Falkirk Sheriff Court on Thursday, and is due to be sentenced at Stirling Sheriff Court on 25 June. In a statement, Ron McNaughton, head of Scottish food crime and incidents unit at FSS, said: "This was not a victimless crime - individuals, businesses, and an emerging sector of genuine Scottish tea growers suffered real financial and reputational harm as a result of deliberate deception." He then thanked a witness who came forward and added: "Fraud of this nature is often difficult to detect and even harder to prove, but we were determined to pursue every line of inquiry to build the strongest possible case."

Artists celebrate gardens in new Dundee V&A exhibit
Artists celebrate gardens in new Dundee V&A exhibit

BBC News

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Artists celebrate gardens in new Dundee V&A exhibit

The first planted gardens in Scotland arrived with the Christian monks in the 6th Century. They were practical places, full of medicinal herbs and nourishing vegetables. But they gave root to the huge range of spaces we have today, from formal parklands, to community allotments, and seaweed all celebrated in a new exhibition, Garden Futures, which opens at the V&A Dundee this weekend. "It's an ancient idea and the origin of human life in many cultures. Think of the Garden of Eden," said Francesca Bibby, one of the show's curators."Gardens represent society, culture, art and design. "They can also be political, therapeutic, environmental, nourishing, practical, aspirational and we tell those stories in the 400 objects in the exhibition." American architect Charles Jencks designed one of the most spectacular gardens in Scotland in the grounds of his home in Dumfries and Galloway. His extraordinary Garden of Cosmic Speculation is open to the public just one day a year and is dedicated to his late wife Maggie Jencks, with whom he created the concept of the Maggie's first one came about when Maggie, a keen gardener writer and designer, was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 47. She received the news that her cancer had returned five years later while she stood in a windowless corridor in the Western General Hospital in that, she and her husband vowed to create a better space for people with cancer to go - outside, but near the hospital. Dundee was the second of their 24 centres to open in September 2003. Designed by Frank Gehry, the gardens were added later to link the centre with Ninewells Hospital. At their centre is a huge labyrinth designed by Arabella Lennox-Boyd."What looks like a puzzle is actually quite straightforward ," said Karen MacKinnon of Maggie's Dundee."It can be quite symbolic for how you navigate life when you have a major illness like cancer. How you manage is one step at a time."The gardens on the other side of the three-acre site offer privacy and peace as well as spaces designed to share. For many staff at the hospital, it's also a welcome breathing space."Through different seasons, these places can work their magic without us knowing it," said Karen. Other parts of the exhibition show the artistic inspiration of gardens and gardening, and how that inspiration can come full artist Duncan Grant, born in Rothiemurchus in the Highlands in 1885, was a member of the Bloomsbury Group, which included famous British writers and artists like Virginia Woolf. Like many in the group, he was unable to be open about his his garden in Charleston in Sussex became a sanctuary for the entire group where they could meet, express their art and be themselves. That garden in turn inspired Kim Jones of the fashion house Dior to create a collection of menswear for summer 2023, one of which features in the show.V&A Dundee are keen that the show seeds interest in gardening way beyond the their projects is a "knit and natter" event which will create seeded squares for a garden will be planted along the Dighty Burn in Dundee to restore the vegetation. The commission is by Alice-Marie Archer, a British artist and designer who uses traditional craft techniques to create knitted hydroponic sculptures in which plants can grow. Using natural undyed sheep's wool, which absorbs and retains rainwater, she adapts knitting patterns to suit the germination needs of different plants. "We hope this exhibition is the launch pad for people's interest in garden," said Francesca Bibby."If you're a seasoned gardener, you might learn something new, but equally people who've never gardened and never had a garden can get out there and start planting themselves."Glasgow designers Andrew Flynn and Eilidh Cunningham never imagined they would be leading the way in 21st Century gardening. Their company POTR focuses on sustainable design and their most successful product is a flat pack self-watering plant pot made from recycled material. "One of the main materials we're using is discarded fishing nets from around the UK," said Andy."We have the potential to clear up hundreds of tonnes of this material from our oceans."We can use one eco-system to help another."The flat pack plant pots are both ancient and modern, inspired by Japanese origami but using modern technology to pinpoint the exact location the material has been gathered from. Last year, they secured a major distribution deal in Japan."We weren't just non-gardeners," said Eilidh, POTR's chief marking officer. "We were people who struggled to keep a plant alive."We come from a design and engineering background, an industry which has a lot of innovation in it - but the humble plant pot has not seen its format change in hundreds of years. "So we've designed something from the ground up to make gardening and plant care simpler." Indoor gardeners These self-confessed former "plant killers" say they're delighted to be given space in the show's final section, which is devoted to gardens of the future."We're interested in urban spaces," said Andrew."To give opportunities to people who don't have access to a full garden and give them opportunities to grow not just ornamental plants but food. "Sustainability starts in the decisions you make in the household."And has the experience turned them into gardeners?"We definitely appreciate plants and the routine you get from caring for a plant," said Eilidh."We've just moved into a top floor tenement flat and we're in the process of creating an indoor garden. So it's definitely turned us into indoor gardeners."

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