South Wales Evening Post

‘Desperate’ dad gave £36k lease car to loan sharks

- JASON EVANS Reporter jason.evans@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A MAN who leased a £36,000 Volvo car gave it to illegal moneylende­rs as collateral on a loan he took out, a court has heard. The Volvo is now missing but is believed to have been shipped to Poland by the loan sharks or their associates.

To try to cover his tracks, Adrian Maciejewsk­i initially told the garage from which he leased the vehicle that he could not return it because his brother had it and his sibling was self-isolating with Covid.

Swansea Crown Court heard the car scam wasn’t the only way Maciejewsk­i had turned to crime to make money – the dad-of-one previously harassed and demanded money from a celebrity, threatenin­g to take his own life if he wasn’t paid.

Megan Jones, prosecutin­g, said in November 2019 Maciejewsk­i took out a 12-month lease on a £36,000 Volvo vehicle from Quality Vehicle Hire in Cwmbwrla in Swansea. The defendant made the regular monthly £576 payments but when the garage boss contacted him in November 2020 to arrange for the Volvo’s return, the defendant told him he had lent it to his brother who was now selfisolat­ing.

The court heard the garage boss – who knows Maciejewsk­i from the car trade – gave the defendant a week’s grace period, but when he contacted him again was told that Maciejewsk­i’s brother had driven the Volvo to Poland to see their parents. The prosecutor said the garage boss gave the defendant a week to return the missing Volvo and said otherwise he would have to report it as stolen.

When Maciejewsk­i turned up at Quality Vehicle Hire to return another leased vehicle on November 17, he said the Volvo was in Poland but he did not know who had it or where it was.

Police were contacted and in his interview the defendant said that in the summer of 2019 he had found himself with debts of between £60,000 and £70,000. Out of desperatio­n, he had put posts on social media asking if anyone could loan him money. He said he had been approached by people offering to loan him £10,000 for which he would have to pay back £1,000 per month for 20 months. When he found himself struggling to make the repayments, he gave the money lenders the Volvo as collateral.

Maciejewsk­i said he was warned by the lenders that if he told the police about the arrangemen­ts there would be “trouble”. Then in October 2020, when he contacted them to tell them he needed the vehicle back as he would soon have to return it, he was told it was in Poland.

Maciejewsk­i, of Waun Gron, Rhydyfro, Pontardawe, admitted theft. He has three previous conviction­s for five offences including harassment. This offence, for which he was given a community order in 2018, saw him writing letters to an unnamed “television personalit­y” demanding money, threatenin­g suicide and turning up at the celebrity’s property.

Giles Hayes, for Maciejewsk­i, said the defendant had been in a business relationsh­ip with the garage boss for a number of years and had previously leased vehicles from him without incident. He said his client’s “financial desperatio­n” had led him to make a “rash and very stupid decision” and he was remorseful for his actions.

The advocate said Maciejewsk­i was a hardworkin­g man who was trying to pay off his debts and he said a period of immediate custody would impact on his wife and teenage daughter. The advocate also pointed to the delay in the case, with his client having made full admissions in police interview in December 2020 but not being charged via postal requisitio­n until March 2022.

Judge Huw Rees told Maciejewsk­i that as somebody who had worked in the car trade for many years he would have known the financial impact on his victim of what he was doing. He noted the defendant’s previous conviction for harassment and told him: “You are capable of being creative in your dishonesty.”

The judge described the delay in the matter being charged as “unconscion­able” and said in the period since his arrest there had been no reoffendin­g and the defendant had worked hard to restore some stability to the family’s finances, which would be threatened if he were to be sent straight into custody.

With a one-third discount for his guilty plea, Maciejewsk­i was sentenced to eight months in prison, suspended for 18 months, and was ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work. The judge said given the defendant’s financial situation he would not award any compensati­on to the victim.

Judge Rees told Maciejewsk­i: “I am giving you an opportunit­y for the sake of others – if you abuse it, the responsibi­lity will be yours and I will send you to prison.”

 ?? ?? Adrian Maciejewsk­i gave a £36,000 Volvo, similar to this model, to illegal moneylende­rs as collateral on a loan he took out.
Adrian Maciejewsk­i gave a £36,000 Volvo, similar to this model, to illegal moneylende­rs as collateral on a loan he took out.

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