Western Mail

£12m Viking hoard plotter spared prison for ‘limited role’ in scam

- MATTHEW COOPER newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AN ANTIQUES dealer who helped hide part of a £12m Viking-era hoard of coins has escaped jail after claiming he did not act for personal gain.

Paul Wells concealed five Anglo-Saxon coins worth up to £75,000 in the handle of a magnifying glass after two metal detectoris­ts unearthed the socalled Leominster Hoard on Herefordsh­ire farmland in 2015.

Wells was found guilty of conspiracy to conceal criminal property in November last year, alongside three other men.The other defendants have already been jailed for between five and 10 years for their roles in not declaring details of the hoard to the authoritie­s.

Worcester Crown Court was told yesterday how Wells, who has previously suffered a heart attack and has continuing health problems, handed the five coins to a police officer during an interview in September 2015.

The 60-year-old was given a 12-month jail sentence, suspended for two years, ordered to complete 240 hours of unpaid work within the next year, and told to undertake 15 days of rehabilita­tion activity.

Passing sentence on Wells, of Newport Road, Rumney, Cardiff, Judge Nicolas Cartwright said the antiques dealer had a “limited function” in the conspiracy after three pieces of jewellery and a number of coins were brought to his stall in Cardiff’s Jacobs Market on June 4, 2015.

The judge told Wells, who later glued five coins inside the leather case of the magnifying glass after undoing its stitching: “It was immediatel­y clear to you that these were valuable items of some antiquity. On the finding of the jury you entered into this agreement to conceal these coins knowing they were stolen or intending that they should be.

“You concealed these coins for three months, which I find to be a sustained period of time. As far as whether there was any personal gain envisaged by you, I have come to the conclusion that I cannot come to a finding today one way or the other about that.

“Having read the medical reports upon you and the contents of the pre-sentence report, this is a sentence I feel able to suspend.”

Wells – who was told that his unpaid work may include a placement in a charity shop – showed no emotion as he was sentenced.

The hoard, much of which has not been recovered, contained a mixture of intact ornaments, bullion and coins, including two of a type issued by King Alfred the Great of Wessex in the late ninth century.

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