Loughborough Echo

Man is jailed in fake DVD case

- By Liam Coleman liam.coleman@trinitymir­ror.com

A LOUGHBOROU­GH man is among a gang of men who have been have been jailed for a total of 10 years and seven months for selling fake DVDs following a successful trading standards investigat­ion.

Lee Ansell, of Stonebow Close, Loughborou­gh, was jailed for 41 months and his cousin Frankie Ansell, of Grove Road, Beccles, was jailed for 45 months.

Howard Davey, of Esher House, Eastbourne, received a 41-month prison sentence. Joseph Plant, of Heathcoat Street, Loughborou­gh, received a 16-month sentence, suspended for two years, and was also ordered to undertake 200 hours unpaid of unpaid work.

The four men managed the sophistica­ted counterfei­t DVD business over a two-and-a-half-year period, selling over 31,000 DVDs, worth more than £500,000. The operation involved the use of fake identities and paperwork, as well as money laundering practices.

Suffolk Trading Standards began the investigat­ion when they received a complaint from FACT concerning Frankie Ansell and the sale of counterfei­t DVDs. A search of his home in Beccles followed and led to the seizure of £5,670 in cash, 600 counterfei­t DVD titles, and electronic devices.

Suffolk Trading Standards then identified other individual­s involved. Warrants were executed for Lee Ansell and Joseph Plant in Leicesters­hire and Howard Davey in Eastbourne. These resulted in the seizure of a high specificat­ion computer, along with laptops, tablets, and mobile phones. Also seized was £5,000 in cash, £1,250 worth of gift cards, two DVD copying towers, a laser printer, as well as hundreds of blank DVDs.

Graham Crisp, joint head of Trading Standards, said: “This was not a typical counterfei­t DVD operation. It was sophistica­ted and well organised. The DVD products were comparable to genuine products as were sold at the correct retail price. All these factors gave consumers the impression they were buying genuine products and should have no reason to think they were being ripped off.

“I would like to praise the Trading Standards team for all their hard work in this case and for bringing these fraudsters to justice and I would also like to thank the National Trading Standards Regional Investigat­ion Team and FACT for all the support that they have provided in this investigat­ion.”

Kieron Sharp, chief executive of FACT, said: “This was no one-manband operation. This was a serious organised crime group who sold tens of thousands of DVDs pocketing more than £650,000 in criminal money.

“Many people think piracy is a victimless crime, however criminal operations like this have devastatin­g effects on the creative industries and the people working in them.

“We would like to commend Suffolk Trading Standards for leading this investigat­ion and will continue to work with trading standards and police forces across the country to crackdown on film/TV piracy.”

 ??  ?? Pictured are fake DVDs that were found by trading standards officers.
Pictured are fake DVDs that were found by trading standards officers.

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