Western Mail

Pensioner made thousands from importing fake skincare products

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

APENSIONER made tens of thousands of pounds by importing counterfei­t big-brand skincare creams from China and selling them on eBay, a court has heard.

Norman Gill was selling the fake Bio-Oil products for half the price of the real thing, and when the company which owns the brand found out and told him to stop he simply continued to trade – even recruiting a friend to sell the creams in his name to hide his dodgy dealings.

The defendant made around £50,000 from selling the counterfei­t creams online, charging customers half what they would pay for the real thing.

The beauty scam is not 73-year-old Gill’s first foray into fraudulent activity – he has previous conviction­s for claiming tens of thousands of pounds in benefits he was not entitled to. Swansea Crown Court heard that though the defendant lives in a plush house in a nice Mumbles street he is in financial difficulty and is currently trying to sell the property.

Stephen Rees, prosecutin­g, said in August 2017 the firm Geneva Laboratori­es became aware that products purporting to be their Bio-Oil creams were being sold on eBay by the defendant, Gill.

An investigat­ion was launched and a test purchase was made from the defendant’s eBay account. The creams were sent for testing in the lab and found to be fake.

The firm sent Gill a “cease and desist” letter telling him it was aware of his activity and requiring him to stop. The court heard the defendant replied, saying he would stop, but in fact he continued to import and sell the fake Chinese products for the next eight months, recruiting his gym friend, John Burns, to sell them for him from his eBay account.

The prosecutor said Geneva Laboratori­es continued its investigat­ion and made a further test purchase, this time from Burns’ account. Again the items purporting to be Bio-Oil were tested and found to be counterfei­t and Burns was written to.

The police were notified and in April 2018 both defendants were interviewe­d. Gill gave a largely “no comment” interview, though did admit to selling the products for around half the £20 price they were in the shops. Meanwhile, 73-year-old Burns said he had agreed to let his friend open an eBay account in his name and in return would receive “the odd £100 in cash as a thank-you” for transferri­ng payments from his account to Gill.

Norman Gill, of Langland Court Road, Langland, Swansea, had previously pleaded guilty to acquiring criminal property and to a trademark offence when he appeared in the dock for sentencing.

In 2009 he was convicted of fraudulent­ly claiming £70,000 in benefits by claiming he was penniless and out of work when he actually lived in a halfa-million-pound house and was running two companies. Then in 2020 he was sentenced to 24 weeks in prison for fraudulent­ly claiming almost £32,000 in benefits as his wife’s carer while she actually lived in a residentia­l home – a claim which continued for three months after she had subsequent­ly died.

John Burns, of Glanmor Road, Uplands, Swansea, had previously pleaded guilty to acquiring criminal property and to money laundering on the basis that he did not initially know that what his friend was doing was illegal but that he subsequent­ly became suspicious of what was going on and that he had no involvemen­t in the importatio­n of the products. He has no previous conviction­s.

Robin Rouch, for Gill, said while the defendant had not tested the counterfei­t products he was importing from China there was no evidence that they were in any way harmful or dangerous. He said though the defendant lived in a “nice house in a nice area” the reality was he was in “real financial difficulty” with two mortgages on the property. The barrister noted that a probation officer who had dealt with Gill had observed a clear change in his attitude since his last offending.

Ian Ibrahim, for Burns, said the defendant was a man of previously good character and that his involvemen­t in the activity was the “only blemish in his seven decades”.

Recorder David Elias QC said given Gill’s age, the length of time since the offending, the remorse he had expressed in a letter to the court, and the changes noted in the defendant since his period of incarcerat­ion he was just about able to suspend the prison sentence that was due. With a 25% discount for his guilty pleas the recorder sentenced Gill to 13 months in prison suspended for two years and ordered him to complete a rehabilita­tion course.

With a discount for his guilty plea, which was entered on the day he was due to stand trial, Burns was made the subject of a 12-month community order with a rehabilita­tion course.

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> Norman Gill

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