A Luton man will not be enjoying a Xmas dinner this year as Judge Michael Kay QC sent the Business Man down for 16 months.
Story written by Jeremy Stenton-Jones Google+
This happens in the very same week that Anthony Underwood was given an 18 month suspended sentence for running through Luton town Centre with a machete and attacking Police. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-25363252
Story written by Jeremy Stenton-Jones Google+
SKY TV BSKYB celebrated the result and said "This should be a warning" Luton Business man Michael Gearty advertised modified satellite receivers on Amazon and sold them for £100 a time selling a total of 227 satellite receivers that allowed the purchaser to watch SKY TV for FREE.
With clients as far away as the Costa del Sol and Portugal the operation resulted in a loss of revenue in the region of £170'000. Kevin Barry, prosecuting, said: "There were a total of 227 users. If each of them had paid for a Sky World package that would have cost £62.25 a month. Over a 12 month period the loss of revenue to BSKYB would be £169,569.
He said computer expert Steven Ellis had set up the operation in Luton on behalf of Gearty, 57 In his basis of plea to the court Gearty said the scam had been set up by his deceased brother Les and he had taken it on. That was not accepted by the prosecution, said Mr Barry.
"The illegally modified Dream decoder set top boxes allowed people to watch television they did not have to pay for. They were advertised on Amazon Marketplace as giving free access to Sky. Amazon are now wise to that."
103 boxes were sold over Amazon with the remaining 125 distributed through other means.
The money received was paid into bank accounts for Bedfordshire Property Services Limited, Gearty's company.
Gearty bought at least two genuine Sky subscriptions, which were paid for from his business account. Ellis was able to send out decoded broadcasts from a server set up in Runley Road, Luton - a multi-occupancy property in which Gearty had a stake.
Investigators from Sky became aware of the scam and alerted Beds police who raided properties in Luton and Dunstable on 13 February last year.
When the server was examined it was found to be able to send decoded channels to 2,000 boxes, said the prosecutor.
Gearty, of Wodecroft Road, Luton, pleaded guilty on the day of his trial to supplying articles for use in fraud and converting £10,225.85p of criminal property between May 2010 and February 2012 - that was the money received from the Amazon sales.
Ellis, of Bowles Way, Dunstable, pleaded guilty to making unauthorized decoders. The prosecutor said his role was technical and he had not profited to any great extent. When questioned by the police, he said he had done it because it was a technical challenge and had only received pizza.
He had one reprimand from 2003 for obtaining property by deception.
Cameron Scott, defending, said the business had been begun by Gearty's deceased brother Les. "He realised it was not a legitimate business but did not extract himself from it.
"Sky will say they suffered a loss of income but not all of those who purchased these boxes would have been prepared to pay for a full Sky service. That is why they bought the boxes."
Mr Scott said Ellis was the "technical brains" and played only a minor role. He said Ellis, who has Aspergers and dyspraxia, had been put under pressure by Les Gearty to get involved.
Judge Michael Kay QC jailed Gearty for 16 months and passed a 12 month community order on Ellis, who must perform 150 hours' unpaid work, be supervised by probation for 12 months and abide by a 3 month curfew between 7pm and 6am for 3 months,
The judge said: "This was a planned fraud with some level of sophistication."
This happens in the very same week that Anthony Underwood was given an 18 month suspended sentence for running through Luton town Centre with a machete and attacking Police. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-25363252
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