Crime
Llanybydder man ordered to pay £54k over fake tobacco
A LLANYBYDDER man who was found with thousands of pounds’ worth of counterfeit tobacco has been ordered to hand over more than £54,000.
Police discovered 73 packs of what appeared to be Amber Leaf and Golden Virginia in Kieran Pritchard’s Vauxhall Corsa on December 29, 2023. Pritchard told officers he had bought the tobacco cheaply abroad and intended to sell each pack for a £5 profit. Checks by the tobacco companies confirmed the packs were fake.
Officers also seized cash, cocaine, and drug-dealing equipment from his home. Messages on Pritchard’s phone suggested he was selling both the counterfeit tobacco and cocaine.
Pritchard, 33, of Heol Y Gaer, was jailed for three years and four months in May after pleading guilty to conspiring to distribute goods bearing a false trademark, supplying cocaine, and possessing criminal property. He has no previous convictions.
A confiscation order under the Proceeds of Crime Act has been made for £54,630.32, after it was established he had benefited by £123,751.13 from his crimes.
At the sentencing hearing, Swansea Crown Court heard the counterfeit tobacco was worth just under £3,000. Officers recovered nearly £30,000 in cash from Pritchard’s home, along with weighing scales, plastic bags, and 4.63 grams of cocaine.
Pritchard told police he had become involved in dealing to pay off his brother’s drug debts. His lawyer said he showed genuine remorse and “believed he was doing the right thing.”
Recorder Christopher Felstead told Pritchard: “I’m afraid that is something you have brought on yourself.”
Crime
Hakin man’s appeal delayed again as Crown Court seeks guidance on insurance law
Judge gives CPS more time to review latest road traffic law guidance before case returns in March
A HAKIN man’s appeal against a conviction for driving without insurance has been delayed after a judge granted prosecutors additional time to review updated legal guidance.
Seventy-six-year-old Niall Taylor, of Haven Drive, appeared at Swansea Crown Court on Tuesday (Jan 13) for a mention hearing in his case.
Taylor has accepted the finding that he drove otherwise than in accordance with a licence, but is challenging the separate conviction for using a vehicle without insurance.
The case relates to an incident on January 18, 2023, when he drove a Vauxhall Zafira along Hammond Avenue, Haverfordwest.
The matter has already followed an unusual procedural history. Taylor initially pleaded not guilty in the magistrates’ court but later changed his plea during the original trial. Questions were subsequently raised over whether that plea had been “equivocal”, leading the case to be reopened under Section 142 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 and reheard in full.
Following a trial of the facts, magistrates found him guilty and imposed sentence in December. Taylor has since lodged an appeal focused solely on the insurance offence.
During Tuesday’s hearing, His Honour Judge Walters granted the Crown Prosecution Service 28 days to review Wilkinson’s Road Traffic Offences (32nd Edition), the leading legal reference text used by courts in motoring cases.
Addressing the court, the judge said the matter may still require further consideration, adding: “The court still might want to reconsider the sentence even if the insurance company is right. It does look as if different insurance companies do things in different ways.”
He added: “It is not in fact void, but it is voidable.”
Taylor maintains that a valid insurance policy was in force at the time of driving and argues that, in law, third-party cover cannot simply be cancelled because of an administrative licensing issue.
The appeal is due to return to Swansea Crown Court on March 27, when further legal argument is expected.
Crime
Pembroke Dock woman admits breaching community order
Magistrates revoke sentence after missed appointments
A PEMBROKE DOCK woman has admitted breaching the terms of a community order.
Shannon Charge, aged 30, of Pater Court, appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Monday (Feb 2).
She admitted failing to attend a scheduled probation appointment and a drug dependency appointment.
Magistrates revoked the existing community order and ordered her to pay £60 in court costs.
The court heard the order related to earlier offences, for which she had been made subject to rehabilitation and drug treatment requirements. A further review hearing is listed for March 2.
Crime
Milford Haven man given extra unpaid work after breaching court order
Magistrates add hours after missed appointments
A MILFORD HAVEN man has been ordered to complete extra unpaid work after breaching the terms of a community order.
Peter Jones, aged 33, of Precelly Place, appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Monday (Feb 2).
He admitted failing to attend scheduled unpaid work and a probation appointment earlier this month.
Magistrates varied the order, imposing an additional 10 hours of unpaid work. Jones was also ordered to pay £60 in court costs.
The court heard the original community order followed an earlier conviction.
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