logo
Fraudster made £500,000 by conning luxury brands into buying fake 'Scottish tea'

Fraudster made £500,000 by conning luxury brands into buying fake 'Scottish tea'

Metro25-06-2025
A fraudster who made more than £500,000 by conning luxury businesses into buying 'Scottish-grown tea' that actually came from wholesalers abroad has been jailed.
Thomas Robinson, 55, operating under the business name The Wee Tea Plantation, claimed to have cultivated the tea at his Perthshire estate using innovative techniques.
He flogged it to high profile clients including representatives of the Balmoral Hotel, the Dorchester Hotel and a company acting on behalf of Fortnum & Mason.
Robinson, also known as Tam O'Braan and Thomas O'Brien, bolstered his credibility by fabricating academic qualifications and industry awards.
He claimed to have worked for the Obama administration in America on a maize project, served in the British Army in bomb disposal and invented the 'bag for life'.
But the reality was he had bought over a tonne of tea grown abroad, repacked it, and sold it on.
He disguised what he was doing by getting the foreign tea delivered to a mailbox address in Glasgow and paying for it though a private bank account.
The court heard a kilo of African tea could be sold for 100 times its cost if passed as grown in Scotland.
Robinson also claimed to have produced tea plants at Amulree from cuttings and seed.
Between 2015 and 2018 he supplied 22,000 plants to a dozen other growers in Scotland and one in Jersey at £12.50 each.
Over the same period he was actually importing tea plants at €3 each from a horticulturalist in Italy.
He either passed them off as Scottish-grown or allowed his customers to assume they were.
Representing himself, Robinson begged for 'compassion' as he appeared by videolink from HMP Low Moss, wearing a green sweatshirt.
Sheriff Keith O'Mahony refused a bid to defer sentence and said it was in the public interest that it went ahead, as Robinson was 'articulate' enough to represent himself.
He was found guilty of two counts of fraud, spanning January 2014 and February 2019, to a value of almost £553,000 after a trial at Falkirk Sheriff Court.
Robinson, who told the court he has four children and attends church, claimed he awoke every morning in his cell plagued with guilt about the 'reputational damage' caused to genuine Scottish tea growers.
'I've had time to wrestle with this over sleepless nights, coming to realise how wrong and stupid I've been,' he told the court.
'The damage this has on all concerned, the stigma of misleading others… I should have been much more transparent and owned up to the situation. Hubris and arrogance made me believe I did my best.
'The method by which you could grow tea in Scotland, something I was told you couldn't do… I didn't know the best, I didn't act as I should have. I go to church, I'm perfectly aware that a sin is not only to do something, but also not to do the right thing.
'The shame of that hangs over me every morning every time I wake up in my cell. Central to that guilt I'm responsible for reputational damage of those involved and reputational damage of growing tea in Scotland.
'It was a scheme I received support from the Scottish Government. I solemnly hope my actions have not detracted from the success which can be achieved for people who want to grow tea in Scotland. I can only offer my sincere apologies if my actions have besmirched that capability.'
He told the court he had experienced 'suicidal emotions' due to guilt and had been 'too ashamed to explain' to his four children.
Robinson claimed he would not reoffend and had learnt from his actions, 'not only from shock of my conviction but truthful acceptance of what I have done'.
He added: 'I solemnly would ask that the above is taken into consideration not as an excuse but an acceptance of the serious nature of my actions and inactions, and I throw myself on the mercy of the court for your compassion.'
Sheriff O'Mahony said the jury had 'generally rejected' Robinson's evidence, and the charges spanned five years and totalled £552,988.
He added: 'By any measure these convictions must be regarded as significant. Mr O'Brien demonstrated significant planning, he was persistent, he repeatedly made false statements.
'These charges are not victimless, witness after witness gave evidence and said they would not have had the transaction if they had known. They were convinced on false pretences to hand over significant sums of money.'
Robinson put his head in his hands as the three-and-a-half year sentence was handed down.
Helen Nisbet, procurator fiscal for Tayside, Central and Fife, said: 'Individuals, businesses, and genuine Scottish tea growers suffered financial and reputational harm as a consequence of Robinson's deceit.
'But thanks to partnership working between Food Standards Scotland, Police Scotland and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, he has been brought to account for his crimes.
'We are committed to tackling financial crime of this kind.'
Ron McNaughton, of Food Standards Scotland (FSS), said: 'We welcome today's sentencing as a clear signal that food fraud is a serious crime with serious consequences. More Trending
'A three-and-a-half year custodial sentence reflects the scale and impact of Mr Robinson's deception. His actions caused real financial and reputational harm to individuals, businesses and a developing sector of genuine Scottish tea producers.
'This outcome is the result of a complex and painstaking investigation involving a dedicated team at FSS and the co-operation of partner agencies and key witnesses.
'It demonstrates that those who set out to mislead consumers and defraud businesses will be held accountable.
'Food fraud undermines consumer trust and damages the integrity of Scotland's globally respected food and drink sector. We remain committed to detecting and disrupting criminal activity of this nature.'
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: Trial date set for man accused of murdering partner found dead after gas explosion
MORE: Glasgow city council hit by cyber attack that 'may have stolen residents' data
MORE: Samurai swordsman guilty of murdering schoolboy he nearly decapitated during rampage
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Carer struck off after he was caught hitting disabled man on camera
Carer struck off after he was caught hitting disabled man on camera

STV News

time33 minutes ago

  • STV News

Carer struck off after he was caught hitting disabled man on camera

A social care worker caught assaulting a disabled man on camera has been struck off the care register. Michael Gitongu hit the man multiple times in February 2023 while he was employed as a support worker by Clinical 24 Staffing Limited in Glasgow. The Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) said Gitongu slapped the man's torso, forcefully hit him twice on the arm, hit him with a large exercise ball which he threw directly at him, repeatedly and forcefully hit the sofa he was sitting on, and made threatening gestures towards the man in an attempt to frighten him. Gitongu was convicted at Perth Sheriff Court in July 2024, for the same incident of assaulting a man by seizing him on the body, pushing him on the body, making threatening gestures, seizing him by the body, and pulling him. The court determined the assault was 'aggravated by prejudice relating to disability', according to the SSSC. Gitongu has been formally struck off the care register and banned from working in the industry again. The regulatory body for Scottish social work said the assault was caught on camera and verified by a witness who saw Gitongu hit or slap the other side of the sofa where the care user was sitting. 'The video evidence is clear and compelling,' the SSSC said. 'This observed behaviour by [Gitongu], a large man towards a [information redacted] on the face of it is abusive and bullying behaviour.' The report said Gitongu was 'not interacting with [the care user] in a positive manner' before the assault. 'You provoked [the man] by flicking the lights and raising your arms to scare and intimidate him. The assaults were clear in the footage,' the SSSC told Gitongu. The regulator said there is 'no explanation' as to why Gitongu's training, or lack of it, would justify this behaviour. 'The behaviour can only be described as being physically and emotionally abusive towards AA, with his rights and dignity being dismissed by you,' the report said. 'This behaviour occurred in AA's own home, a place where he should feel safe. You abused the trust placed in you to care for a highly vulnerable individual.' The SSSC concluded it had no choice but to strike Gitongu from the care register. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Tommy Robinson allegedly told journalist ‘I'm coming to get you'
Tommy Robinson allegedly told journalist ‘I'm coming to get you'

Western Telegraph

time42 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

Tommy Robinson allegedly told journalist ‘I'm coming to get you'

Robinson, 42, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, is charged with two counts of harassment causing fear of violence to MailOnline reporters Andrew Young and Jacob Dirnhuber through his X account between August 5 and 7 2024. He appeared at Southwark Crown Court on Thursday after his not guilty pleas at Westminster Magistrates' Court last month. Wearing a blue waistcoat and a man bag, Robinson entered not guilty pleas after the details of the charges were read out at the crown court. Tommy Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, entered not guilty pleas (Lucy North/PA) Robinson also spoke to confirm his name at the brief hearing and waved at his supporters in the public gallery. His Honour Judge Tony Baumgartner set a trial date of October 19 2026 with a five-day jury trial estimate at Southwark Crown Court. A pre-trial review was also set for October 5 2026. Robinson is charged with harassment causing fear of violence by making a telephone call on August 5 last year in which he is alleged to have told Mr Young that he would visit his house and said 'I'm coming to get you'. He is also alleged to have posted on his X account on August 6 last year at 10.45pm, three edited photographs depicting Mr Young's wife, daughter and his motor vehicle, with the message: 'Hey @JDirnhuber get your colleague Andrew Young to call me back, you see he published pictures of my family and gave away their location. 'I'm working on a news piece myself about all of you, I won't identify any innocent people or give address as that's not morally right unlike you scum. You will all be questioned on camera about how you think endangering children is ok. My homework continues.' Robinson is further charged with harassment causing fear of violence by allegedly posting from his X account a direct message to Mr Dirnhuber on August 5 last year at 8.50am in which he said 'I'll be knocking at your door'. On the same day, he is also alleged to have posted direct messages to Mr Dirnhuber saying 'Let your bosses know I'm coming to all your houses', 'Okay got your address' and 'We need to talk'. On August 6 at 9.43pm, Robinson is alleged to have posted on X: 'Got ya @Jdirnhuber this is Jacob, he likes to locate and endanger families. Jacob and the rest of the Daily Mail journalists who were involved in endangering my children have today been located. 'I look forward to hearing on camera your justification for doxxing my children's location. I got all three of you tagged and bagged in one day'. He is also alleged to have posted on August 6 last year at 10.50pm a direct message on X to Mr Dirnhuber in which he said: 'I'll bring my questions to all of your doors.' Prosecutors told a previous hearing that none of the alleged harassment contained direct threats of violence. After the last hearing, Robinson said he had 'never had' the opportunity to have a jury trial and wanted '12 members of the British public' to hear the evidence in the case.

Emergency crews rush to Scots river after ‘person falls in water'
Emergency crews rush to Scots river after ‘person falls in water'

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Emergency crews rush to Scots river after ‘person falls in water'

Locals watched as the coastguard worked with cops at the scene well into the evening RIVER DRAMA Emergency crews rush to Scots river after 'person falls in water' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) SCORES of emergency services raced to a Scottish river after a person is believed to have fallen into the water and got into difficulty. Police, ambulance and coastguard crews were scrambled to the River Leven in Dunbartonshire yesterday afternoon. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Crews raced to the River Leven yesterday Credit: Alan MacGregor Ewing - The Sun Glasgow The alarm was raised at around 4.15pm after officers received reports of a person in the water. It is believed that the person was seen in the river near the Place of Bonhill in Renton, Dumbarton. Locals watched as the coastguard worked with cops at the scene well into the evening. Helicopter crews circled the area in the sky as the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service was called to the river. Ambulance teams were also spotted in the area. The outcome of the incident is currently unclear. However, the HM Coastguard confirmed this morning that crews were working to locate a person in the water. A spokesperson said: "HM Coastguard assisted Police Scotland with reports of an individual in the water near the River Leven yesterday, 2 July, at around 4:15pm. "A Coastguard helicopter was tasked. For further information, please speak to the Police". Last night, a Police Scotland spokesperson told Dumbarton Reporter: "Around 4pm on Wednesday, July 2, 2025, we received a report of concern for a person potentially in the water near Place of Bonhill in Renton. COPS launch probe into man's mystery death at high rise flats in Royston, Glasgow "Emergency services are at the scene." Locals flocked to social media as "loads" of emergency services swarmed the area yesterday evening. One person said they could hear "lots of sirens" blaring near the river close to 5pm. While another said they counted a total of 15 emergency units speeding through the Renton area to get to the scene. A third chimed in: "Loads of different types of search and rescue down at St Martins (St Martins of Tours Catholic Church on Main Street, Renton)." Police Scotland has been contacted for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store