The Man who conned Premier League stars Sam Allardyce
and Andy Carroll has been jailed for four years for fraud. Stephen Ackerman
targeted the pair when they were at West Ham as he convinced them to buy luxury
hampers off him for big bucks.
The 48-year-old, of Hillcroft, Loughton, Essex, was
found guilty at Snaresbrook Crown Court in October of 18 counts of fraud,
totalling more than £61,000. Ackerman used the pseudonym Mark Kingston while
selling the goods during a visit to the training ground in December 2014. He
took payment from a number of players and staff using a hand-held chip-and-pin
device.
The luxury items were never delivered and in the
following weeks, some of the victims noticed unauthorised payments running into
the thousands charged to their bank accounts. They reported the matter to
police and Ackerman was arrested. He was caught after search warrants were
carried out at addresses linked to him in Essex and Hertfordshire. Judge David
Radford described Ackerman as an "utterly deceitful and dishonest man who
has consistently, premeditatedly and shamelessly defrauded others".
He said he was a man with "no scruples
whatsoever... telling lie after lie to try to deceive others". "Your
endemic dishonesty is plainly unremitting," he said. "You earn no
credit for your remorse, nor any credit for any pleas of guilt." The judge
said "many" of his victims were Premier League footballers, adding:
"This was not simply a fraud involving undelivered Christmas hampers and
wine or even simply the fraudulent use of a card chip-and-pin device. "You
used the bank account details perhaps in conjunction with others that you had
obtained when you visited the West Ham training ground and... obtained sizeable
amounts of money from bank accounts." He said Ackerman was introduced to
them as a "trustworthy salesman".
The judge said "significant planning" had
gone into the fraud and described Ackerman as "someone who has got to
learn". Ackerman had "numerous previous convictions for fraud",
with the most recent in 2013, prosecutor Samuel Trefgarne told the court. Defence
counsel Charles Royle said Ackerman "regrets" having the trial and
would have pleaded guilty if he had been instructed differently, but the judge
said this was "not the most compelling mitigation".
Ackerman, wearing a blue cardigan and checked shirt,
remained composed as he was sentenced and blew a kiss to a woman in the public
gallery as he left the dock.
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