Japan’s H3 No 7 rocket lifted off as scheduled at 9:00 AM on October 26 from the Tanegashima Space Center in Minamitane, Kagoshima Prefecture. About 14 minutes later, it successfully separated the new space station…
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Exercise and omega-3s could be the secret to healthier teeth
New research published in Scientific Reports has found that regular exercise paired with omega-3 supplementation can significantly enhance immune function and reduce the severity of chronic apical periodontitis, a type of inflammation that…
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Exercise and omega-3s could be the secret to healthier teeth
New research published in Scientific Reports has found that regular exercise paired with omega-3 supplementation can significantly enhance immune function and reduce the severity of chronic apical periodontitis, a type of inflammation that…
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TV tonight: a night of ghost-hunting with telly’s funniest siblings | Television & radio
Daisy May and Charlie Cooper’s NightWatch
9.30pm, BBC Two
Daisy May Cooper is late meeting her brother Charlie – she’s been busy stocking up in a crystal shop, before they set off on a tour of the UK’s spookiest places. They start with a…
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Croxley Green wine scam victim’s warning as fraudsters jailed
Nicola HaselerHertfordshire
BBC/Nicola HaselerTerry Fleming, 81, invested £40,000 over two years in what he thought was a profitable scheme A pensioner who ploughed £40,000 into a fraudulent wine investment scheme has warned others not to fall for similar scams after three men were jailed.
Terry Fleming, 81, from Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, said he invested the money over two years believing he would make a profit, but eventually had to sell the bottles at a considerable loss.
Three men who stole at least £6m from 41 victims in the scheme were given prison terms to at St Albans Crown Court on Friday.
Mr Fleming said the scam “sounded believable” but the men only “cared about how much money they were going to make”.
Benjamin Cazaly, 43, of Coach House, Orpington, south-east London, was jailed for six and a half years; Dominic D’Sa, 46, of Oxford Avenue, Wimbledon, south-west London, for four and a half years; and Gregory Assemakis, 40, of Plaistow Grove, Bromley, south-east London, for three and a half years.
They had been found guilty of fraudulent trading in August.
Cazaly founded Imperial Wines of London in 2008.
It claimed to be a family-run investment house with offices in Paris and Hong Kong.
In reality, it was a call centre in an office building in Groveland Court, London, which was raided by trading standards in November 2018.
An investigation by Hertfordshire Trading Standards found £37m passed through Imperial Wine & Spirits Merchants’ accounts during the 10 years it was trading.
Hertfordshire County CouncilThe company had the mantra “no means yes” written on the wall The mantra “no means yes” was written on the wall, and they used films such as The Wolf of Wall Street to learn manipulation tricks.
Cold callers used fake names and followed scripts – found when the office was raided – to persuade pensioners to hand over their money.
Victims were sent glossy brochures that used logos from the Daily Telegraph and the Financial Times without permission.
Hertfordshire County Council said the jury was played a recording where a confused woman was asked for payment card details despite not knowing what a card was or who she banked with.
It said the long-running scam saw pensioners convinced to spend their life savings on wine investments which had vastly inflated prices.
Investors were told the company did not make money unless the wine was sold at a profit.
Mr Fleming said: “It sounded believable.
“It didn’t seem like you were paying a small price and getting a huge return, it would be an average purchase price and a reasonable profit selling price.”
But staff from Imperial Wines of London kept contacting him.
“They offered me better and better deals,” he said.
“Instead of just a slight profit, these were really good wines that were going to make a lot of money. I said ‘no, no, no’ and they kept coming back trying to sell me more and more wine.”
What Mr Fleming didn’t realise was that the bottles he was paying £2,000 for were only worth £400. In the end he had to sell them at a loss.
“They sold some of it for me at a loss but some of the wine just disappeared,” he said.
“I just gave up in the end. All they cared about was how much money they were going to make. “
Hertfordshire County CouncilVictims were overcharged in the wine investment scheme, sometimes by 400%, National Trading Standards said Trish Burls, from National Trading Standards, said: “Victims in this case lost thousands of pounds through a co-ordinated scam of lies, deceit and manipulation.
“The criminals exploited people’s passion and enthusiasm, preying on them to invest while stripping many of their life savings and causing significant emotional distress.”
Ajanta Hilton, executive member for community safety at Hertfordshire County Council, added: “The stories of those targeted with this investment scam are devastating.
“I’d like to thank them for their bravery in telling their stories so that these callous criminals could be brought to justice.”
Mr Fleming said he is speaking out to prevent other people from falling for similar scams.
“However smooth and nice they seem, they’re not,” he said.
“The nicer they seem, the worse they are.
“A lot of people I know didn’t cope, and it must have been terrible for them because their lives have been ruined.
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The musician with millions of Spotify listeners
Olivia OsbyLiam McCay is possibly best known as Sign Crushes Motorist, although he has released music under a variety of names Liam McCay was driving down Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles with a friend from Ireland when it set in just how different…
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Beaucroft Element Rebel Black | INTRODUCING
Time+Tide
- British indie Beaucroft unveils a stealthy and surprisingly technical new take on its Element field watch.
- It features Nitron MC – an advanced, scratch-resistant tungsten…
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Start small, keep a log, picture the end result: 17 experts’ top tips on how to stay motivated | Health & wellbeing
Make it a fantasy
In the middle of a tough workout, I put my imagination in a survival situation. I pretend I haven’t had water for several days in a desert. I’m parched. I need to drill down to my last drop of strength to arrive at the oasis….
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‘I’m in a lull. I’m trying to recalibrate after a long decade of elder care’ – The Irish Times
“I’m in a bit of a lull,” Anne Enright says when I ask what she’s working on. “You wait for a catch, a snag to your interest.
“The wonderful Annie Dillard has a story about an Inuit woman who has a baby to feed and no fish, so she…
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