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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Jon Harris & Charlotte Cox

Dad told he was dying stole £25,000 of duty free goods after exploiting in-flight loophole HUNDREDS of times

An airline passenger was arrested at Manchester Airport after exploiting a loophole in the way card payments are processed mid-flight to steal £25,000 of duty-free goods.

Dubbed the 'Fraud of the Skies', Keith James, 63, stole the items, including perfume, alcohol and cigarettes, in hundreds of transactions over three years by taking advantage of gap in banking security on flights between Manchester and his second home in Spain.

James, who believed he was terminally ill with bladder cancer, used bank cards with no credit facilities after realising online transactions could only be processed after planes landed, a court heard.

READ MORE: Jet2 Manchester to Turkey flight forced to land in Vienna after 'out of control' woman starts attacking passengers

Between May 2016 and April 2019 the married father-of-six would fill his bags with items from the duty-free trolley onboard then, after touching down at the airport, would make a quick getaway before cabin crew downloaded passenger purchases. They would then find his transactions had been rejected due to 'insufficient funds''.

Even when Jet2 tried to ban the rogue customer from their flights he managed to get round it by using his middle name on boarding passes.

James, from Greenwood Road, Wythenshawe, would ignore legal letters demanding payment and even kept flying with the same operators but he was eventually arrested at Manchester Airport as he got off a flight from Spain. He later admitted hundreds of illicit mid-flight transactions for pleasure claiming he wanted to ''get one over'' on the banks claiming they were ''keeping customers in debt'.

He said he had gifted all the stolen items, which also included sunglasses and aftershave, to his family. The total amount of goods he stole was worth £25,556.40.

In a statement James said: ''I've been an idiot haven't I. But the diagnosis has taken its toll on me mentally and physically and I felt the radiotherapy and chemo had done me in and made me a bit bitter and twisted.

''I was genuinely giving things away as it made people happy. Giving away a bottle of nice perfume was making me happy. I didn't know how long I had left and I liked doing this. I realise it was wrong I shouldn't be doing it. But at the time I was treating each day as my last and didn't think of the consequences - I regret it now and haven't done it since.''

Jet2 lost £12,459.50 during the racket while the now-defunct Thomas Cook lost £13,100.19. Inquiries revealed Jet2 had been previously banned James from their aircraft over his but he circumvented it by using his middle name on boarding passes. Thomas Cook had previously told him not to use cards on board their flights.

At Minshull Street Crown Court, Manchester, James who is still undergoing twice-yearly treatment for his illness, admitted eight charges of fraud by false representation and was given 12 months jail suspended for two years.

He was also ordered to complete 150 hours unpaid work and was ordered to wear an electronic tag for six months as part of a 7pm-7am curfew. The thefts began after James who divided his time between the UK and a property in Tenerife where his wife lives, was diagnosed with cancer and told he was terminally ill.

Brett Wilson, prosecuting, said James would travel regularly to destinations in Europe and use a credit card with insufficient funds.

He added: "Whilst in mid-flight the terminal cannot connect to the bank for obvious reasons and it is only when the aircraft arrives at its destinations the crew plug in the payment machines and the bank does the transaction."

He said that James, who had received a letter from Jet2 banning him from flying with them, started making reservations using his middle name, calling himself Anthony James. An investigator for Thomas Cook, meanwhile, discovered James had made 112 transactions in 2016 alone and nine in 2018.

On one occasion in 2018, she even confronted the defendant when he was on a flight bound for Arrecife in Lanzarote and warned him against using cards to buy in-flight products. These were low to mid-level transactions over a period of time but eventually, they add up.

Matters came to an end when he was arrested at Manchester Airport.

"Initially, he argued that he expected the banks to pay because he had credit with them and he attempted to convey an image of innocent ignorance," said Mr Wilson. ''He explained he would give away the items he obtained on the planes as gifts. there were perfumes, cigarettes, alcohol and sunglasses.

''But eventually he admitted there was no credit on the cards when he made those purchases. There was extensive use of these credit cards over three years. On some occasions, he travelled out of the UK and then back again in a matter of hours.

''There was some planning and connivance behind this offending in working out that it would be very difficult for the airline to catch him. He's deliberately targeted these airlines.

''These are not victimless crimes. People may think a big airline can simply absorb their losses but there's an impact on all of us - raising airfares, airlines employ people locally they buy products and services and pay their taxes and shareholders.''

In mitigation, defence counsel Andy Evans said James was 'living between two countries' as his wife was based in Spain and that the offending was something he did while travelling, adding: "His journeys were not deliberately set up to do this. He discovered this fraud by chance when he used a card with insufficient funds when on a flight- he should have ended it there but he didn't

''At the time he was potentially terminally ill and had a diagnosis of bladder cancer and with that preying on him and he took the decision to continue exploiting this gap in the security systems.

''His targets were the credit card companies not the airlines. He viewed them as organisations with deep pockets who kept normal citizens in debt and he thought this was something he could do to give him pleasure and get one up on a larger system. It was one or two luxury items at a time then he would gift them to friends and family to lighten the mood of his diagnosis."

''This was not him attempting huge financial gain. It was something which presented an opportunity for him to bring some joy to his family in a bleak time in his life.''

James was also ordered to complete 150 hours unpaid work and was ordered to wear an electronic tag for six months as part of a 7pm-7am curfew.

Sentencing the judge Mr Recorder Nicholas Fewtrell told him: ''You managed to successfully evade capture for some considerable time. Whilst I've listened with care to what has been said about you, the fact is these offences cannot be tolerated."

James will face a Proceeds of Crime hearing in July.

You can find out more about the cases appearing at the Manchester courts in this newsletter.

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