Stud Farm Bosses Connelly & Jones |
A couple – who ran a
respected horse stud farm – were ordered to pay a total of over
£90,000 today following their convictions for involvment in
Europe's largest-ever illegal veterinary medicines scam.
Management consultant Richard Jones,
61, and June Connelly, 70, of Winchcombe Road, Sedgeberrow, Evesham both
appeared at Croydon Crown Court to hear the outcome of Proceeds of
Crime Act proceedings.
Each were ordered to pay £37,950
within six months or face fifteen months imprisonment and Jones must
pay an additional £15,000 costs.
They ran the Henry Field Stud, Naunton
Beauchamp, Pershore when arrested as a result of a huge invesigation
by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).
Jones denied, but was convicted on
nineteen charges and was sentenced to six months imprisonment,
suspended for two years, and was ordered to perform 200 hours
community service.
Connelly admitted possession and
importation of illegal medicines and was sentenced to four months,
suspended for two years and ordered to perform 140 hours community
service.
"You worked as a team, the jury
found as much and they were right," Judge Ainley told them
during sentencing in 2011.
The couple had a close friendship with
ringleaders Ronald Meddes, 73, and Regine Lansley, 62, enjoying
holidays on their French estate, and bought £57,000 worth of illegal
medicines.
Regarding Jones and
Connolly DEFRAS’s senior investigating officer in the case, ex-cop
Derrick Price said: “They both exhibited a cavalier attitude
towards the welfare of horses and knew exactly what they were doing
in selling illegal drugs in the Worcestershire and Warwick areas.”
The court heard the couple
bought illegal anti-inflammatories, anabolic steroids, tranquilisers,
antibiotics, sedatives, painkillers and other miscellaneous products
administered to horses, household pets and farm animals.
Jones was convicted by a
jury of buying £61,000 worth of illegal medicines from the disgraced
French-based 'Eurovet' wholesalers, which bought products form India
and Australia.
He told the court the
fifty-horse stud was his retirement plan, insisting his animals and
those of his clients were not given illegal medicines.
“You are saying the
horses were drugged up to the eyeballs, but they would not have
been,” Jones insisted. “To my knowledge we did not do it. I
certainly did not.”
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