Wine investors 'defrauded of £2.5m'
- Friday 15 October 2010
Bordeaux 2005: fraudsters allegedly sold £2.5m of non-existent wine
Investors were cold-called and persuaded to invest in Bordeaux en primeur mainly 2005 First Growths.
The three companies involved are Bordeaux Wine Trading Company, International Wine Commodities Ltd and Templar Vintners Ltd.
Although the victims paid a total of £2.5m, it is alleged that the fraudulent companies only ever had one £10,350 case of wine in stock. No other orders were placed with suppliers.
Instead the defendants spent the money on luxury goods, including cars and designer watches.
The court heard today of a spending spree by 37-year old Paul Craven, who ran the Bordeaux Wine Trading Company.
In October 2006 he bought BMW convertible for £20,600. In November he spent over £16,000 on various items in Selfridges including Ozwald Boateng clothes and Cartier watches. In January 2007 Craven bought an electric wine cooler (£1225) as well as a Jacuzzi bath and bathroom TV.
In October 2007 Craven bought a black RR sport Land Rover for £55,700.
The next month he bought a black BMW sports convertible for his girlfriend, paying £32,162 on the spot by debit card.
There are a number of charges. Niklas Cashman, Paul Craven, Oseghale Hayble and Benedict Moruthoane are charged with conspiracy to defraud.
Benedict Moruthoane and Andrew Griffiths are charged with fraud and Anita Lanskill with transferring criminal property. Although the case is linked, it is believed that none of the defendants was involved in all three companies.
The trial continues and is expected to last four to five weeks
Update: 3rd November 2010:
Please note that Andrew Griffiths has now been severed (official parlance) from this case with a new trial date to be set in due course. In plain language he is now no longer on trial in this case being heard at St Albans Crown Court.

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Have your say!
Alex Andrawes
October 19 02:14
I agree with Keith. Wine-Searcher and many other price aggregator websites show a ton of Bordeaux futures or "pre-arrivals" that the companies never had or will have access to. Study the merchant, Google them, check forums to make sure you are buying from a credible source.
Keith Wollenberg
October 15 23:58
An excellent reminder as to how En Primeur purchases involve trust, and that you should only purchase form a known source, with a proven track record of delivery.