Illegal Money Lending - Chris Connor

Post on 25-May-2015

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A selection of the slides used by Chris Connor, of the England Illegal Money Lending Team hosted by Birmingham City Council, at the Big Local spring event in Birmingham on 8 May 2014, organised as part of the Local Trust programme of networking and learning events for Big Local residents. The 'Stop loan sharks' workshop touched on what loan sharks look like, the signs of loan shark activity, why people use loan sharks and how to report loan shark activity.

Transcript of Illegal Money Lending - Chris Connor

Chris Connor

LIAISE Officer

Trading Standards Illegal Money Lending Team

What is a loan shark?

• A loan shark is someone who lends money without the licence required by the Consumer Credit Act 1974.

• These licences are issued by the Office of Fair Trading to individuals or companies whom they believe are “fit and proper”.

• It is a criminal offence not to have the requisite licence and carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison.

• Who enforces this legislation?

Trading Standards and the national

Illegal Money Lending Project

• Powers to ENTER.

• Powers to SEIZE.

• Powers to CHARGE.

• Powers to PROSECUTE.

• IMLT within the team has powers to ARREST.

“ARNIE’S” AREA

• One area on “Arnies”

round

0

200

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600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1st

Nov

03 -

04

1st

Nov

04 -

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Crimes

Reported

Established loan shark victim

rehousing protocol with these

Birmingham Partners

Birmingham Civic

Housing Association

Other area protocols

• Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull, Walsall, Wolverhampton

• In progress – Warks, Stoke and Staffs

MILLS

• A loan shark who preyed on the vulnerable lay in wait for a victim at the Post Office before taking her and her mother’s benefits.

Winston Mills handed back just £10 for the two women to live on.

• Mills, 41, worked as house manager at a hostel in Openshaw for five years and got free board in return.

He would befriend troubled tenants before lending them small amounts of cash, interest-free.

Once they had got into the habit, Mills would jack up the interest to rates of up to 50 per cent, leaving borrowers trapped in a spiral of debt

What are some typical characteristics

displayed by loan sharks?

• No credit agreements given – “you owe me this much today”

• No receipts for payment or payment books

• Violence, intimidation or threats if repayments are missed

• Loans to young people (under 18’s)

• Can take illegal securities e.g. cash card• Never advertise – find clients by word of mouth.

• Repayments of at least twice the amount lent, often with very high charges for defaulting

• Personality changes when victim can no longer meet payments

Who is affected?

• report estimated 320,000 UK households use IML

• This equates to 6% of households in most deprived areas

• UK repays £120 million per year to IML

• Victims most likely female, aged 30-40, on welfare benefits, living in social housing

• Less prevalent in the UK compared to international counterparts

Loan Shark Customer

• Often very young, singles and younger single parents• • Frequently heavily dependent on family support• • Poor financial skills:• • Problems with prioritising• • Difficult to resist temptation• • Typically history of failed catalogues and home credit loans• • No engagement with creditors• • Budget entirely on their full income so frequently left with nothing• • Sustained week to week by informal lending compromising family

and social networks• • become increasingly desperate for cash to meet essentials• May say they have borrowed from a “friend”• May try to hide amounts when completing I&E forms

The affects on a community

• Their control over their victims rests on a climate of fear which both protects revenue flow and acts against reporting

• There is a high degree of cross-over between illegal money lending and criminal lifestyles with some victims drawn into theft, drug running, prostitution

• Illegal lending hollows out the finances of victims, exacerbates crime and anti-social behaviour and deepens financial and social exclusion

What happens when we start

operating in a new area?• Using a brand mark.

• Poster campaigns.

Advertisements on

public transport.

• A 24/7 hotline . 0300 555

2222

The story so far…….

• Over 1,700 targets have been identified (and increasing)

• Arrested over 500 illegal money lenders

• Over 16,000 victims have been helped.

• Over £37,000,000 illegal “debt” wiped out.

• Prison sentences totalling over 107 years for illegal money lending.

• We have seized over £1.3 million in cash.

• £20 million+ of assets being investigated under POCA

• Referred over 600 victims to legal sources of credit

It is not a community service..

Working in partnership

• To build effective relationships with key partners• Concentrated programme of networking to increase

awareness

• Key part in local authority’s financial inclusion strategy

• Trading Standards

• Local housing Departments/Housing Associations

• Credit unions

• WM police

• Social services depts

• DWP

• Financial Services Authority

• Community safety partnerships

Awareness Raising

POCA Money

• Credit Union incentive Schemes

• Awareness days

• Drama project

• Pub beer mat campaign

• School Rap competition

We hope we can carry on our

successes with your help.

Questions?

0300 555 2222

Christopher.connor@birmingham.gov.uk

Tel 07500809341