Jail for Yorkshire Coast amusement arcade counterfeit toy suppliers

Two amusement toy suppliers have been jailed for distributing fake and unsafe toys to east coast arcades.

Author: Karen LiuPublished 17th Jun 2021

Two amusement toy suppliers have been jailed for distributing fake and unsafe toys to east coast arcades.

The suppliers of fake and unsafe toys were sentenced at York Crown Court yesterday after pleading guilty to offences of selling and having in possession for distribution over 240,000 counterfeit children’s products.

Martin Ivor Miller of Liverpool and Neel Parmer of Briar Road, Watford also pleaded guilty to two offences relating to fake Fingerlings monkeys which contained excess quantities of two phthalates.

North Yorkshire County Council’s Trading Standards Service brought the prosecution after one of its officers found the items in two amusement arcades during the summer of 2019. The visits to the amusement arcades took place as part of a project to check the goods and services being sold to tourists and visitors to the county’s seaside towns.

The authority says further enquiries revealed that the products had been supplied by Top Notch Goods Ltd of Liverpool. Martin Miller was the director of Top Notch Goods Ltd. He traded over a number of years with Neel Parmer, a director of Euro Bijoux Ltd, who sourced items directly from China to Miller’s specifications.

Goods seized from the Liverpool warehouse of Top Notch Goods Ltd included toy figures, bracelets, cushions, wrist bands, key fobs, playing cards, erasers and wallets. The brands which had been counterfeited included Fortnite, Peppa Pig, Pikachu, Minions, Barbie, Minecraft and the Creeper.

His Honour Judge Norris sentenced Miller to 7 months’ imprisonment and Parmer to 8 months’ imprisonment. A timetable was set for confiscation proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime Act and an Order was made for the forfeiture and destruction of the goods.

County Councillor Andrew Lee, Executive Member for Trading Standards said:

“It is disappointing to think that visitors to the county might have won fake and unsafe items during their family holiday or day trip. It is particularly worrying to see that the toy monkeys contained harmful phthalates at a level banned in law. I am pleased that our officer was able to identify these products and take action to remove them from supply.”

First for all the latest news from across the UK every hour on Hits Radio on DAB, at hitsradio.co.uk and on the Rayo app.