9 given immediate prison sentences for running illegal waste site

 
Lincolnshire illegal waste site
Smoke over the illegal waste site after the burning of waste with residential properties in view nearby.

Nine defendants have been sentenced to a collective 11 years of immediate imprisonment after pleading guilty to running an illegal waste site in rural Lincolnshire.

An investigation into the waste site on Fen Lane, Long Bennington by the Environment Agency waste was burned daily and buried.

Waste burning intensified during the first Coronavirus lockdown in March 2020, the Environment Agency said, which led to the site being closed down.

Following the investigation, 12 people, including three family members, and one company were charged, with 10 pleading guilty.

Following an eight-week trial at Nottingham Crown Court, the remaining three defendants were found guilty.

Lincolnshire illegal waste site
Aerial view of the site during the raid showing burning waste and a lorry depositing waste.

Reacting to the sentencing, Leigh Edlin, Area Director for Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, said: “This was a serious illegal waste site which was highly organised and involved multiple offenders.

“Those involved sought to profit from Covid restrictions at the cost of the environment and by inflicting misery on the local community.

“The site and its operators had a major impact on legitimate businesses and our regulatory work.”

In April 2020, Environment Agency officers raided the site with Lincolnshire Police, which found lorry-loads of shredded waste were regularly being accepted onto the site.

Environment Agency officers also seized an excavator and a lorry which were actively depositing more waste at the site when officers arrived.

The Canner family Paul, 53, Judith, 55, and Joshua, 29, ran the illegal waste site and all received custodial sentences.

Paul was sentenced to 26 months in prison, while Judith and Joshua were both given 16-month sentences.

Sentencing the defendants, His Honour Judge Coupland found that the offending caused the highest level of harm and the illegal activity was deliberately concealed physically with falsified paperwork.

The Judge also said the repeated nature of the offences over a long period of time, and the financial gain obtained by the operation aggravated the offences for all defendants.

Privacy Overview
Circular Online

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is temporarily stored in your browser and helps our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

More information about our Cookie Policy

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly necessary cookies allow core website functionality and the website cannot be used properly without them. These cookies include session cookies and persistent cookies.

Session cookies keep track of your current visit and how you navigate the site. They only last for the duration of your visit and are deleted from your device when you close your browser.

Persistent cookies last after you’ve closed your Internet browser and enable our website to recognise you as a repeat visitor and remember your actions and preferences when you return.

Functional cookies

Third party cookies include performance cookies and targeting cookies.

Performance cookies collect information about how you use a website, e.g. which pages you go to most often, and if you get error messages from web pages. These cookies don’t collect information that identifies you personally as a visitor, although they might collect the IP address of the device you use to access the site.

Targeting cookies collect information about your browsing habits. They are usually placed by advertising networks such as Google. The cookies remember that you have visited a website and this information is shared with other organisations such as media publishers.

Keeping these cookies enabled helps us to improve our website and display content that is more relevant to you and your interests across the Google content network.

Send this to a friend