Gloucester waste site director ordered to pay back more than £179,000

2nd November 2020


Web p11 waste istock 978506676

Related Topics

Related tags

  • Pollution & Waste Management ,
  • Recycling

Author

Alexandra O'Donovan

An illegal waste company director, Barry Connally, has been ordered to pay back over £179,000, obtained through proceeds of crime from his unlawful operations. Connally, 70, was the sole director of Rhino Recycling Limited, which operated a waste treatment facility on the QinetiQ Industrial Estate in Pershore, Worcestershire.

Between March 2013 and December 2015, he ran the facility without the necessary environmental permit. In June 2019 Connally was sentenced to 12 months' custody, suspended for 18 months, and ordered to complete 160 hours' unpaid work in the community.

During the hearing, the judge found that Connally prioritised profit and adopted an “arrogant approach to the regulatory regime“. Following the sentencing, the Environment Agency went on to bring confiscation proceedings against Connally to recover the proceeds of crime. In passing a confiscation order, Worcester Crown Court heard that he used Rhino Recycling Limited's company persona to conceal his identity as the true actor in relation to the illegal waste operation.

It was found that between March 2013 and December 2015, Connally acquired more than £1m in criminal benefit from illegal waste operations. He was ordered to pay back £179,373.36, as it was the sum total of all his assets available.

Connally also pleaded guilty to contempt of court for disposing of a portion of his assets between September 2019 and July 2020, contrary to court orders forbidding him from doing so. For this, he was sentenced to four months' imprisonment, suspended for 18 months.

Following the sentencing, a spokesperson for the Agency said: “This case shows that we're not just content to prosecute those who run illegal waste sites, we'll also come after them to get back the profits they made from their illegal activities and to recoup taxpayers' money spent on pursuing them.“

Picture credit: iStock

Subscribe

Subscribe to IEMA's newsletters to receive timely articles, expert opinions, event announcements, and much more, directly in your inbox.


Transform articles

Latest environmental legislation round-up

Regulatory gaps between the EU and UK are beginning to appear, warns Neil Howe in this edition’s environmental legislation round-up

4th April 2024

Read more

Around 20% of the plastic recycled is polypropylene, but the diversity of products it protects has prevented safe reprocessing back into food packaging. Until now. David Burrows reports

3rd April 2024

Read more

A hangover from EU legislation, requirements on the need for consideration of nutrient neutrality for developments on many protected sites in England were nearly removed from the planning system in 2023.

2nd April 2024

Read more

Campaign group Wild Justice has accused the UK government of trying to relax pollution rules for housebuilders “through the backdoor”.

14th February 2024

Read more

Stella Consonni reports on the existing legal framework and the main challenges

15th January 2024

Read more

David Burrows on the stolen concept of a circular economy, and how reduction must be at the heart of product design

30th November 2023

Read more

Zero Waste Scotland is focused on closing the energy sector’s circularity gap. Kenny Taylor reports on progress so far

28th November 2023

Read more

Media enquires

Looking for an expert to speak at an event or comment on an item in the news?

Find an expert

IEMA Cookie Notice

Clicking the ‘Accept all’ button means you are accepting analytics and third-party cookies. Our website uses necessary cookies which are required in order to make our website work. In addition to these, we use analytics and third-party cookies to optimise site functionality and give you the best possible experience. To control which cookies are set, click ‘Settings’. To learn more about cookies, how we use them on our website and how to change your cookie settings please view our cookie policy.

Manage cookie settings

Our use of cookies

You can learn more detailed information in our cookie policy.

Some cookies are essential, but non-essential cookies help us to improve the experience on our site by providing insights into how the site is being used. To maintain privacy management, this relies on cookie identifiers. Resetting or deleting your browser cookies will reset these preferences.

Essential cookies

These are cookies that are required for the operation of our website. They include, for example, cookies that enable you to log into secure areas of our website.

Analytics cookies

These cookies allow us to recognise and count the number of visitors to our website and to see how visitors move around our website when they are using it. This helps us to improve the way our website works.

Advertising cookies

These cookies allow us to tailor advertising to you based on your interests. If you do not accept these cookies, you will still see adverts, but these will be more generic.

Save and close