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A voice on the internet for the residents of Aldridge

 

Putting Aldridge residents first

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Permanent link to archive for 11/12/09. Thursday, November 12, 2009
Aldridge cash plotter is jailed

Cash plotter faces jail

An Aldridge businessman was facing jail today after using his town centre shop as a front for money laundering.

Richard Williams, who ran Aldridge Interiors, was being sentenced at Birmingham Crown Court.

The 45-year-old, of Marshall Close, Aldridge was found guilty of two charges of money laundering for using his business to conceal large sums of money made by a nationwide drugs smuggling ring.

Williams was also to be sentenced for his part in smuggling over 2.2 million counterfeit cigarettes.

 


# - Dusan Popratnjak - 11/12/09; 8:16:37 PM - Comment [0] Trackback [0]

Kitchen firm boss from Aldridge is jailed

48 years in jail for gang of smugglers

A gang of smugglers who shipped pure cocaine with a street value of £300,000 into the country have been jailed for a total of more than 48 years.

Mastermind Paul Price, of Weeford, near Lichfield, was sentenced to 10 years and nine months after admitting to conspiring to bring 4.2kg of the drug into the UK.

Kitchen firm boss Richard Williams was jailed for five years for using his business Aldridge Interiors to laun-der more than £1million made from the operation.

The five-strong gang was sentenced at Birmingham Crown Court yesterday.

The court heard that Price, aged 39, of Hungry Lane, was “deeply involved” in the operation.

Williams, 46, of Marshall Close, Aldridge, became embroiled in the network by associate Price.

He was convicted of two counts of concealing criminal property relating to money laundering in July after it emerged that £1million had passed through the shop in Portland Road.

He was also convicted at a separate trial for smuggling 2.2million counterfeit cigarettes.

Mr Adrian Maxwell, defending Price, said his motivation was to clear a £20,000 debt he had built up with a £100-a-day crack cocaine habit.


# - Dusan Popratnjak - 11/12/09; 8:13:21 PM - Comment [0] Trackback [0]

Aldridge Mail firm

Mail firm on the up thanks to post strike

SEND TS 05

A private mail company is snapping up scores of business customers from strike-hit Royal Mail – and most say they won’t be going back.

Send Marketing is now handling up to 50,000 letters a day at its base on Aldridge Fields Business Park. Managing director Guy Chatburn said: “About half have only just come to us in the last two or three months, in the run-up to the strike action. A survey of our customers found eight out of 10 said they would not go back to using Royal Mail for their business post.”

The five-year-old company has 15 staff handling business mail at its Aldridge base, such as promotional letters from Wolverhampton’s Grand Theatre, Symphony Hall in Birmingham and Birmingham Rep as well as Nationwide Autocentres and Fujifilm.

“We handle letters, not parcels, and we use independent postal companies like Secured Mail, TNT and City Link,” said Mr Chatburn. “They handle the mail until it is delivered to a Royal Mail delivery centre – effectively Royal Mail only handles the last mile of the process, pushing it through the letter box.

“Because we handle mail in bulk, we can print and deliver a letter for just 27p, 3p per letter cheaper than a Royal Mail stamp.

“And we have also found that, despite the strike action, 94 per cent of our customers have been unaffected because we are largely by-passing the disruption of the Royal Mail’s collection and sorting network.”

 


# - Dusan Popratnjak - 11/12/09; 8:07:36 PM - Comment [0] Trackback [0]

Swoop nets 6m fake cigarettes

Swoop nets 6m fake cigarettes

Six million fake cigarettes have been seized from an Aldridge industrial unit, it was revealed today.

The haul of counterfeit goods was hidden in boxes labelled as mixed vegetables and would have cost the public purse around £500,000 in lost tax revenue.

Keith Morgan, detection manager for HM Revenue & Customs, said no arrests had yet been made but that investigations were under way. He would not reveal which unit had been targeted in Friday’s raid.


# - Dusan Popratnjak - 11/12/09; 8:03:52 PM - Comment [0] Trackback [0]

Plan for extension to supermarket blocked

Plan for extension to supermarket blocked

A plan to expand a West Midland supermarket by demolishing a neighbouring ambulance station has been thwarted after councillors turned them down on road safety and noise grounds.

Morrisons wanted to knock down Aldridge Ambulance Station and build a bigger store in a move that would have created 100 jobs. It would have also paved the way for a reshuffle of paramedic bases across Walsall with plans for a smaller base in Aldridge, next to the supermarket’s proposed new service yard.

But elderly residents who live in Croxalls Court sheltered flats directly opposite the proposed development in Anchor Road said they were unhappy with the plans due to current noise nuisance.

Eileen Turner told Walsall Council’s development control meeting last night: “We object to the service yard as it will be 40m nearer and immediately opposite our apartments.”

She said some residents were being disturbed at night by current 24-hour loading activity at the supermarket and there were concerns over the number of delivery lorries visiting.

 Ashley Turner, of architect’s WECC which designed the scheme, said his firm worked closely with the council and West Midlands Ambulance Trust, which was in favour of the plans saying its Aldridge base was to large for its purpose.

The council’s planning officers had recommended the plans for approval.

Councillor John Rochelle, of Aldridge, said: “I am appalled by this application. We were promised a reasonable facility for the ambulances. I think the people of Aldridge will lose out.”

Councillors refused the application on grounds it would adversely affect the amenities of the neighbours at Croxalls Court, increase the traffic on the Aldridge Bypass, the access to the new ambulance base was inadequate and dangerous and an increase in noise levels.

No one from Morrisons was today available for comment.


# - Dusan Popratnjak - 11/12/09; 7:57:05 PM - Comment [0] Trackback [0]

 

 

8.2.2012

Last update: Thursday, November 12, 2009 at 8:16:37 PM
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