
Manchester jury hears moneylender made £3m profits, as Newcastle court is told loan shark made £88,000 from £500 loan.
      A loan shark who made £88,000 in interest  from a victim's initial borrowings of only £500 left court in a Jaguar today,  while another was jailed for five years for threatening and blackmailing more  than 1,000 poverty-stricken clients.
      Both men were condemned by judges at  separate courts in the north of England. Agencies and government ministers  warned borrowers to avoid backstreet lenders and seek debt advice.
      The extraordinary spiral of repayments  demanded by 39-year-old Robert Reynolds, of Stanley, County Durham, was  revealed by 40-year-old victim Debra Wilson at Newcastle upon Tyne crown court.
      She said Reynolds, who lives nearby, posed  as a friend who would want only "a bit of interest" when she borrowed  the £500 at Christmas nine years ago to buy a computer as a present for her  daughter.
      Within days, he told her he was only a  go-between for the actual lender, who wanted £250 a month – a lie he maintained  for eight years while Wilson and her husband, Kevin, took out more loans in a  hopeless attempt to meet interest which grew much faster.
      The court heard the Wilsons had remortgaged  their home, paid Reynolds most of £4,000 given to Mr Wilson as compensation for  a motorbike accident, and had their gas cut off because they could not meet  payments.
      Mrs Wilson, who has three other children,  suffered two strokes and a brain haemorrhage during the eight-year ordeal and  blamed it on Reynolds.
      Meanwhile, he lavishly furnished his home,  buying two flatscreen TVs and other luxuries with the money he was getting from  his victims.
      Ann Richardson, prosecuting, told the  court: "The final straw only came in January 2008 when Mrs Wilson's  daughter came home with a bag of food leftovers from her babysitting job,  saying she was sick of being hungry.
  "There was no gas, the house was  freezing, and Mrs Wilson went to the police."
      While she was at the police station,  Reynolds rang with his weekly demand for more money.
      PC Natalie Hulse told the court she had  listened in to the call and said its tone was "calm and eerie".
  "He told Mrs Wilson that he wanted  £1,600 by the end of the month, £585 by the end of the week and £85 that day –  and suggested someone else might get nasty if she didn't pay," she said.
      Reynolds admitted harassment with intent to  commit violence, but told the court he was penniless and registered disabled  with arthritis and psoriasis.
      He was sentenced to 51 weeks in prison,  suspended for two years, by Judge John Evans, who told him: "You are a  person without a conscience and you should be stamped with a government health  warning as anybody who comes into contact with you will be at risk of damaging  their health.
  "Your behaviour towards that family is  beneath contempt."
      Speaking outside the court, Mrs Wilson  said: "Don't, please, get involved in this.
  "It's really not worth the long  stressful road that you will be on. If you are involved with a loan shark, go  to the police. It needs to be stopped now."
      In a separate case in Manchester, loan  shark John 'Johnny Boy' Kiely was jailed for five years for running a huge  operation with an army of enforcers from a mansion in the Peak District.
      Minshull Street crown court heard he  charged interest of up to 2,437% on victims living on council estates, which he  toured in a black Range Rover with the personalised registration plate BOY.
      He was condemned by Judge Adrian Smith as a  "ruthless but sophisticated criminal" who targeted the vulnerable.
      Steps are likely to be taken to recover  some of the fortune he built up through illegal money-lending, which brought  him £3m profits over four years.
      Kiely was convicted by a jury of blackmail,  acquiring, concealing, disguising, converting or transferring criminal  property, and unlawfully failing to give notice of a change in circumstances.
      He admitted five charges of illegal  money-lending.
      The court heard that one desperate client,  45-year-old Donna Ockerby, had been forced to leave Manchester and go into  hiding after falling behind on repayments on a £300 loan for her wedding dress.
      The money spiralled, with interest, into an  unreachable sum, particularly when her working hours were cut.
      Judge Smith said Kiely had harried Ockerby  in "a chilling, sinister and deliberately menacing way".
      She had been left fearing for her life  after a concrete block was flung at her windows and Kiely paid her a  threatening visit.
  "You put your face so close to hers  she thought you were going to headbutt her," the judge said. When Kiely  was arrested last October, he had an estimated £800,000 owing in loans and  interest. Originally from the travelling community, he invested £800,000 in his  seven-bed mansion at Chapel-en-le-Frith.
      Speaking after the hearing, Ockerby said  Kiely – who has a previous conviction for assault – preyed on people's  misfortune.
  "There are more like him out  there," she added. "People need to be aware. You will never get to  the end of the last payment. It just goes on and on and on."
      Kevin Brennan, the junior minister for consumer affairs,  said a government drive against loan sharks had secured more than 100  prosecutions.
  "Thugs like Kiely who prey on  vulnerable people cause untold misery within communities," he said.
Source: Guardian.co.uk
