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Touts who made millions from reselling tickets are jailed

<span>Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters</span>
Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters

Two touts who made at least £11m selling tickets for concerts by artists such as Ed Sheeran, Bruno Mars and Taylor Swift have been jailed, after they were found guilty of fraud at a landmark trial.

Peter Hunter and David Smith, trading as Ticket Wiz and BZZ, used multiple identifies and bots to harvest thousands of tickets to gigs and West End shows such as Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.

The pair, who conducted their business via secondary ticketing websites including Viagogo and StubHub, were found guilty of fraud earlier this month.

Hunter was jailed for four years at Leeds Crown Court on Monday while Smith, his husband, was given a 30-month custodial sentence.

Hunter was first exposed by a Guardian investigation into touts and their relationship with so-called “secondary ticketing” websites, which allow people to resell tickets and take a commission on the price, which is often vastly inflated.

National Trading Standards, which brought the prosecution, began investigating the pair several months later.

The verdict could have major implications for the practice of touting and secondary ticketing websites.

Hunter and Smith were found guilty of three counts of fraud, for using techniques that previous reporting by the Guardian has shown are common among professional ticket touts.

These include the use of multiple identities and credit cards to bypass restrictions on the number of tickets that one person can buy, reducing the number of tickets on sale to the general public.

They sold tickets for events at which resale was banned, putting buyers at risk of being refused entry at the turnstile.

The pair also listed tickets that they did not yet own, a practice known as “speculative selling”.

A jury concluded that these methods were fraudulent, while it also found them guilty of possessing articles for fraud, namely software used for harvesting tickets.

Lord Toby Harris, the chair of National Trading Standards, said: “Today’s sentences send a strong message to similar online ticket touts: these are criminal offences that can lead to prison sentences.

“I hope this leads to a step change in the secondary ticketing market, making it easier and safer for consumers buying tickets in the future.”

The music industry campaign group FanFair Alliance lauded a “fantastic” result for National Trading Standards and called for further investigation into secondary ticketing.

“By facilitating the activities of online touts, there must be concerns that the platforms themselves are profiting from the sale of tickets unlawfully acquired by their biggest suppliers.

“This should be investigated as a matter of urgency and lead to action against those platforms if they have benefited from the proceeds of criminality.”