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Episode 17

The cowboy call centre bosses in court. Rachel investigates the company at the heart of the latest Welsh scandal. The Elvis suit that left a fan All Shook Up. Now he wants to return it to sender. Plus, the fabulous executive homes with black markings down the walls.

29 minutes

Last on

Tue 26 Mar 2019 11:45

Swansea call centre

Swansea call centre

CCTV footage taken inside a Swansea call centre shows how staff lied to customers in a corporate culture obsessed with money.

Company bosses were spending thousands in the city鈥檚 nightclubs while operating the cold calling frauds.

REC Home Audits called potential customers offering 鈥渇ree鈥 boilers under a 鈥済overnment scheme鈥. They took upfront fees of 拢299 or 拢399 鈥 but only three of around 1,200 customers ever got boilers.

Those three were all elderly and ended up paying for the boilers with 12 year credit agreements.

CCTV seized by Swansea Trading Standards after raiding the premises in 2014 and seen by X-Ray showed a manager shouting at his team:聽 鈥淲hat motivates you?

The team reply:聽 鈥淢oney鈥.

聽The manager adds: 鈥淒eals, and without deals none of us are going to get any f* money are we?鈥

Video footage also shows pressure selling tactics 鈥 including one operator pretending to consult with a manager over a special offer while he was vaping and boasting to a colleague about the scam he was operating.

Rhys Harries from Swansea Trading Standards told X-Ray: 鈥淭hey were using all sorts of techniques to try and manipulate people in to taking it out. They would pressurise people constantly. 鈥淭hey would put pressure and pressure and pressure.鈥

The company was making up to 拢50,000 a week while it was operating in 2014

鈥淭hey were going out on a Saturday night, and spending 拢4- 5,000 on Wind Street with the staff, taking them out, treating them. So that鈥檚 where a lot of consumer鈥檚 money was going,鈥 said Mr Harries.聽
After a four year investigation and a trial at Swansea Crown Court the company鈥檚 directors Kyle Lewis, Darren Palmer and David Alford and its compliance manager Jason Cunliff were all found guilty of conspiracy to defraud.聽 They are due to be sentenced on April 15.

One of the company鈥檚 victims, Sonja Owen, from Rhymney 鈥 who paid 拢299 and only got a survey of her house, said:聽 鈥淚 hope that they get sentenced and their assets taken off them, and they should be made to pay everybody back. Not only us, but everybody they鈥檝e scammed.鈥

Taylor Wimpy

Taylor Wimpy

Homeowners, who spent more than half a million pounds on their new homes in Cowbridge, are demanding their builders put right what they say are problems with their roofs.

Taylor Wimpey built the Scholar's View development seven years ago on the site of a former school. Buyers were promised a 'touch of luxury in an exclusive location' 鈥 but one homeowner has told X-Ray there is a defect with her roof that could prove costly.

Teacher Meryl Burrough bought a five bedroom house at the site for 拢650,000 in 2014.

She said: 鈥淎s soon as I saw it, I thought it was really nice. I loved the pillars outside I liked the sort of double bay frontage as well. So I went down to the sales office and literally thought it's now or never.鈥

But less than a year after buying the house there were problems. She noticed dark streaks appearing on one of the outside walls.聽聽

鈥淎s winter took hold this streaking pattern from the roof started to sort of get worse,鈥 Meryl explained.聽

鈥淭he rainwater was coming down through gaps in the tiles because they're too far apart coming down the brickwork and then down the walls. And over time it is becoming stained with black.鈥澛

Despite complaining repeatedly to Taylor Wimpey, the problem has persisted for the last five years. Her home was covered by a 10 year warranty from the National House Building Council (NHBC), so Meryl turned to them.

She said: 鈥淭he NHBC and Taylor Wimpey refused to acknowledge that there was a defect with the roof, not just of my house but all the ones in this development.鈥

The NHBC told her the issue wasn't covered by their warranty because she hadn't reported the problems to her builder in the first couple of years after she'd bought the house.

Meryl is one of a number of homeowners on the development complaining of similar problems. In the end, she called in surveyor Tim Davies to take a look at the issues. His attention was drawn to the "verge closures" which seal around the side of the roof.聽

He said that the verge closers that Taylor Wimpey had used were 鈥渋ncorrect and badly fitted.鈥

Mr Davies said this was allowing the rainwater to run down the wall and cause the cosmetic staining.

鈥淓ventually if you get frost behind the render it will blow the render off and you're then into a big repair,鈥 he added.

In his view these problems should be covered by the NHBC鈥檚 ten year guarantee.

Taylor Wimpey, however, say they鈥檙e sorry customers aren鈥檛 happy with their homes, but that they鈥檝e done everything demanded by the NHBC. The NHBC say they surveyed the properties earlier this year and found that the dry verge systems had been fitted correctly.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Lucy Owen
Presenter Rachel Treadaway-Williams
Series Producer Nick Skinner

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