Warner Bros Studio representative concedes £36,935 robbery of Harry Potter products


A previous Warner Bros Studio representative who took £36,935 worth of Harry Potter product to sell on eBay has been given a suspended sentence. 

Adam Hill, 35, of Cedar Road, Stamford, Lincolnshire, took Harry Potter things to arrange from the Warner Bros Studio in Leavesden in Hertfordshire. 

At St Albans Crown Court, Hill confessed to robbery by worker. 

He was condemned to 14 months in jail suspended for year and a half and 250 hours of unpaid work. 

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the things, taken between December 2017 and March 2018, included wands, ties, identifications and key rings,. 

Slope, who at the hour of his capture lived in St Neots, Cambridgeshire, publicized the taken product on his own eBay account, presenting it on purchasers from a neighborhood post office, afterwards utilizing his organization's franking machine to send it from his work post room. 

The robberies were found in March 2018 after associates saw Harry Potter stock showing up and vanishing from under Hill's work area, and revealed him to their managers. 

In the inward examination that pursued, they found that Hill had sold 1,040 things of Harry Potter stock through his eBay account. 

At the point when Hill's vehicle was looked, they discovered 12 bundles of Harry Potter things fit to be posted that coordinated deals he had made on eBay. 

Officials from Hertfordshire police looked through Hill's home in St Neots, where they seized Harry Potter ties, identifications and key rings just as more envelopes and bundling. 

Jan Muller, of the CPS, stated: "In a critical break of trust, Adam Hill had the daringness to take a huge number of pounds of product from Warner Bros on display of his work partners; however they revealed him in the wake of becoming suspicious of the things continually accumulating under his work area. 

"Resulting examination of Hill's eBay and PayPal accounts uncovered requests and installments got for products which were discovered bundled up prepared to send to purchasers, giving him no choice yet to admit to his wrongdoings."

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