Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
January 31, 2015
The whole idea of there being some kind of unearned privilege that we have over the other races in our own countries is such an obvious fraud. It is not White people that are privileged, but those who are of one of these various shades of brown.
This grinning Black buffoon conned White people out of tens of thousands of pounds by selling them tickets to non-existent flights.
Imagine how distraught these people must have been when they turned up expecting to fly away on holiday, as well as the money they had lost.
Now they can add insults to their financial injury, as the anti-White courts have seen fit to only fine the creature a pound because he says he has blown all the stolen cash already.
A rogue travel agent who duped holidaymakers out of tens of thousands of pounds by selling tickets for non-existent flights has been ordered to repay just £1.
Dean Oliver, who is serving a three-year sentence behind bars, avoided a hefty sum of restitution after he pleaded poverty and an investigation found that he has no assets or cash to forfeit.
Birmingham Crown Court heard the 46-year-old conman lived a ‘criminal lifestyle’ which involved ripping off customers with false promises of cheap flights and is believed to have netted him more than £100,000.
But Mr Oliver, from Manchester, had blown all of the cash and there was no realistic prospect of recovering any assets or funds, said prosecutor Ben Mills.
As a result the Crown asked for a confiscation order of just £1 even though his victims each lost hundreds or thousands of pounds when they booked dream holidays or trips to visit family or attend weddings.
Mr Oliver, who was pictured grinning following a Birmingham Crown Court appearance last year, was jailed for three years last September after a jury found him guilty at trial last July.
The Jamaican could have to serve just a single extra day at the end of his sentence if he fails to cough up the £1 by March 17.
Mr Oliver was convicted of 19 charges of fraud and two of using a false instrument, covering a total of £25,993.
But an investigation found another £103,649 of unexplained deposits in his accounts.
The scheming crook promised cheap flights from his Smethwick-based travel firm and then from Digbeth, but he left 19 holidaymakers in the lurch between 2011 and 2012.