MAIN PIC paul broadbent

Chief executive of the GLA Paul Broadbent

A Lincolnshire couple, who operated as gangmasters illegally between 2006 and 2010, have been ordered to repay more than £400,000 in criminal proceeds.

Stasys Skarbalius and Virginija Skarbaliene were jailed in 2015 in a landmark conviction under licensing legislationafter fraudulently setting up Scunthorpe-based business CV Staff Services. They did it under a fake identity and in turn applied for licences from the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) and mortgages to build a property portfolio.

During this time they facilitated hundreds of people into work in the agricultural and horticultural industries in Lincolnshire and Humberside, and across Yorkshire, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridge. The business had an estimate turnover of £12 million.

DC Grant Bailey, from EMSOU’s Regional Asset Recovery Team, said: “Skarbalius and Skarbaliene enjoyed a lifestyle of big houses, lavish holidays and access to substantial amounts of cash thanks to their lucrative business, which had its origins steeped in lies.

“It’s hard to reconcile the stark contrast to their agency workers, who earned just above the minimum wage and undertook honest days of manual labour at farms across Lincolnshire and the Humber to get by in this world. Clients who were potentially left unemployed when the truth was revealed.”

The sham was exposed in 2011 when Skarbalius’ bogus Dutch passport, which he held under the name of Charles Rene Luske, expired and he was unable to renew it for the purposes of the annual licence.

Following a joint investigation by the GLA and the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU), the pair, originally from Lithuania, were convicted in June 2015. The conviction was the first of its kind in the UK under a previously unused section of the Gangmasters (Licensing) Act relating to possession of a document known to be obtained improperly with the intention of leading people to believe they were properly licensed.

Both of no fixed address, Skarbalius, 62, and Skarbaliene, 58, received prison sentences of two-and-a-half and three years resepctively. They were also disqualified as company directors for seven years.

Yesterday, Sheffield Crown Court heard how they had each received total benefits of £1m from their criminal exploits. They were served with Confiscation Orders under the Proceeds of Crime Act on their available assets — £187,219.85 for Skarbalius and £231,687.68 for Skarbaliene — which they must pay within three months or be jailed for another two years and three months.

Included in their assets are substantial bank account balances, recovered cash, a Mercedes Sprinter van, a Lexus Sport, a Volkswagen Transporter van, their four-bedroom detached home in Scotter, Lincolnshire, two three-bedroom houses occupied by tenants in Scunthorpe, and their Scunthorpe business premises.

The Home Office is also considering deporting the pair.