
A man has been found guilty of fraud totalling almost £600,000 after he passed off ordinary tea as a premium product grown in Scotland.
Thomas Robinson, 52, claimed the tea was a unique variety he had grown at his Perthshire estate using innovative techniques.
Operating as The Wee Tea Plantation, he then fraudulently sold it to high-profile clients in the hospitality sector, including luxury hotels and retailers, between January 2014 and February 2019.
Varieties listed on the website – which touted partnerships with train operator Caledonian Sleeper and the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh – include Dalreoch White, Silver Needles, Scottish Antlers Tea, and Highland Green.
Also known as Tam O’Braan and Thomas O’Brien, Robinson was found to have misled genuine Scottish tea growers by selling them plants he falsely claimed were a unique, locally-grown variety.
He also bolstered his credibility by fabricating academic qualifications and industry awards.
An investigation by Food Standards Scotland (FSS) found Robinson’s misrepresentations led to his clients losing a total of £584,783.
He was found guilty of two counts of fraud by a jury at Falkirk Sheriff Court on Thursday, and is due to be sentenced at Stirling Sheriff Court on 25 June.
Read more from Scotland:
UK’s oldest polar bear euthanised
Abusive foster carer forced boy to eat cat food
In a statement, Ron McNaughton, head of Scottish food crime and incidents unit at FSS, said: “This was not a victimless crime – individuals, businesses, and an emerging sector of genuine Scottish tea growers suffered real financial and reputational harm as a result of deliberate deception.”
He then thanked a witness who came forward and added: “Fraud of this nature is often difficult to detect and even harder to prove, but we were determined to pursue every line of inquiry to build the strongest possible case.”