A businessman who supplied illegal security to a sports bar has been fined.
Company director Terence Macartney, from Wareham, Dorset, pleaded guilty and was fined £415. He was also ordered to pay court costs of £1,529 plus a victim surcharge of £42.
A guilty plea was also entered for Macartney’s business, Maxim Security Ltd.
The company was fined £1,000 and ordered to pay court costs of £1,529 plus a victim surcharge of £100.
According to the Security Industry Authority, a Maxim manager pleaded not guilty to supplying illegal security and has elected to be tried in a crown court.
The court was told that on 10 December last year Security Industry Authority (SIA) investigators, accompanied by Dorset Police licensing officers, visited a Bournemouth sports bar while carrying out routine licence inspections.
They found two men working as door supervisors, one of whom proved that he was appropriately licensed by the SIA.
The second man was unlicensed and denied that he was working as door supervisor.
He pleaded not guilty and will appear again before Poole Magistrates’ Court in January 2023 for a trial hearing.
SIA investigators checked the signing-in book, which revealed that the man had also previously worked at the venue on 15 and 16 October.
The owner of the venue confirmed to SIA investigators that Maxim Security Ltd were their security supplier.
On 16 May 202,2 SIA investigators interviewed Terence Macartney under caution. He confirmed that as director of Maxim he had overall responsibility for the supply of security. On 25 August, Terence Macartney resigned his role as director of the business.
Mark Chapman, one of the SIA’s criminal investigation managers said: “Maxim Security and its director Terence Macartney have been prosecuted and received a significant sentence.
“Mr Macartney has been handed a criminal record and his company fined, suffering reputational damage as a result.
“The role of the SIA licensing regime is to keep people safe, and this is particularly important in the run-up to the festive season when bars and clubs are busier. The public should be assured that the security appointed to protect them are suitably trained, qualified and licensed to do so.”
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