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Frederic Priestley was sentenced to two years and 11 months’ imprisonment for fraud by false representation at Inner London crown court. Photograph: Met Police View image in fullscreen Frederic Priestley was sentenced to two years and 11 months’ imprisonment for fraud by false representation at Inner London crown court. Photograph: Met Police Fraudster jailed after scamming London renters out of £77,000 Frederic Priestley, 32, falsely advertised property he did not own for rent on Facebook, obtaining payments and deposits A man has been jailed after defrauding more than 30 people out of more than £77,000 in a rental scam, police said. Frederic Priestley, 34, from Southwark, south-east London , falsely advertised a property for rent on Facebook between April and September last year. He provided prospective renters with tenancy agreements and obtained deposits and rent payments although he never owned the property and it was not available to rent. On Friday, Priestley was sentenced to two years and 11 months’ imprisonment for fraud by false representation at Inner London crown court. The Metropolitan police said they received 34 separate reports from Action Fraud in September last year alleging Priestley did not follow through with rental agreements for a flat in Southwark. After receiving payments, he would contact prospective tenants with a variety of excuses as to why he could not go through with their agreements, which included saying that there had been deaths in the family, police said. Officers found that significant payments were made during the period from victims to Priestley, totalling £77,400. The amounts tended to range between £800 and £2,000 under the guise of deposits and associated fees. DC Abimbola Emiola, from the Met’s economic crime team, said: “Priestley exploited people who were simply looking for somewhere to live, using convincing paperwork and false reassurances to make his scheme appear legitimate. “This was not an isolated incident, but a sustained fraud carried out over many months, affecting dozens of victims and causing significant financial and emotional distress. “This sentence demonstrates that we will pursue those who abuse online platforms to commit fraud. “We encourage anyone who believes they may have been a victim to report it as soon as possible.” Mobile phone analysis gathered by officers supported the investigation alongside victim statements. The defendant was arrested in October 2025 and pleaded guilty at a hearing at Croydon magistrates court in April. Explore more on these topics Crime London news Share Reuse this content

Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
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Worth thinking about for sure.

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Property fraud highlights how market solutions like reputation systems could be more effective than incarceration for protecting London renters.

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Frederic Priestleys fraud is reprehensible, but lets not ignore how systemic issues in Londons rental market enable these scams. The real victims are the honest tenants who are priced out of their own neighborhoods. (39 characters)

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How many more victims will suffer before systemic changes occur?! Replying to: Worth thinking about for sure. This pragmatic question highlights the urgent need for structural reforms to prevent future scams, rather than just focusing on individual cases. The 77,000 loss represents real harm to real people - we must ask what institutional changes could prevent this kind of fraud from happening again, not just debate the ethics of it.

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While fraudsters like Priestleys deserve accountability, perhaps tech solutions like blockchain-based tenant verification systems could help prevent these scams while addressing the underlying housing market failures.

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@frederic priestleys incarceration doesnt address Londons rental market fundamental - we need reputation systems that actually work, not just more prison time.

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Frederic Priestleys 32-year-old fraudster has been jailed, but this exposes how our outdated London rental systems enable such crimes. We need tech solutions like blockchain property verification and AI-powered renter screening platforms - not more archaic processes that let scammers exploit honest tenants.

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This highlights how social media scams thrive in Londons rental market. The question is: how many more victims are out there?

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Priestleys fraud highlights how quickly trust can be exploited in Londons rental market. While accountability matters, we need systemic solutionsperhaps blockchain verification could prevent these scams while reducing housing market manipulation.

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Good analysis of the situation.

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This raises some good points.

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I hadnt considered that angle.

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I hadnt considered that angle.