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Owners of ‘smoking wasteland’ ordered to remove waste for £2.5m

Two men have been sentenced for allowing the operation of an illegal waste site on their land in rural Lincolnshire, in which the Environment Agency (EA) has said they did “nothing to prevent it”.

The landowners of the illegal waste site on Fen Lane, Long Bennington, were sentenced at Nottingham Crown Court on 16 December 2024, in the latest development in ‘Operation Lord’.

Marc Greenfield was sentenced to 19 months in prison, and James Baggaley was sentenced to 20 months in prison, both suspended for 18 months.

They have also been ordered to remove the waste from their land by September 2025, at an estimated cost of £2.5 million.

They are the latest defendants to be sentenced in the case, bringing the total so far to 11 people, including three family members.

Judge Coupland found that their offending was deliberate: they both lied to residents and tried to conceal the activity, while Greenfield also lied to investigators. The judge found that the “highest level of harm” had been caused, with the site changing from a grassed area to a “smoking wasteland” which put nearby residents at harm from toxic fumes.

Operation Lord

Operation Lord saw the Environment Agency officers spend months building a picture of evidence of the illegal waste site. Intelligence revealed lorry-loads of shredded waste were regularly being accepted onto the site “the size of a football pitch”.

Waste was burned daily and buried. This activity intensified during the first Coronavirus lockdown in March 2020, and so action was taken to bring it to a halt.

Environment Agency officers conducted a raid on the site in April 2020 with Lincolnshire Police. Two arrests were made, and they seized an excavator and a lorry which were actively depositing more waste at the site when officers arrived.

Leigh Edlin, area director for Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, said: “This was a serious illegal waste site which was highly organised and involved multiple offenders. Those involved sought to profit from Covid restrictions at the cost of the environment and by inflicting misery on the local community. The site and its operators had a major impact on legitimate businesses and our regulatory work.

“Our enforcement teams will continue to tackle serious illegal waste crime by working with partners such as Lincolnshire Police, fire services and councils, as we did in this case to hold those responsible to account.”

A family affair

The findings of the investigation led to 12 people and one company being charged, of which 10 pleaded guilty. Following an eight-week trial at Nottingham crown court which concluded on 28 June 2024, the remaining three defendants were found guilty.

Nine defendants were sentenced on 18 October at Nottingham crown court. The Canner family: father Paul, mother Judith and son Joshua, ran the illegal waste site. Paul was sentenced to 26 months in prison, while Judith and Joshua were each sentenced to 16 months.

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