Edition 94
www.thecourier.es
Friday, December 7, 2012
OAPs VICTIMS OF LAND DEAL SCAM HUNDREDS of UK pensioners may have been victims in an elaborate property investment scam perpetrated by two British-owned Spanish companies. More than 100 people have filed complaints to the official courts claiming a possible crime of fraud by the companies Primula Developments SL and Owners International SL. The action is being taken under the legal guidance of Martinez-Echevarria Lawyers, who issued a press release on Wednesday confirming the details and offering help to anyone who may have been a victim. The release revealed: “These companies, whose headquarters were in San Javier (Murcia) and Marbella (Málaga), advertised free coach trips offering a free lunch or day out, to capture a large number of British citizens (mainly pensioners) with the promise of investing in high-yield real estate products under a contract written in English.’’ Some of the “clients” are believed to have been taken to San Javier offices and interrogated for up to seven hours about their own personal finances before the salesmen made them an offer. They were given very loose contracts in English and false share certificates. The press release added: “Complaints from hundreds of concerned pensioners have not been previously followed up out of court, because the companies seem to have "disappeared" physically quite suddenly without apparent trace. “Now it seems that only with the help of the prosecution and courts will they be able to reach the person/s that are ultimately responsible for what clearly seems to an overall swindle. “There are, as said, hundreds of affected people, and it´s entirely possible that many of them do not even know yet that they have been the subject of a possible scam, so we at Martinez-Echevarria Abogados (Lawyers) would like to offer our telephone number to for any possible affected clients : 96 571 84 54.’’ Alternatively, you can contact us here at The Courier either by email at. office@thecourier.es or telephone on 966 921 003 with your story of how you were affected.
BEST OF BRITISH! Satellite switch joy for us - but Costa del Sol faces UK blackout By ALEX TRELINSKI FEARS that many TV viewers on the Costa Blanca would lose their UK channels following the switch to the new Astra 2F satellite have proved unfounded. But the picture looks bleak for the expat population in the Costa del Sol, who face the prospect of blank screens with their favourite British services no longer available on dishes smaller than two metres.
Many Costa Blanca viewers have been using small onemetre dishes, many of which were installed this year. The Astra 2F satellite came into service last month, with some channels - including Channel Five and Channel Four HD - being moved over this week. Despite fears that small dishes would not be able to pick
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