An investigation led by a team of York experts has brought a gang to justice who cheated their way to more than £1 million.
The group offered home improvement services – particularly supplying and fitting windows and doors – and targeted victims across Yorkshire and Derbyshire between April 2017 and August 2019.
They used fake names to hide their true identities, secured business by misrepresentation, knowingly delivered defective services and persuaded customers to pay with substantial deposits for substandard work.
They also generated customer interest through a misleading advertising campaign for which Eastenders star June Brown was hired to play a character. The adverts encouraged customers to contact the group, at which point they began their pushy sales techniques.
Ms Brown, who played Dot Cotton before her death in 2022, had no idea that the people behind the company were anything other than legitimate.

The National Trading Standards Yorkshire and Humber Regional Investigations Team, based in York and hosted by the city council, carried out the investigation.
The defendants were convicted of fraud and proceeds of crime offences in relation to the activity of several companies that claimed to be home improvement specialists, with expertise in fitting windows.
In many cases, the windows were of poor quality, often arriving undersized, cracked and/or scratched. They were often installed badly, causing damage to homeowners’ walls and leaving them with large gaps between the windows and the walls.
The sentences handed down by Leeds Crown Court on Friday were as follows:
- Zulkernan Mahmood, 36 of Bradford, Yorkshire sentenced to 6 years and 4 months imprisonment, handed a 10-year criminal behaviour order (CBO) and disqualified from being a director for 14 years.
- Rehan Yousaf, 47 of Bradford, Yorkshire sentenced to 2 years and 6 months imprisonment (to run consecutively with a sentence of 7 years and 11 months that he is currently serving), handed a 10-year CBO and disqualified from being a company director for 12 years.
- Jonathan O’Grady, 37 of Bridlington, Yorkshire handed a 2-year suspended sentence, ordered to complete 220 hours of unpaid work and disqualified from being a director for 6 years.
- David Goody, 54 of Bradford, Yorkshire ordered to complete 100 hours of unpaid work and disqualified from being a director for 3 years.
A fifth man, Jordan Coalby, 31 of Bacup, Lancashire, failed to attend court and an arrest warrant has been issued.
The victims

One victim, an 80-year-old man, hired ‘Pilkington Home Improvements’ in 2018 to build an extension after being cold-called by a man named ‘Adam’.
The victim paid £89,000 for work that – if completed to a satisfactory standard – should only have cost £46,000. Instead, he was left significantly out of pocket for work which left his home in a dangerous condition.
Another victim hired the company after being told he was eligible for a ‘special offer for over 70’s’. The victim was pressured by ‘Adam’ into paying the £1,325 deposit for work which was never started.
Luckily, he was able to get his money back following an intervention by Trading Standards.
Cllr Jenny Kent, executive member for environment at City of York Council, said: “Our Trading Standards team investigations are helping secure justice for innocent people and are a warning to anyone considering exploiting homeowners that they will be caught.
“Home and energy efficiency improvements are vital for people to have warm, low-cost homes, and it is really damaging if peoples’ trust is eroded by a small number of criminals.
“Our dedicated team is committed to upholding people’s rights, enabling confidence in decent suppliers, and ensuring that those who seek to cheat people and erode that trust are brought to justice.”
Lord Michael Bichard, Chair, National Trading Standards, said: “These men left many people with extensive remedial works required at their homes; some were left living in structurally unstable properties with no viable means of repairing the damage done due to the financial losses they incurred.
“Today’s sentencing follows a lengthy investigation by Trading Standards officers, and I would like to extend my gratitude to them for their hard work in bringing this gang to justice.