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понедельник, 21 января 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Judge blasts 'utterly self-centred' rich kid of Instagram heiress



Stephanie Scolaro, 26, arrives at Southwark Crown Court in London last month


Stephanie Scolaro, 26, arrives at Southwark Crown Court in London last month



Stephanie Scolaro, 26, arrives at Southwark Crown Court in London last month



An 'utterly self-centred' heiress was today ordered to do community service after smuggling baseball caps and a bag made of endangered python skin into Britain before selling them.


Stephanie Scolaro, 26, sold snakeskin baseball caps and bags via her website 'SS Python' as well as her Instagram account, which has 85,000 followers.


The swimwear model daughter of Italian mining tycoon father Francesco, 54, and British mother Anna, 50, who live in a £9million home in Knightsbridge, also sold some of the £450 baseball caps with a boutique in Mayfair.


Scolaro, who has a luxury apartment in exclusive Marylebone, ordered the baseball caps and a travel bag from Indonesia, and sold some in the UK to her network of wealthy customers. 


But today she was sentenced to community service at Southwark Crown Court, having admitted two counts of importing goods with the intent to evade a prohibition, two counts of keeping for sale a species acquired unlawfully and one count of selling a species unlawfully imported between 2016 and 2017.


Judge Michael Gledhill QC slammed her lifestyle that is 'all about me' and told her that the approach to dealing with her apparent mental health issues was to just 'throw more money at the problem and she'll be alright, but it is not alright'. 




Swimwear model Scolaro sold snakeskin baseball caps and bags via her website 'SS Python'


Swimwear model Scolaro sold snakeskin baseball caps and bags via her website 'SS Python'



Swimwear model Scolaro sold snakeskin baseball caps and bags via her website 'SS Python'





 Scolaro is the daughter of an Italian mining tycoon father and a British mother


 Scolaro is the daughter of an Italian mining tycoon father and a British mother


 Scolaro is the daughter of an Italian mining tycoon father and a British mother



The judge said: 'This is a young woman who, for all sorts of different reasons, is utterly self-centred - her entire life is utterly centred around herself.


'One of the reasons is over that the years, all her life, she has been given exactly what she likes. Focusing the spotlight on herself, 'it's all about me', there is no thought for anybody else.'

He told her of the cruelty pythons suffer, adding: 'How they are skinned alive, how they are endangered - that doesn't cross her mind, it does not concern her.


'All she is concerned about is getting hold of some accessories that she can sell.' 




Scolaro also sold some of the £450 snakeskin baseball caps with a boutique in Mayfair


Scolaro also sold some of the £450 snakeskin baseball caps with a boutique in Mayfair


Scolaro also sold some of the £450 snakeskin baseball caps with a boutique in Mayfair





 'The large bags, which were intercepted, were advertised on her website at £2,800 each


 'The large bags, which were intercepted, were advertised on her website at £2,800 each



 'The large bags, which were intercepted, were advertised on her website at £2,800 each



The judge said that a recently completed psychiatric report suggested that Scolaro suffers from various mental illnesses.


He added: 'Nobody seems to have realised that your difficulties were out of the ordinary and needed addressing.


'It seems to me that the approach has been to throw more money at the problem and she'll be alright, but it is not alright. You are completely adrift and you need guidance.'


Defence counsel Adam Davis QC said: 'This has possibly been the most salutary period in her life.'





Scolaro's Italian mining tycoon father Francesco, 54, and British mother Anna, 50, are pictured together in 2010


Scolaro's Italian mining tycoon father Francesco, 54, and British mother Anna, 50, are pictured together in 2010






Scolaro's mother Anna is also pictured with her sister Lana in 2011


Scolaro's mother Anna is also pictured with her sister Lana in 2011



Scolaro's Italian mining tycoon father Francesco, 54, and British mother Anna, 50, are pictured together in 2010 (left). Her mother Anna is also pictured with her sister Lana in 2011 (right)





Francesco and Anna Scolaro live in a £9million home on this road in London's Knightsbridge


Francesco and Anna Scolaro live in a £9million home on this road in London's Knightsbridge



Francesco and Anna Scolaro live in a £9million home on this road in London's Knightsbridge



On social media, Scolaro shares pictures of high-end designer clothes and supercars for her 80,000 followers to admire. 



'You need guidance': Judge's full comments





Michael Gledhill QC


Michael Gledhill QC



Michael Gledhill QC



Judge Michael Gledhill QC said of Stephanie Scolaro: 


'I take the view that this is a young woman who, for all sorts of different reasons, is utterly self-centred - her entire life is utterly centred around herself. One of the reasons is over that the years, all her life, she has been given exactly what she likes. Focusing the spotlight on herself, 'it's all about me,' there is no thought for anybody else.'


'How they (pythons) are skinned alive, how they are endangered - that doesn't cross her mind, it does not concern her. All she is concerned about is getting hold of some accessories that she can sell.


'I hope you have done some research that makes you think, 'what on earth was I doing even contemplating importing endangered species.' It is pretty obvious to anybody with any intelligence that exotic animals are likely to be endangered and their trade regulated.


'You are a young woman with very few barriers - indeed, 'what I want I get,' seems to be your motto and the way you approach your life. I take a very dim view of this offence and you know why.' 


'Nobody seems to have realised that your difficulties were out of the ordinary and needed addressing. It seems to me that the approach has been to throw more money at the problem and she'll be alright, but it is not alright. You are completely adrift and you need guidance.' 




Her sister Lana starred in the Channel 4 reality TV show Rich Kids Of Instagram after flaunting their jet-set lifestyles on social media.


In total, police seized 35 hats as well as a number of large bag made of the illicit hides, which she was selling for £2,800 each.


Previously, prosecutor Gregor Mckinley said: 'The case is about the importation and selling and offering for sale of articles made from genuine python skin.


'Ms Scolaro herself has a very active engagement with social media and in particular with an Instagram channel which she operates and manages.


'She has been described in some quarters as being influential in terms of fashion, in particular with young people.


'The goods in question are a kind of baseball hat, in different colours, made from python skin.


'Also advertised on the website and seized as consignments were bags, both large holdalls and smaller bags.'


The prosecutor told how police began investigating the model after a package sent from Indonesia was stopped as it was sent via Europe.'


A consignment of these goods comprising of ten of these caps, one large bag and one smaller bag, were stopped by German customs officials at Leipzig Airport.'


Mr Mckinley told the court that German customs alerted British authorities and forwarded the DHL parcel on to the UK.


'It was with the forwarding company DHL and at the same time police were making enquiries as to the ultimate destination, Ms Scolaro was making enquiries with DHL as to why it had not arrived.


'Police began looking at Ms Scolaro's Instagram account and at the associated website,' added the prosecutor.


Mr Mckinley told how the defendant had sold one of the caps to Rogue Menswear in Bexleyheath for £185 but suggested a retail price of £350.




Scolaro swears at photographers as she leaves Southwark Crown Court In London last month


Scolaro swears at photographers as she leaves Southwark Crown Court In London last month



Scolaro swears at photographers as she leaves Southwark Crown Court In London last month





Scolaro and her family regularly fly by private plane to homes in Monaco, Ibiza and New York


Scolaro and her family regularly fly by private plane to homes in Monaco, Ibiza and New York



Scolaro and her family regularly fly by private plane to homes in Monaco, Ibiza and New York



'Again, very similarly there were five of these caps on sale at a shop called Park Lane Collections. Three of the caps were on sale for £450 and two of them for £300.'



Horror of the illegal trade in snake skins 



The illegal trade in snake skins starts in Indonesia when pythons are skinned alive and left to die in agony, after initially being stunned with a blow from the back of a machete.


A hose pipe is then between their jaws - before water is turned on, the reptile fills up and it is left for ten minutes with a leather cord tied around its neck.


Its head is impaled on a meat hook, and the skin is peeled off by tugging. 


As for the python's body, it is tossed on a pile of similarly stripped snakes and normally dies in a few days from the effects of shock or dehydration.


The skin is sent to a tannery before turned into luxury items and shipped abroad to Western countries. 


This is despite endangered species being protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.


It is designed to stop the illegal killing of these species by destroying the market – and applies to anything from them, such as skin, fur and teeth.


Under British law, people must apply to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs for a permit before importing anything on the list.


When something is imported, it must also have a permit proving it was legally sourced by the export country.




Customs officials seized another shipment of eight caps and another large bag made of illegal skins was stopped at Heathrow Airport on March 8, 2017, 'again, very simply addressed to the defendant and that was seized directly by customs.'


Scolaro was interviewed by police on the same day and gave a no comment interview.


'Following the interview with police, the investigating officer was forwarded two documents which purported to be export licenses covering the importation of some of these goods from Indonesia,' the prosecutor continued.


'Both of these documents have been checked and both are forgeries.


'All of the investigation has been by the police from the website and the Instagram account and without any cooperation from the defendant in finding these articles or where they had been placed on sale,' explained Mr Mckinley.


'There are some 35 of these baseball caps and if we take the retail value as was suggested by the defendant herself of about £350, the value of these hats come to £12,215.


'The large bags, which were intercepted, were advertised on her website at £2,800 each. Looking at the large bags and the hats together, that comes to £17,815.'


Scolaro advertised the goods on her website 'SS Python' and sold snakeskin accessories from Rogue Menswear in Bexleyheath and Park Lane Collections in Mayfair between December 2015 and February 2017. 




Scolaro was interviewed by police after a shipment was seized and gave a no comment interview


Scolaro was interviewed by police after a shipment was seized and gave a no comment interview


Scolaro was interviewed by police after a shipment was seized and gave a no comment interview



She is also charged with keeping specimens of python leather at her luxury home in Marylebone on March 8, 2017.


Scolaro has more than 85,000 followers on Instagram, where she posts images of herself in exotic locations across the globe.


Scolaro – known as Stephy – and Lana attended Mill Hill School in North London, where boarding fees are £33,717 a year, and regularly fly by private plane to family homes in Monaco, Ibiza and New York.


Lana, who designs diamond jewellery, once claimed she spent £15,000 a month on clothes and shoes.




Scolaro posts images of herself in exotic locations across the globe on her Instagram account


Scolaro posts images of herself in exotic locations across the globe on her Instagram account



Scolaro posts images of herself in exotic locations across the globe on her Instagram account



Stephanie told The Mail on Sunday's You magazine in 2016: 'I think the first time I was really aware that we were rich was in my early teens.


'We were taking a private jet to Monaco and eating sushi from Nobu and something told me that regular kids didn't do that.'


She said she planned to launch a brand of caviar 'because there's, like, a real demand, you know?'. 


Stephanie was handed a 12-month community order requiring her to carry out 160 hours of unpaid work. 


A hearing to recover her criminal profits will be heard at the court at a date to be fixed.




Scolaro's sister Lana starred in the Channel 4 reality TV show Rich Kids Of Instagram (pictured) after flaunting their jet-set lifestyles on social media


Scolaro's sister Lana starred in the Channel 4 reality TV show Rich Kids Of Instagram (pictured) after flaunting their jet-set lifestyles on social media



Scolaro's sister Lana starred in the Channel 4 reality TV show Rich Kids Of Instagram (pictured) after flaunting their jet-set lifestyles on social media



After the case, Detective Constable Sarah Bailey, from the Metropolitan Police's Wildlife Crime Unit, said: 'Pythons are one of many species protected under Cites, an international treaty to protect endangered plants and animals (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species).


'Any trade outside of the legal framework could threaten the conservation status of the remaining wild population and contribute to its decline in the wild.


'We will continue to enforce the regulations in place and work to protect these species when offences are discovered.


'This is a fine example of multiple agencies, comprising the Met, UK Border Force, Animal and Plant Health Agency and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee working together toward a common goal.'


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https://hienalouca.com/2019/01/21/judge-blasts-utterly-self-centred-rich-kid-of-instagram-heiress/
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Stephanie Scolaro, 26, arrives at Southwark Crown Court in London last month

An ‘utterly self-centred’ heiress was today ordered to do community service after smuggling baseball caps and a bag made of endangered python skin into Britain before selling them.
Stephanie Scolaro, ...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves US News HienaLouca





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