Pair who made millions from reselling concert tickets are jailed Peter Hunter and David Smith bought tickets at a face value of around £4m and sold them for £10.8m, their trial heard.

Image: The touts tried to get £7,000 for a £75 ticket to one of Ed Sheeran's charity shows

Two ticket touts who made millions of pounds from reselling pop concert seats at inflated prices have been jailed for a total of six-and-a-half years.

The touts were convicted in a landmark trial with the help of singer Ed Sheeran and his manager after they discovered a £75 ticket for one of his charity shows was on sale for £7,000.

Peter Hunter and David Smith, a married couple, used computer software and multiple identities, to scoop up sought-after tickets at face value as soon they were officially offered online.

Hunter was sentenced to four years behind bars, while Smith received a two-and-a-half-year jail term.

The pair's use of technology meant that, unlike individual ticket buyers, they didn't have to continually refresh their online applications during an initial selling frenzy - the computer software did it for them at great speed.


The pair were convicted of fraud after breaching restrictions that banned resales and limited the number of tickets available to individual fans. They bought 1,000 Ed Sheeran tickets from official, primary ticket websites and sold them at higher prices through secondary sites.

Image: Ed Sheeran's manager Stuart Camp gave evidence at the trial in Leeds

Sheeran's manager Stuart Camp, who gave evidence for the prosecution, told Sky News: "We had always been aware of the resale market, but £7,000 was ridiculous. That was the turning point for me.

"I don't think anyone actually bought that ticket, but it's that sort of criminality and greed we were facing, a mass harvesting of tickets. It was the Teenage Cancer Trust show at the Royal Albert Hall and we did it for free.

"We want the money to go to the right people and if someone wanted to pay £7,000 and give it to the charity then I'm delighted, but you know that wasn't the case. I don't think there was any noble intention."

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To combat touts, Mr Camp restricted Sheeran world tour tickets to four per customer on primary websites and capped genuine resale prices through a trusted secondary site. He voided tickets resold elsewhere.

It caused some problems for Hunter and Smith, but they were cashing in with other artists. By buying hundreds of tickets they reduced the number available to genuine fans and, in doing so, drove up demand and prices.

They bought and resold tickets for Coldplay, Cliff Richard, Taylor Swift, Queen, Little Mix, Depeche Mode and others.

They bought nearly 500 tickets when the hugely-popular Harry Potter And The Cursed Child play opened in London's West End. Other shows they targeted included the Last Night Of The Proms and the Edinburgh Military Tattoo.

Image: Concerts by girl band Little Mix were also among those targeted

Hunter, 51, and Smith, 66, ran what they insisted was a legitimate business from their north London terraced home. They boasted thousands of positive reviews as a trusted source of tickets.

They bought tickets at a face value of around £4m and sold them for £10.8m, a jury was told during a three-month trial at Leeds Crown Court.

They bought them from official websites Ticketmaster, See Tickets and AXS. Then they sold them on secondary sites Viagogo, StubHub, Getmein! and Seatwave.

The case was the first prosecution of its kind brought since National Trading Standards eCrime team began investigating internet ticket resales.

Dr Stephen Davies, of the Institute of Economic Affairs free-market think-tank, said the men's use of deception to buy hundreds of tickets was rightly judged illegal. But, otherwise, he argued that ticket touts perform a vital economic function.

He said: "They are brokers essentially, middlemen, and they have been around for hundreds of years. What they do is to ensure the goods in question, in this case tickets, end up in the hands of the people who want them most and are prepared to pay the highest price for them.

"This is in economic terms a market efficient outcome. Nobody is actually forced with a proverbial or metaphorical gun to their head to pay £7,000 for an Ed Sheeran ticket."

Stuart Camp said: "It's purely about mark up and lining their back pockets, it's not providing a service, it's just hindering a decent service being made to the consumer.

"It's always remiss to wish anyone to have their liberty taken away, but I think a sign needs to be sent out to people that this was a criminal act, not just a slap on the wrist, and I'd be happy if there was a custodial sentence."