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South London News (SLN) > Local South London News > Bromley News > Rogue Roofers Jailed Over Chimney Scam, Kent 2026
Bromley News

Rogue Roofers Jailed Over Chimney Scam, Kent 2026

News Desk
Last updated: May 13, 2026 10:31 am
News Desk
1 hour ago
Newsroom Staff -
@slnewsofficial
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Rogue Roofers Jailed Over Chimney Scam, Kent 2026
Credit: Photospirit/kent.police.uk

Key Points

  • Two men from South East London, Nelson Cooper and Scott Smith, were jailed after a Kent Police investigation found they carried out a roofing and chimney repair scam that targeted elderly homeowners across Kent.
  • Victims in Dover, Canterbury, Ramsgate and Swanley were given low initial quotes and then charged inflated prices for unnecessary or entirely fabricated repairs.
  • The investigation concluded the repairs recommended by Cooper’s company (for which Smith worked) were fraudulent; overall losses reported in related coverage exceeded six figures in some accounts.
  • Court evidence and witness statements described instances of high-pressure doorstep selling and dramatic price increases after work had begun, including one elderly victim charged tens of thousands of pounds.
  • Kent Police and partner agencies have issued public warnings about rogue traders and provided advice to homeowners about avoiding doorstep scams and checking credentials.

Kent Police (South London News) May 13, 2026 — Two men from South East London, identified as Nelson Cooper and Scott Smith of Orpington, Bromley, have been jailed after a criminal investigation found they conspired to defraud elderly homeowners across Kent by charging for unnecessary chimney and roof repairs, the force confirmed. As reported by Kent Police, the defendants operated in towns including Dover, Canterbury, Ramsgate and Swanley, persuading vulnerable residents that urgent structural work was required before dramatically inflating the costs.

Contents
  • Key Points
  • What did victims say they were told and charged?
  • How did the fraud operate and what did the police investigation find?
  • What were the legal outcomes and sentences?
  • What advice have authorities given to homeowners after the convictions?
  • How did investigators and reporters verify victims’ losses and company records?
  • What statements did local media and police make about the emotional impact on victims?
  • Are there related national cases that help explain the scale of the problem?
  • Background of the development
  • Prediction:

What did victims say they were told and charged?

As reported by a Meridian News item referenced on social platforms, one St Albans resident in their 80s was charged £44,000 for roof repairs alleged to be unnecessary, and material collected by local media suggested the total sums extracted by the pair and linked associates exceeded £100,000 across multiple victims.

Witnesses and victim impact statements supplied in court described a pattern of behaviour: an initial small quote or inspection followed by increasingly expensive “findings” once work had begun, leaving older homeowners out of pocket and distressed.

How did the fraud operate and what did the police investigation find?

Kent Police’s investigation established that repairs recommended by Cooper’s company, for which Smith was employed, were entirely fraudulent and that the pair used aggressive doorstep sales techniques and falsified or inflated invoices to obtain large sums from vulnerable customers.

The force said its detectives uncovered evidence of deliberate deception—work was either unnecessary, of poor quality, or not completed to the standards that would justify the sums charged.

What were the legal outcomes and sentences?

As noted in Kent Police publicity and covered by regional broadcasters, both men received custodial sentences following a successful prosecution that relied on witness testimony, financial records and the force’s investigative findings; Kent Police released details of the convictions on May 12, 2026. Media reports summarising the court case emphasised the strong emotional impact on victims, especially older people who were targeted in their own homes.

Police and consumer-protection organisations frequently warn that older people are disproportionately targeted by doorstep traders because they are perceived to be more trusting, to have homeownership (making repair work plausible) and sometimes to hold accessible savings or equity.

In previous similar scams reported nationally, fraudsters used counterfeit business cards and fake invoices or posed as legitimate companies to create the appearance of authenticity and to persuade homeowners to accept urgent work.

National coverage in the past year has shown a rise in door-to-door rogue tradespeople offering immediate repair services and then dramatically increasing costs, with Action Fraud and police forces urging consumers to verify tradespeople, demand written estimates and avoid high-pressure doorstep agreements.

That broader pattern of criminality was reflected in Kent Police’s comments about this case and in the warnings given to homeowners following the convictions.

What advice have authorities given to homeowners after the convictions?

Kent Police and other regional forces reiterate standard safeguards: do not accept unsolicited doorstep offers, ask for identification and business references, obtain multiple written quotes, check a company’s registration and online reviews, and never agree to significant work or hand over large sums without time to obtain independent advice.

Organisations such as Action Fraud also advise contacting local trading standards if a suspect trader calls at a home and to report any suspected fraud promptly.

How did investigators and reporters verify victims’ losses and company records?

Court documents and investigative statements used by prosecutors typically include invoices, bank records showing payments, photographic evidence of the work carried out (or lack of necessary repairs), and testimony from victims and any credible independent assessors.

Kent Police stated that their probe into Cooper’s company established the recommended repairs “were entirely fraudulent,” a determination supported by the accumulation of documentary and testimonial evidence presented at trial.

What statements did local media and police make about the emotional impact on victims?

Coverage summarised on social media posts shared by broadcasters and by Kent Police noted the toll on elderly victims, who reported feeling intimidated and “trapped” by the traders’ tactics; some described being left fearful about their homes or isolated because of financial loss. Media reporting emphasised the vulnerability of older residents and the need for communities to look out for neighbours who might be targeted.

Kent Police said that pursuing those who exploit the elderly and vulnerable is a priority and encouraged members of the public to pass on information about suspicious doorstep activity to local policing teams; national agencies continue to run awareness campaigns and coordinate investigations with trading standards and the Crown Prosecution Service when necessary. In the wake of convictions, police often publish case details to raise awareness and deter copycat activity.


The two men were named publicly by police as Nelson Cooper and Scott Smith and are reported to be from Orpington in the London Borough of Bromley; court reporting linked both defendants to the company through which the fraudulent work was offered. The investigation covered incidents across several Kent towns—Dover, Canterbury, Ramsgate and Swanley—suggesting a pattern of targeted visits rather than isolated incidents.

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Are there related national cases that help explain the scale of the problem?

National prosecutions in recent years have highlighted large-scale construction-related frauds and demonstrated how organised groups can prey on public funds and homeowners; separate cases prosecuted by the Crown Prosecution Service have involved tens of millions of pounds where construction-industry insiders abused their positions.

Those larger cases provide context for why police and prosecutors treat fraudulent traders seriously and why co-ordinated investigations with trading standards are common.
Victims should contact their local police non-emergency line to report the incident, preserve any paperwork or communications from the trader, seek independent assessments of any work completed, contact trading standards for advice about recourse, and alert family or neighbours so others are not targeted.

Background of the development

Doorstep tradesperson scams have been a recurrent problem across the UK for many years, typically involving cold-call visits by individuals claiming urgent problems with roofs, chimneys, driveways or gutters. These scams exploit common homeowner anxieties about structural damage, use high-pressure sales techniques, sometimes produce low-quality or no work, and then demand substantially more money than originally quoted; older homeowners are repeatedly identified as higher-risk victims. Law-enforcement responses have included public-awareness campaigns, partnerships with trading standards, and targeted investigations that use financial and photographic evidence to prove the work was unnecessary or substandard.

Prediction:

This successful prosecution and custodial sentences for Cooper and Smith are likely to produce several short- and medium-term effects for the particular audience of homeowners, especially elderly residents. First, the convictions and publicity should raise local awareness and temporarily deter some opportunistic rogue traders operating by cold-call—raising vigilance among older residents and their families. Second, however, the market effect may be limited: experienced or organised scammers often adapt their methods (using different trading names, more sophisticated fake documentation, or relocating), which means ongoing vigilance and repeated public education will be necessary to reduce risk long-term. 

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