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Five men who streamed Premier League football games through £10-a-month subscriptions are JAILED

FIVE fraudsters who charged football fans £10-a-month for an illegal Premier League streaming service have been jailed.

Flawless TV raked in £7.2million from over 50,000 subscribers, offering matches not available on UK TV.

Ring leader Mark Gould – who netted a staggering £1.7 million from the operation – was discovered among piles of Doritos packets when arrested


Up to 30 set-top boxes running streams were found at Gould’s South London address

Flawless TV intercepted football feeds from abroad and delivered them to paying subscribers

It undercut the likes of Sky Sports by bypassing a Uefa-imposed “blackout” that stops the broadcast of most 3pm kick-offs on Saturdays, which encourages fans to go to games.

Feeds were intercepted from broadcasters in Australia, the UK, US, Canada and Qatar and delivered a few seconds later to subscribers.

The crooked service – which also offered film and tv – ran between 2016 and 2021 and even had its own streaming app.

Flawless went to great lengths to avoid detection, even developing software to blur a unique code Sky adds to stop illegal streamers.

When Premier League investigators raided the homes Flawless’s masterminds, they seized computer equipment and documents detailing the operation.

The group’s “prime mover” Mark Gould netted a staggering £1.7 million from the operation.

He was found in pyjamas surrounded by piles of Doritos packets and Domino’s pizza dips when he was cuffed at his riverside flat in Greenwich, South London.

Doug Love, a Trading-standards investigator who led the raid, said up to 30 set-top boxes running streams were found at the address.

At Derby Crown Court, Gould, 36, was sentenced to 11 years in prison following a rare private prosecution by the Premier League.

Four other gang members were sentenced to between three and more than five years.

One of them, Christopher Felvus, 36, was also found guilty of voyeurism and possessing indecent images of children.

The Intellectual Property Office estimates nearly four million people in the UK used an illegal source to watch live sport last year.