Why Shady American Candy Stores are Taking Over the UK

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
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    As these expensive, often deserted stores keep appearing all over Central London, a place with some of the highest commercial rents in the world, Byline TV investigates the murky world of the American Candy Store
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @petyrkowalski9887
    @petyrkowalski9887 Před 2 lety +2110

    I live in London and its not just these candy stores, there are lots of restaurants with almost no customers that stay open with no obvious means of support…it is almost certainly money laundering. I am amazed that the local council allow these stores.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 2 lety

      The UK is really really run down.

    • @LambsyLamb
      @LambsyLamb Před 2 lety +64

      How can they launder money? The rent on those buildings must be astronomical and they NEVER sell anything!

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 2 lety

      @@LambsyLamb I don't know how that works, but it's well known for funding Afghanistan terror units. Same as the drugs in Birmingham.

    • @charlottefactteller2519
      @charlottefactteller2519 Před 2 lety

      More than money launder they are trafficking persons too !

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 2 lety +200

      @@charlottefactteller2519 Money laundering is all over the world.
      But the thing is, in London it is totally in the open. Even people on the streets know what happens there with these businesses. It seems the government and the police gave up with the UK.

  • @LCOF
    @LCOF Před 2 lety +1245

    These candy shop guys should go into banking, that's where the real money laundering goes on. I laughed out loud when the guy in the audio said £5 million has been lost that could have gone to the entire nation. Jeez, that's incomparable to the tax free billions that are squirreled away by friends of the government.

    • @molybdomancer195
      @molybdomancer195 Před 2 lety +20

      any tax revenue withheld should be investigated

    • @GreenLarsen
      @GreenLarsen Před 2 lety +66

      @@molybdomancer195 I agree, but I also believe we need to focus on the big fish first and foremost

    • @Spuddowww
      @Spuddowww Před 2 lety +51

      @@GreenLarsen Well given that it's the big fish who are investigating it, I don't think there is much chance of that.

    • @tonivaripati5951
      @tonivaripati5951 Před 2 lety +3

      Your right there,

    • @phoenixzappa7366
      @phoenixzappa7366 Před 2 lety +6

      And we bail the criminal enterprises out

  • @IMelkor42
    @IMelkor42 Před 2 lety +762

    American tourist: "They appear to be full of American candy"
    Blimey, I'm glad they managed to catch that guy for his input on the situation...

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Před 2 lety +51

      He did edit in additional commentary from him a bit later. I mean, the guy is walking down the street, gets ambushed by a reporter, asked some inane questions, and then they edit in a few seconds. Yet the tourist is the idiot here?

    • @jtxo9305
      @jtxo9305 Před 2 lety +9

      Really some hard hitting “journalism” 😆

    • @dkhosh7380
      @dkhosh7380 Před 2 lety

      for real what feedback would you even expect?

    • @dkhosh7380
      @dkhosh7380 Před 2 lety +7

      @@gravityissues5210 i didn't take it as the tourist was the idiot, i mean what other valuable insight would they expect upon asking a random American tourist about a store filled with American candy?

    • @SICresinwrks
      @SICresinwrks Před 2 lety +1

      🤣🤣 agreed

  • @KINNOHA
    @KINNOHA Před 2 lety +188

    Going into the city centre is not an exciting experience when you’re met with 500 candy stores and a Primark, it’s definitely ruining areas like Oxford Street

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Před 2 lety +3

      Almost doesn't matter. It seems like since the "pandemic" because of supply chain shortages everything being made as far as clothes is basic stuff. As in no fancy material being used and that sort of thing.

    • @uncontrollable343
      @uncontrollable343 Před 2 lety

      Bond Street?

    • @marleyite
      @marleyite Před 2 lety +1

      Oxford St was ruined many years ago to be fair.

  • @baldobaz1
    @baldobaz1 Před 2 lety +359

    These shops are all over every major city centre in the UK. Absolutely 100% criminally funded.

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz Před 2 lety +2

      But do they pay tax???

    • @Moshimulations
      @Moshimulations Před 2 lety +14

      @@mogznwaz They don't.

    • @justjacqueline2004
      @justjacqueline2004 Před 2 lety +1

      Guess where their accountants are?

    • @missmuffet3874
      @missmuffet3874 Před 2 lety +3

      @@justjacqueline2004 where?

    • @uncontrollable343
      @uncontrollable343 Před 2 lety +46

      @@Moshimulations Of course they pay tax lol. That’s the whole point of a business front/Laundromat. To pay tax on criminally acquired money so they can buy legal assets. False receipts and invoices for sales that never happen etc. the dirty cash goes through the till and into the bank.

  • @johnshields3658
    @johnshields3658 Před 2 lety +180

    Love how it's the youngest interviewees who are the most observant

    • @lisahanleychannel
      @lisahanleychannel Před 2 lety +25

      You've just summed up the overall problem with the British media

    • @gibfear
      @gibfear Před 2 lety

      It's probably because they aren't jaded and tired enough to realise it's a waste of time questioning anything certain "minorities" get up to. No one in authority is willing stick their head above the parapet knowing they will be made an example of...

    • @phosoa8965
      @phosoa8965 Před 2 lety

      young people are not stupid
      just raised around bullshit

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Před 2 lety

      ​@@capturedflame The problem with Britian is self hating Brits, like yourself.

  • @MarieFlanigan
    @MarieFlanigan Před 2 lety +30

    American here. Just got back from London. Despite being called American candy stores, my friend and I didn’t recognize many of the brands and those places felt so sketch. We talked about how they seemed like fronts.

  • @unknown.135
    @unknown.135 Před 2 lety +221

    In Düsseldorf, Germany, there are several stores like these. I smh thought the same: Nobody wants to buy sweets for 17€, everything is far too expensive. It's obv a fake business. Interesting video, thanks.

    • @2darki
      @2darki Před 2 lety +6

      Omg I was just about to comment that!
      They sell Cheetos for like 11€

    • @JimMedcraft
      @JimMedcraft Před 2 lety +3

      Same in Sydney, Australia

    • @jacob476
      @jacob476 Před 2 lety

      That's just real prices in canada

    • @pigstrotters4198
      @pigstrotters4198 Před 2 lety

      @unknown In Cologne as well...mostly Chinese. The streets in the High Str. have been taken over by shit-selling Chinese shops.

    • @MichaelCholowicz
      @MichaelCholowicz Před 2 lety +2

      I mean.. I was a frequent customer at 2 or 3 stores like these in Poland. Very expensive from import costs. I missed certain junk food that just wasn't available. Mainly mac n cheese and jelly beats. But could easily spend 100 euros on just junk food from 1 visit. Im sure there's a lot of american expats going for these candy stores

  • @RobSteward1983
    @RobSteward1983 Před 2 lety +122

    Supporting money laundering underpins our economy. How can we tell these shops to stop when the city is washing the blood from billions around the world using the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, and so on. This is a symptom of deeper problems in our country, not a cause.

    • @jol0973
      @jol0973 Před 2 lety +3

      Spot on!

    • @stevehill4615
      @stevehill4615 Před 2 lety +1

      The other problem is if you removed these shops what would you have in their place (boarded up, charity shops)?

    • @jimmyjung9510
      @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety +3

      @@stevehill4615 No, rents would continue to fall until they were affordable, or they would be converted into residential units (there is a massive scarcity of residential property in London now). Just as online retail posed a huge threat to commercial landlords, conveniently these money laundering operations have come into to fill the void and pump rents back up.

  • @drumrboynoid
    @drumrboynoid Před 2 lety +64

    It goes even deeper than the obvious money laundering and tax evasion. The building owners and landlords, which are most likely involved in the organized crimes themselves, benefit from having their spaces occupied by businesses like this. They let a renter come in and pay a super low rent, and sign non disclosure agreements that say they cant disclose the rent cost. The building owner says that the value of each space is some outrageous over valued amount, and gets tax right offs for losses from the spaces that dont rent. They can make more money from the tax right offs than they can from renting them out. This is obviously not right, but certainly no different than our governments have done for years.

  • @JJ-iu1tj
    @JJ-iu1tj Před 2 lety +159

    I was just talking to my mates about this for ages. Every time I go to central I see all of these store right next to each other completely empty and once when I went in, the prices are so expensive its insane. Has to be some sort of cover up for either money laundering or drug related.

    • @ywarjanpalod9400
      @ywarjanpalod9400 Před 2 lety

      They sell heroine an legal high even magic machroms

    • @MattyEngland
      @MattyEngland Před 2 lety +6

      As said, Heroin money

    • @jimmyjung9510
      @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety +4

      @@asgdhgsfhrfgfd1170 A lot of that real estate is part of the Crown Estate's portfolio. It's rarely put on the market so I suspect it's just that the rents, although high, are miniscule compared to the profits they are making. You could put 10,000 pounds in the till in one day and have paid the rent for a month. The merchandise just gets reused, so there is no restocking. You could be right in some cases though.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Před 2 lety +1

      Big brother UK government sure seems incompetent. But they'll come to your house and arrest you over a mean tweet or no covid mask. What a joke.

    • @Btt8
      @Btt8 Před rokem +2

      @@jimmyjung9510 I don’t think you’re aware of how much rents are for prime Oxford street retail space. Upwards of 60k a month.

  • @spumemonk11
    @spumemonk11 Před 2 lety +30

    I have a friend of Pakistani heritage. We recently walked the high St in our town, nearly every other shop we passed he commented on how he knew the owners and how they made their money. The vast majority make their money from importing Herion. He also has a brother who's a bank manger and a cousin who's a solicitor. They have weekly meetings at his house to discuss the latest ways to defraud the system. He took pride in telling me all this.

    • @ajaysanjay7389
      @ajaysanjay7389 Před 2 lety

      Your mate sounds like a typical bullshit talker tbh

    • @crabapples1995
      @crabapples1995 Před rokem +9

      Yep. It’s basically a free for all and the vast majority of British people are too naive to understand the exploitation.

    • @Bethfair
      @Bethfair Před rokem +3

      @@crabapples1995and the council's dont care because they are getting rent

    • @DafyddBrooks
      @DafyddBrooks Před 11 měsíci +1

      What have you done to make sure authorities know?

    • @spumemonk11
      @spumemonk11 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@DafyddBrooks Nothing at all. Why because sadly they don't want to know. The local Police seem to be intimidated by the accusation of racism and also the local council is predominantly run by people who come the country as my friend. Either way you can't win.

  • @fidget2020
    @fidget2020 Před 2 lety +247

    If they are laundering money, we should not be surprised, it is after all a time-honoured British tradition and the reason that off-shore havens were established in many UK territories and flourish to this day.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Před 2 lety

      Dave, money laundering is a British institution par excellence. Now you probably do not know many small islands/nations were created after the centuries long holocaust that black people endured ( slavery ) specifically to transfer and conceal cash. I have no idea why you are one bit surprised.

    • @fidget2020
      @fidget2020 Před 2 lety

      @@PHlophe Dave Mitchell, 2 days ago " we should not be surprised,..".
      I'm surprised you couldn't read that...

    • @laurencefox5884
      @laurencefox5884 Před 2 lety

      The UK is itself a tax haven and money laundering centre. Most has come through the London Property market. They are just branching out with more criminality from lower down the food chain. Meanwhile someone is getting paid to continue to turn a blind eye.

    • @brownwarrior6867
      @brownwarrior6867 Před 2 lety

      Suprised no ,pissed off yes.

    • @johnwickr678
      @johnwickr678 Před 2 lety +1

      Well said pal.its the british way to launder money and evade taxes lol.

  • @TechBaffle
    @TechBaffle Před 2 lety +440

    There was a shop near me that had unbelievably expensive American candy and food. I went there twice, astonished at the prices, and lack of customers for such a prime location. No prices on any products (which is weird for a retail store). Whilst I do like to try out international food, it all seemed a bit sketchy and now the shop is something else.

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper Před 2 lety +127

      I steal from them regularly, they don’t seem to care at all

    • @bugsy742
      @bugsy742 Před 2 lety +33

      @@StoutProper 😅🤣😂🤜🏻🤛🏻

    • @bjtt9841
      @bjtt9841 Před 2 lety +12

      @@StoutProper No wonder you steal from them, @ nearly £20 for a candy bar, is a total rip-off. Yeah these places are all right, yeah if one has money to burn. These Establishments do not surprise me, in the nobody zone as CM calls it, in a song called "Missing You" Laters Guinnes. The best pint of Guinness I've ever tasted, is in Dublin. :-) :-)

    • @StoutProper
      @StoutProper Před 2 lety +16

      @@bjtt9841 yeah the Guineas in Ireland is different gravy. I don’t think they care if you steal from them, they’re definitely not there to sell the sweets, you can literally walk in help yourself and just walk out. They probably ring it through as a sale and wash the cash

    • @bjtt9841
      @bjtt9841 Před 2 lety +4

      @@StoutProper You are damn tooting Guinness, it's certainly a money laundering set up. & Yeah, the pints of Guinness in Ireland, are different class. One needs a calculator to keep tabs, on how many pints one has consumed, superb, & loads of Iron as well, yum-yum. Anyway Guinness, I bid you pleasant times ahead, & enjoy, & good luck, sincerely, BJTT. :-) :-)

  • @MartialLiam
    @MartialLiam Před 2 lety +126

    I'm glad someone made a video about this, good stuff!

  • @oliverv305
    @oliverv305 Před 2 lety +86

    I work in the area and I've been thinking this for years. There's definitely something dodgy going on and I'm rather sick of seeing these generic shops popping up everywhere while some genuine useful businesses can no longer afford the ridiculous rents and rates of central London anymore.

    • @LugarLatore
      @LugarLatore Před 2 lety +3

      Is that not the governments fault that these “genuine useful companies” can’t afford to let those properties ?

    • @adventuress904
      @adventuress904 Před 2 lety +1

      You're mad at the wrong people

    • @oliverv305
      @oliverv305 Před 2 lety

      I wouldn't say its the governments fault per say, although they don't help. Of course these kinds of prestigious locations with some of the highest footfall will demand high prices, it's just got to the point that even decent businesses struggle to pay all their overheads and make some profit, then we have these junk sweet shops that look colourful but don't really add much to the area. I don't get it 🤷‍♂️ but oh well

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety +1

      If they're paying the rent who cares? This is just capitalism all money is dirty do people even know how the UK became rich in the first place? This is such a non issue it's ridiculous

    • @skyworm8006
      @skyworm8006 Před 2 lety

      ​@@jacksevert3099 yeah bro corruption and illegal shit is fine why are you complaining about what goes on in your society.
      you're either braindead or a shill

  • @dab88
    @dab88 Před 2 lety +468

    when the countrys leadership constantly escapes accountability, you can really only expect it's populace to act the same

    • @drstkova
      @drstkova Před 2 lety +3

      *its

    • @GaaGaaGaaGaaGaaGaa2
      @GaaGaaGaaGaaGaaGaa2 Před 2 lety

      No no no, "rules for thee - not for me". If you're not born into their circles, you can get f***ed.

    • @KosmicCharley
      @KosmicCharley Před 2 lety +1

      The Del Boy Trotter & Arthur Daley approach.

    • @Security848
      @Security848 Před 2 lety +3

      lets see how labour council deals with it

    • @denisescally7090
      @denisescally7090 Před 2 lety +8

      Except it's not our populace is it?

  • @awesomegamercz
    @awesomegamercz Před 2 lety +163

    Loving the inconsistent pricing of products as well, sounds like they're just making up numbers as they go

    • @billkosses3808
      @billkosses3808 Před 2 lety +12

      Yep. Dodgy as

    • @caio5987
      @caio5987 Před 2 lety +24

      It’s priced high on purpose so they don’t have to provide a legit receipt since no one would buy it

    • @awesomegamercz
      @awesomegamercz Před 2 lety +4

      @@caio5987 It's not just that, the prices vary wildly

    • @I_am_Spartacus
      @I_am_Spartacus Před 2 lety +10

      @@caio5987 Exactly that! The stock isn't for sale, it's there to be written off and claimed back... I bet their sale receipts would not match actual sales... there was a chip shop near my house in North London that only used cash.... and I every time I bought something, it always got put through the till as 1p....

    • @MattOGormanSmith
      @MattOGormanSmith Před 2 lety

      @@I_am_Spartacus That's if they are just avoiding tax. For money laundering, they exaggerate the till receipts and bank the dodgy cash brought in. It might get taxed but it now appears legit.

  • @chriswinslow
    @chriswinslow Před 2 lety +182

    I'm so glad this has been highlighted. The Westend in my view has eroded and decayed into a place of cheap and tacky shops. I visit the Westend maybe once a year now, whereas 10 years ago it was more like a few times per month. In addition to these American Candy shops, there's a massive gift shop selling mainly cheap baseball caps and t-shirts amount other things in Coventry St, not only do I think it lowers the tone of Piccadilly but how on earth do they afford these sky-high rents and business rates? If all they sell is clothing and other cheap items typically found on market stalls in places such as Deptford High Street? It was empty when I visited it back in November 2021 and it still looks empty now while viewing it on google maps (Images taken March 2022). These American Candy shops probably price their items highly, because then when it comes to banking their "profits" it won't look unusual?

    • @marks-0-0
      @marks-0-0 Před 2 lety +12

      This is just more evidence that society and the economy is turning to sh1t.
      I imagine that Oxford street was quite a magical place in the 80's and 90's compared to now.

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety +5

      @@marks-0-0 If they're paying the rent who cares? This is just capitalism all money is dirty do people even know how the UK became rich in the first place? This is such a non issue it's ridiculous

    • @JohnIrwin
      @JohnIrwin Před 2 lety +6

      @@marks-0-0 I wouldn't say magical. But certainly before the internet and apps the only place you could make a big impression with Londoners were on the sides of buses and on Oxford Street. A lot of money went into having the biggest, flashiest store fronts.

    • @jimmyjung9510
      @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety +3

      Heralding lawlessness just because some in the distant past got rich through nefarious means is absurd.

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety

      @@nancyvandermeer4480 "stealing money" how are these shop owners stealing money when they legally renting the space? they are working! they are just laundering the money like British Banks do for the Drug Cartels and Oligarchs. It's the same shit different level don't get mad get glad! London was built on this shit!

  • @yourmom4398
    @yourmom4398 Před 2 lety +104

    American here with a unique story to tell about my experience visiting one of these candy shops on Oxford Street.
    During the summer of 2021 I went in to one of the shops directly across the street from the Marble Arch to buy a vape. First of all, they were selling it at a price that is way more expensive than what I pay back home for the same brand. Second, they were selling vapes that have a higher nicotine percentage that what is legally allowed to be sold in the UK. And to top it all off, the store clerk I spoke to asked if I smoke, I then asked him what exactly he meant.
    He then takes me over to a large office cabinet, opens it up, and inside are three large black plastic bags. He sticks his hand in one of them and pulls out a THC vape cartridge, offers it to me and I couldn't believe my eyes. I was being offered to buy weed in broad daylight on one of the world's busiest shopping streets in a country where weed is illegal. All of a sudden the massive amounts of candy stores I started to notice the rest of my vacation made more sense.

    • @von...
      @von... Před 2 lety +22

      damn so they are pushing boof carts over there too?! goddamn... Please don't smoke those from some rando, my British homies.
      We had a big problem with those over here in the US. You are fr better off smoking the shittiest ditch weed you could find, vs that, like 99% of the time. Unless you know the source/manufacturer, don't even consider smoking a grey/black market cart. ESPECIALLY if they try to show you 'how thick it is' as if that is a measure of quality (i.e. "look how slow the bubble moves when I turn it over", etc).

    • @crymp2057
      @crymp2057 Před 2 lety +15

      One of my flatmates from uni student halls used to buy his weed from an american candy store in Camden... he said that most of them do if you just "ask the right way". Its actually quite a genious way to openly advertise that they sell drugs, almost like a chain.

    • @sirflexall0t56
      @sirflexall0t56 Před 2 lety +9

      @@crymp2057 All of those American stores don't actually sell thc, it's k2 spice which is 20 times worse than actually weed. I had a mate that got hooked on it, really not good stuff. That's the reason why they are able to get away with it, the chemical compound within spice is not thc and therefore is technically legal, despite it being physically addicting. Furthermore, the 50mg found in vape shops in Camden/ American candy shops is not actual nicotine, literally burns your throat. In general, just stay away from anything they sell

    • @04dram04
      @04dram04 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sirflexall0t56 Im seeing Delta 9 everywhere in the U.S. now

    • @jackroutledge352
      @jackroutledge352 Před 2 lety +3

      That's interesting. I suspect though that the guy just had a side hustle selling weed in the shop, when the main purpose of the place is as part of a money laundering operation. I imagine his boss wouldn't be too pleased if he found out.

  • @thoughtfortheday7811
    @thoughtfortheday7811 Před 2 lety +146

    That's a tragedy for Oxford Street, and for the wonderful HMV flagship store to be turned into this dross is terrible.

    • @pogman15
      @pogman15 Před 2 lety +1

      loada dross

    • @theolderigetthewrongbitget4746
      @theolderigetthewrongbitget4746 Před 2 lety +1

      Dumbing down is common place.

    • @zeeone4492
      @zeeone4492 Před 2 lety +1

      Cry me a river

    • @MrPiccolop
      @MrPiccolop Před 2 lety +12

      As much as I like HMV it was a victim to change in technology. Can't really blame anyone for that. 🤣 The problem for HMV is that it didn't innovate or adapt and evolve.

    • @thoughtfortheday7811
      @thoughtfortheday7811 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrPiccolop I agree. It was possible to have great conversations with in-store specialists on music and films,and make new discoveries.

  • @KrisRyanStallard
    @KrisRyanStallard Před 2 lety +36

    I can assure you one of the hallmarks of American candy is how cheap it is. They should be arrested for the insane markup alone. 🤣

  • @michaelg6815
    @michaelg6815 Před 2 lety +33

    You need to investigate all the barber shops that are also opening up within yards of each other in the poorer neighbourhoods in the North as well -it used to be sunbed shops

    • @alwayspooh1588
      @alwayspooh1588 Před 2 lety +1

      Good point; I see these barber shops everywhere now in the Home Counties. They are always staffed by Turkish guys.

  • @AFGuidesHD
    @AFGuidesHD Před 2 lety +59

    They're also likely a front for illegal migration. There's a "London tat" shop in... York, staffed by someone of ME origin who can't speak any English and doesn't know what a 50 pence coin looks like.

    • @RougeDanno
      @RougeDanno Před 2 lety +10

      there are so many in york!!! it's so sad to see our highstreets become this way

    • @landz2228
      @landz2228 Před 2 lety +1

      is london tat a mispelling ?? is york no longer a touristy town, i have good memories of york,

    • @RougeDanno
      @RougeDanno Před 2 lety +5

      @@landz2228 sadly not a mispell, a large portion of highstreets are now I

    • @AFGuidesHD
      @AFGuidesHD Před 2 lety +4

      @@landz2228 No it's not. It's officially titled "The London Shop" or something like that, the exact same "franchise" you see on every street in London.
      Selling nothing but big ben statuettes and London magnets etc.

    • @stevenyoung5210
      @stevenyoung5210 Před 2 lety

      via an investment visa?

  • @roddychristodoulou9111
    @roddychristodoulou9111 Před 2 lety +74

    The reason is this , under UK laws any foreigners bringing money into this country to invest in certain sectors do not need to declare origin of money .
    I will leave the rest to you but here's a clue , London is now the biggest money laundering capital on planet earth .

    • @barbthegreat586
      @barbthegreat586 Před 2 lety +10

      Londongrad or Londonstan or something similar.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Před 2 lety +3

      Roddy, same with greece and Cyprus , money is invested there, the local politics pocket huge commissions and refuse to send auditors to interrogate provenance of the influx of cash.
      The Uk enjoys cash from dictators from across the globe no questions asked. huge interest generated is repurposed in a tax havens. and some of it is to buy arms which are then resold.

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Před 2 lety +8

      You also get a free passport to stay. Bringing 32 of your close relatives.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +2

      Are you sure about this? I am sceptical of your claim.

  • @borusa32
    @borusa32 Před 2 lety +217

    When I was younger I was genuinely excited to go up west and visit HMV and Virgin-it was great to go to Oxford News and buy a rare coconut fruit ice lolly. I was horrified the last time I walked down Oxford Street to find these seedy looking candy stores literally everywhere with no customers. Who knows what is going on .

    • @strictlyyoutube6881
      @strictlyyoutube6881 Před 2 lety +6

      I remember those days.

    • @robtyman4281
      @robtyman4281 Před 2 lety +37

      Oxford Street is massively overrated......in fact it's a disgrace tbh. The entire street needs a total rethink, not just in terms of banning all the diesel belching vehicles, but ridding it of 'tat' aswell.
      It's supposed to be Britain's premier shopping street, but lacks the class and glamour of Regent Street, or the regal splendour of Edinburgh's Princes Street. Oxford Street is just so shabby, has no style, and is trapped in the past quite frankly.
      Now that Westminster has a Labour council, perhaps they will do something to address all the things I mention above.......oh, and be 'cycle friendly' too - something that Conservative controlled Westminster Council were notorious for not being. Just ask the London Cycling Campaign (LCC).

    • @markmeade2937
      @markmeade2937 Před 2 lety +14

      Oxford St is now a sad mess , not the place I remember growing up when going there was a wonderful experience.
      Today it looks run down and has lost its lustre…….

    • @alexprach
      @alexprach Před 2 lety +29

      I'm more sad for Tottenham Court Road than Oxford Street, which used to be the electronics road like Akihabara of Tokyo, nowadays it's just another street in Central London.

    • @ianmclaughlin4043
      @ianmclaughlin4043 Před 2 lety +3

      Went to hmv and virgin in Glasgow in the 80s looked forward tae it every week mad days 🥺🤣💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @SkamGame
    @SkamGame Před 2 lety +12

    London Accountant here, we have turned down a few of these "businesses", their financing is dodgy at best.

    • @jesuschrist5488
      @jesuschrist5488 Před 2 lety +2

      Who are the people behind the stores? How much money are they declaring as profit?

  • @Manthko
    @Manthko Před 2 lety +14

    It all started with Trocadero! How did Westminster allow one of London’s best attractions “SegaWorld” to turn into a souvenir shop which now is another candy store. Same with Virgin Megastore on the corner of Marble Arch and many more. The government is complicit. It’s all about money.

  • @rowdogspeaks5900
    @rowdogspeaks5900 Před 2 lety +46

    Wow. I can’t believe HMV Oxford Street is gone, only to be replaced with this shite!

    • @BanterRanterr
      @BanterRanterr Před 2 lety +2

      😾🥲 it's a real shame 😔

    • @bokhans
      @bokhans Před 2 lety +2

      Even if you don’t care about the company and their products its sad, that’s what intelligent anti war Russians say about McDonalds leaving Russia and selling of almost 1000 restaurants. Big change and not for the better! 😢

  • @stephenmurray2851
    @stephenmurray2851 Před 2 lety +180

    I've been wondering about this for a while. They are everywhere in Glasgow and their sweets are really expensive. They are always empty and in places with high rents. How do they stay open?

    • @HostageK1ll3rHD
      @HostageK1ll3rHD Před 2 lety +23

      Yeah, Sauchiehall Street is really bad for them, open for a while, close down for two weeks, reopen two units down and repeat - I did read something about if your business closes within 18 months you don't need to pay some sort of tax.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 2 lety +4

      @@HostageK1ll3rHD Not aware of that, the liability to tax is not extinguished.

    • @Shahzadkhan-dm3cv
      @Shahzadkhan-dm3cv Před 2 lety +19

      Most of these so called American
      Candy 🍬 shop's are just a front...
      Behind most of them it's pure drug
      Dealing....
      I personally knew someone who
      Had a candy 🍬 shop which was
      Empty most of the time and when
      I asked him he blatenly told me it's
      Just a front!!!

    • @DS-od1kb
      @DS-od1kb Před 2 lety +14

      @@Shahzadkhan-dm3cv Just about every Eastern European food shop in Grimsby sells cheap cigarettes. Some are smuggled in and some are dodgy but when they get raided there are literally hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of them. As soon as one is raided people go to the next one and so it continues.

    • @suzyqualcast6269
      @suzyqualcast6269 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Shahzadkhan-dm3cv what gear are they shifting ¿?

  • @LA-fr7fx
    @LA-fr7fx Před 2 lety +13

    Seems, after the Afghan war and immigration of Afghans into the UK, this practice became mainstream. A look into the lifestyle of an Afghan in the UK does not add up? They run a small shop on a run down street, yet live like kings. I have one on my street, claims to run a small clothes shop, yet family all drive £60k cars, recently spent £300k on a house renovation (builder mentioned the total cost to me) and they always have plenty of spare cash for luxurious holidays - something does not add up?

    • @bunnystrasse
      @bunnystrasse Před 2 lety +1

      Tell us more!

    • @talalmedia
      @talalmedia Před 2 lety

      Lol

    • @user-ec9yu1ep2j
      @user-ec9yu1ep2j Před 2 lety

      Same around here. Afghan takeaway shops and barbers everywhere. One shop got busted for a cannabis grow. That's what the money is coming from - illegal drugs.

    • @yung21king
      @yung21king Před 2 lety

      What don’t add up is why England and America went to there land and raped and pillaged there people and the spike in opium in USA after the war

  • @KarlRock
    @KarlRock Před 2 lety +192

    What a joke. But just look at all the fugitives who’ve laundered money in their home country and fled to live outside of the law in the UK too. Pretty sad state of affairs. Good investigation 👍

    • @billjefferson3092
      @billjefferson3092 Před 2 lety +2

      Not only live but the UK does not care that this is in fact blood money.

    • @VinylUnboxings
      @VinylUnboxings Před 2 lety +1

      Just how prolific do you think this problem is...?

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Před 2 lety +5

      If they're paying the rent who cares? This is just capitalism all money is dirty do people even know how the UK became rich in the first place? This is such a non issue it's ridiculous

    • @sammydemon666
      @sammydemon666 Před 2 lety +5

      @@billjefferson3092 It's waycist to be mean to about the brown people blood money

    • @DS-od1kb
      @DS-od1kb Před 2 lety +6

      People in the UK are more concerned about the bloke across the road claiming disability benefits while loading fishing gear or golf clubs into a car he got on mobility than they were about the Panama papers.

  • @matthewfoley3929
    @matthewfoley3929 Před 2 lety +221

    Its always been fairly easy to see which shops in your area are actually owned by drug dealers or traffickers. Basically any shop that is so quiet that you think, "how the hell are they staying open?!"
    If a small independent shop has low footfall and survives more than a year, its a front.

    • @deputyVH
      @deputyVH Před 2 lety +55

      I would add any business that doesn't accept cards. :/

    • @mm-yt8sf
      @mm-yt8sf Před 2 lety +21

      i had a friend in high school who had a part time job at a music box store. he said no one ever bought anything there and the owner didn't seem bothered when they came to visit the store. didn't mind if he took long lunch breaks either. i remember my friend said he thought it was a front and i didn't know what he meant by that :-)

    • @justjacqueline2004
      @justjacqueline2004 Před 2 lety +2

      Also use expensive lawyers and accountants.Although the real accountants and lawyers are often on low key shopping centres with tiny little name plates .Its really fascinating, obviously the real accountancy goes on here with the big name presented with clear paperwork and a fat fee. problems arise when the big name accountants try to take the client out for lunch!

    • @liverpoololdschool
      @liverpoololdschool Před 2 lety

      Actually not true most shops like tanning salons and beauty parlours do OK it's these whatever the stans that are defrauding the taxman and reclaim non existent vat etc.

    • @hassanamir387
      @hassanamir387 Před 2 lety +7

      Not necessarily, have you sat outside those shops all days and at all times and no exactly what is going on inside? I own a small takeaway, and we mainly do deliveries. If anyone was to glance at the shop from outside they’d think we’re always dead as there’s hardly any customers ever inside (although we actually do get quite a bit of collection customers, enough to survive off even, but they’re spread throughout the day so there’s no que’s ever) but we do a lot of deliveries, we turn over 5 figures a week. But you wouldn’t know just by looking at the shop from outside. Yes it could be the case that people use shops for money laundering, but it’s not always the case. And another thing people confuse money laundering and tax evasion, people who money launder are not trying to evade tax, they’re actually trying to pay tax in order to legitimise their illicit money lol

  • @paulsmith2516
    @paulsmith2516 Před 2 lety +24

    It isn't just London btw, they are everywhere, even in my wee town of Dunfermline. Also, if a company like BOOTS can't afford to maintain their Oxford Street site then clearly, without any shadow of a doubt this is certainly money laundering. Even the one in my small town's High Street shopping centre is 100% empty AT ALL TIMES yet they can afford rent and rates and are open 7 days a week. Nothing more than criminal fronts and I don't understand how they continue to exist. The local authorities and their banks have a legal obligation to report them as money laundering front operations.

    • @LoveProWrestling
      @LoveProWrestling Před 2 lety

      Ah but you have to be able to prove it.

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Před 2 lety +1

      Probably linked to Tory party mate, what illegal shit isn't?

    • @aestheticsbyjasmine940
      @aestheticsbyjasmine940 Před 2 lety

      same in liverpool. example we had a large H&M store on church street which relocated further up the street and now it’s a american candy shop it’s always empty how the hell can they afford the rent on this prime location on church street 🤣

  • @Springsteen002
    @Springsteen002 Před 2 lety +194

    Mrs Sonia is legit and her method works like magic I keep on earning every single week with her new strategy

  • @Freeman-bt9od
    @Freeman-bt9od Před 2 lety +7

    Honestly you can say the same about any high street store now. All I see is nail salons, vape stores, Turkish barbers, candy stores and mobile phone repair stores.

    • @georgecarr9844
      @georgecarr9844 Před 2 měsíci

      With absolutely nobody in them and not one English worker makes zero sense

  • @Ian_Carolan
    @Ian_Carolan Před 2 lety +57

    Great content as always.

  • @evakatz6351
    @evakatz6351 Před 2 lety +30

    I ALWAYS wondered how all the shops up the Tottenham Ct Rd end of Oxford St made any money, when they had huge rents, but were largely empty.

    • @Laser2120
      @Laser2120 Před 2 lety +1

      Some of them fancy shops you see with like one shoe on display in the window and not really selling much is normally owned by a wife of a rich business man to give her something to do.

  • @jimmyjung9510
    @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety +17

    This must be great for major landlords whose rents had been taking a hit due to the rise of online retail. I wouldn't be surprised if powerful people are turning a blind eye and/or are reluctant to make this illegal in order to prop up commercial rents and defend landlordism, in which many of the most powerful people and institutions in the country (private equity funds, politicians, royalty etc.) are invested heavily.

    • @laureng2110
      @laureng2110 Před rokem

      Money laundering is already illegal.

  • @aniquinstark4347
    @aniquinstark4347 Před 2 lety +5

    The fact that every single product is full stocked should be an immediate red flag

  • @ssj1260
    @ssj1260 Před 2 lety +18

    Great video, I think the reporter for this is the poshest chap I have ever witnessed in my life.

    • @geneytube18
      @geneytube18 Před 2 lety +1

      That's what turns me off , Byline.

  • @alexritchie4586
    @alexritchie4586 Před 2 lety +173

    I think this is certainly true for phone accessory shops, and increasingly in my city (Exeter) Turkish barbers. We now have whole streets that are composed entirely of the two. There's no way there's enough demand to satiate to overabundant supply, and there appears to be precious little (if any) business going on in any of them.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +1

      It won't surprise you to hear that it is most likely for fencing stolen mobile phones and drug trafficking.

    • @Dazreil
      @Dazreil Před 2 lety +7

      Small shops don’t need to pay business rates and barbers don’t need to hold stock. You have three chairs but only one in use.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Dazreil - very small shops in poor areas maybe, but it's a small number.

    • @theolderigetthewrongbitget4746
      @theolderigetthewrongbitget4746 Před 2 lety +34

      With the amount of 'Turkish' barbers in the UK I wonder how the Turks at home get a haircut.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 2 lety +1

      @@theolderigetthewrongbitget4746 Its a style and method of cutting etc

  • @JALC-x
    @JALC-x Před 2 lety +22

    I live in Luton, and the shopping centre here has become very suspicious. Costa coffee moved out and was replaced with a shop called "coffee shop". Debenhams moved out and has been replaced with "home store" etc etc. theres even a shop that sells *sweetcorn in a fucking cup* and they called it "yummy cup corn"🤦‍♂️ These places never have anyone in them, they sell things you'd expect to find at a car boot sale, makes you wonder what the motive is

    • @ALPINA527
      @ALPINA527 Před 2 lety

      Laundered drug and people trafficking money.

    • @Joseph-os6nl
      @Joseph-os6nl Před 2 lety +1

      i love the sweetcorn place

    • @JALC-x
      @JALC-x Před 2 lety

      @@Joseph-os6nl they must've used jedi mind tricks

  • @kimberleyroles946
    @kimberleyroles946 Před 2 lety +5

    "I feel like most of the things in there have even expired" lol

  • @heliotropezzz333
    @heliotropezzz333 Před 2 lety +101

    Private Eye Magaizine has been covering this issue for some time, and it also highlighted some foreign owned souvenir shops that were avoiding paying tax and HMRC seemed uninterested when informed.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 2 lety +4

      Always get my Souveniers from Shepherds Bush Market, cheaper and the stalls are run by locals

    • @magnuscritikaleak5045
      @magnuscritikaleak5045 Před 2 lety

      HMRC is owned by the NSA & GCHQ US national Security

  • @IslandGirlKelly
    @IslandGirlKelly Před 2 lety +53

    I so welcome this video as it validates what I have been thinking every single time that I walk by one that is in Greenwich. They charge exhorbinate prices so no one buys anything. They are always fully stocked, mind you, so they look legitimate.

    • @rachaelgraceblack
      @rachaelgraceblack Před 2 lety +9

      I know where you mean. There are a couple now and they’re hideous, not least because they’re tacky looking places but mostly because they’re clearly a front for nefarious business.

    • @IslandGirlKelly
      @IslandGirlKelly Před 2 lety +1

      @@rachaelgraceblack So very true Rachael, and at least we now know that our suspicions were spot on.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +6

      It's the same stock they've had since day 1. But the accounts will show large purchances of new stock and large customer purchases of candy (always in cash).

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz Před 2 lety +5

      Stupid thing is they could run those businesses properly and make money legitimately

    • @C4sp3r123
      @C4sp3r123 Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@mogznwaz yes but that would take a lot of effort for a relatively small return. This way is much easier and very profitable and almost zero effort as no customers or stocks to restock.

  • @atomsk1972
    @atomsk1972 Před 2 lety +5

    In Australia there are nail salons and massage shops in copious amounts - far more than any demand could meet. I have heard of them being used as fronts for paid immigration sponsoring, among other things. The nail salons have dropped off a bit, but at one time they were just like these candy shops.

  • @puirYorick
    @puirYorick Před 2 lety +69

    Whenever you see a shop/store that hasn't enough walk-in traffic to possibly pay the rent for the location yet survives where other more normal businesses fail you can be sure it's connected to some form of money laundering.
    In a suburban plaza of shops there was a tiny Tea Shop with perhaps three small tables and a small counter in the tiniest footprint within the property. The grocery store, the convenience store, the national drug store franchise, several small restaurants, a boutique and so on *all failed* and closed in due turn but the little Tea Shop stayed in place. Once in a while a stretch limousine could be seen parked in front and other times there might be a random dump truck there. Clearly it was the mob landlord of the development which itself was built as some kind of tax dodge investment.
    I described this to a friend at work and he recalled a similar place at another older plaza not far away with another weird small specialty shop with no customers that mysteriously stayed while large franchise clients failed and died away and were replaced with new shops.
    If I could figure out these are syndicate operations surely the local police *could* as well which makes you think they are on the take to look the other way.

    • @robert039
      @robert039 Před 2 lety +1

      That’s what I think when I see watch repair or shoe repair shops in the states

    • @puirYorick
      @puirYorick Před 2 lety +1

      @@robert039 At least those once made sense and squeezed into lower level kiosks in suburban malls. That second shop my buddy mentioned was/is selling over-priced tacky bric-a-brac and NOBODY shops there yet they still exist afaik.

    • @gwynbetts29
      @gwynbetts29 Před 2 lety +1

      ...and mobile phone accessories kiosks, Oriental massage parlours, and nail boutiques.

    • @puirYorick
      @puirYorick Před 2 lety +1

      @@gwynbetts29 In my local suburban mall every kiosk and shop selling mobile/cell phone accessories and services apart from the giant national ones is run by the same guy. I counted at least ten shopfronts and kiosks one day. A staff member at one of the major branded stores clued me in that price shopping among those independents was useless because it was all the same owner with shared staff and resources.
      Ironic then that horse trading was not being done.

  • @peterburnett1661
    @peterburnett1661 Před 2 lety +16

    But the Police have not noticed!

  • @cola9994
    @cola9994 Před 2 lety +25

    there's tonnes of them in Edinburgh now too. I live in a flat above one of them and I never see anyone ever go in there. i was out once and my amazon parcel got dropped in there and the prices were crazy

  • @sileo2
    @sileo2 Před 2 lety +11

    I noticed that a lot of small budget food shops, all forgeign staff close to established convenience stores , they are not busy enough to pay their rates or overheads , this needs to be investigated

  • @txbre8758
    @txbre8758 Před 2 lety +13

    Listen as an American, once you see too many of one store, assume money laundering. It’s the American way lmao

    • @krystelhardesty9960
      @krystelhardesty9960 Před 2 lety +3

      They don't even do it well they open shop right next to each other, if you are going to do something do it well at least. Back in the 60's my grandparents owned a small hot dog restaurant in Chicago and they said at the time if the restaurant looked like it was crap but was around for years it was for money laundering. But you never saw like ten of them on the same freaking street.

  • @REGANELITE
    @REGANELITE Před 2 lety +26

    Always had my suspicions on those shops every time I pass them and there always empty

  • @peterjones6640
    @peterjones6640 Před 2 lety +28

    There is clearly no commercial rationale for these shops, therefore the conclusion must be they have been set up for another reason. A council will never have the resources to pursue the owners ( if they can be found), it should be the matter for a criminal investigation, unlikely to happen though.

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Před 2 lety +3

      A vacant shop in Oxford street would be bad for tourist image, so any shop will do. Lower rate.

  • @n1knak
    @n1knak Před 2 lety +7

    I’m not going to lie, I mourned my innocence when I watched this. I love sweets and use these shops to get imported snacks that are hard to find. I assumed that these shops were legitimate because people pay stupidly high prices if they’re tourists or in London. The numbers don’t add up, I could understand a couple of successful shops, but seriously, the entire high street! Definitely laundering money, do any of these shops have a website!? How the hell can they afford the rent.

  • @michaelwalker1145
    @michaelwalker1145 Před 2 lety +7

    This has been going on for years, The hand car wash game is a prime example.

  • @avaloncbt5898
    @avaloncbt5898 Před 2 lety +32

    I live in Paisley Scotalnd and theres ice cream/ desert shops all over the place, theres at least 6 of these all within a mile and they are always empty. Most established businesses have cleared off leaving just charity shops, takes aways and bookies. It all looks very dodgy.

    • @laurencesmith2199
      @laurencesmith2199 Před 2 lety +4

      Came back tae the toon a few years ago , nearly gret when ah seen the high st , wi the imagine shops . And the only guy in the street for a while was a busker playing the same 4 bars over and over .
      Gled ah wiz exiled noo .

    • @avaloncbt5898
      @avaloncbt5898 Před 2 lety +1

      Aye it's sad to see the state of the town when you consider how busy it used to be. I've walked though Paisley at times and it is deserted.

    • @ianmclaughlin4043
      @ianmclaughlin4043 Před 2 lety +3

      Coatbridge exact same barbers and nail bars always empty 🥺💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @ianmclaughlin4043
      @ianmclaughlin4043 Před 2 lety +1

      @@laurencesmith2199 exiled 😅👍🏻💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @laurencesmith2199
      @laurencesmith2199 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ianmclaughlin4043
      Fur lack o commitment to the swally , ah wiz always a lightweight .
      They flung me o'er Hadrian's wa' , and hauf the toon came , to reassure the other hauf it happened .

  • @Lewis-op9zp
    @Lewis-op9zp Před 2 lety +26

    Really enjoyed this mini investigation!

  • @retrovelcro
    @retrovelcro Před 2 lety +9

    As an American who lived in London, it's a shame to see. But surprising to see how blatant these "store owners" are. It's so obviously odd that people know something is definitely up.

    • @retrovelcro
      @retrovelcro Před 2 lety

      @Steve Sherman You're right. I, myself, am not ashamed. It's an idiom.

  • @michellezevenaar
    @michellezevenaar Před 2 lety +6

    This is extremely frustrating because if we had a shop selling American foods ( not just candy) at a reasonable price it would definitely do really good business in my area. There are soooo many expats here. The expats have had to turn to online source though now.

  • @analogdistortion
    @analogdistortion Před 2 lety +23

    They need A WHOLE TON of people coming up and filming and getting up to all sorts of strange but legal activities around them. Flash mobs might be an idea. Let's do something!

    • @mrglide7078
      @mrglide7078 Před 2 lety +5

      What they need is an HMRC compliance unit to swoop on them

  • @DrOktobermensch
    @DrOktobermensch Před 2 lety +83

    Government would need to legislate to close the loopholes and allow local councils to pursue/close them. But they won't because foreign dirty money winds up in their pockets via the City banks and because that would be too much work that would kill off their own loopholes they use to exploit the economy. An absolute mess.

    • @jimmyjung9510
      @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety

      And the government will never allow anything which threatens demand for commercial property. The most powerful interests in the UK are all invested in both commercial and residential real estate, so rents and asset rises are all but guaranteed. Whenever there is a threat to them, the government takes measures to push them back up again.

  • @JC-br1jb
    @JC-br1jb Před 2 lety +3

    As an American i clicked on this video thinking "man they must really love our candy" just to find a crazy money laundering scheme in the UK lol good watch glad i found it.

  • @2upV2downA
    @2upV2downA Před 2 lety +6

    You should come to Amsterdam as the same thing is happening. So many candy stores are opening up that used to be Nutella crepe and waffle stores. I wouldn’t be surprised to hear this exact thing going on in many other major cities.

    • @jus2cute09
      @jus2cute09 Před 2 lety +1

      I lived in Lisbon and there loads of tourist shops that are expensive, no customers.

  • @bikerslow2598
    @bikerslow2598 Před 2 lety +19

    This is hilarious. The UK has fallen a long way...

    • @makara80
      @makara80 Před 2 lety

      As other comments on here attest these dubious shops are found in numerous other countries…

    • @jimbrown2688
      @jimbrown2688 Před 2 lety

      This is what happens when you open the floodgates to foreigners..
      Criminals the lot of them..
      I'm in a town 25,000 people and we've got four shops like this..
      No one ever in them but it well known they're fronts for drugs, fake tobacco and fake branded alcohol and money laundering..
      Small town and you can't keep secrets especially when no one ever goes in them...
      Shut them all down and kick the bastards out of Britain..

  • @Creteway
    @Creteway Před 2 lety +117

    A very clever, logical, and cost-effective way to survive in a broken economy. The aim of the shops is not to sell goods, they are placeholders that are opened and closed on rotation to avoid paying business rates on an empty property. They keep the shopping street colorful, look busy, and save the owners millions until a viable shop can take up occupation. You cannot bill a business not making money business rates, so regular rotation is critical. Other advantages include keeping the shops clean and functional and not degrading. So nothing suspicious, just survival in the messed-up economy.

    • @DJ-uk5mm
      @DJ-uk5mm Před 2 lety +10

      I agree but It’s the landlord avoiding Business Rates by using this practice in Oxford Street . it’s probably the Duke of Westminster or the Queen or someone similar. I guess people who own empty property elsewhere should copy their strategy as if it’s ok for them it’s ok for everyone

    • @Bea_remembrance
      @Bea_remembrance Před 2 lety +11

      And the high prices of the sweets stops customers buying so the shop makes no money therefore no business rates 😁

    • @cowantom
      @cowantom Před 2 lety +6

      Excuse my naivety but how does it work for the shops themselves? I can see your point that the owners of the property save on business rates, but how does the owners of the shops in the properties make money if they aren't selling much? I can see that sometimes they may be one and the same, but many city/ town centre properties are owned by Councils surely?

    • @analogdistortion
      @analogdistortion Před 2 lety

      Rubbish. They openly admit it is for money laundering. The dealers tell you too

    • @theboogie_monsta
      @theboogie_monsta Před 2 lety +1

      Did you watch the video, or have you read any of the painstaking journalism that has revealed the fraud involved? E.g. King of Sweets opening up numerous businesses with 0 employees in order to claim Covid relief worth millions of pounds.

  • @frusciantesplectrum7980
    @frusciantesplectrum7980 Před 2 lety +5

    There’s a local corner shop in my old area that sells out of date bread and only one pint of milk in the fridge…. The shop is totally bare of items. The owner turns up in a rolls Royce and the authorities don’t seem to investigate…. Clearly a drug front

  • @melissadavis46
    @melissadavis46 Před 2 lety +3

    I wondered the same when I saw all these same candy stores popping up on every block in the center shopping area of Amsterdam. I thought, seriously who needs this much candy?! But now it makes sense.

  • @kbbg00141
    @kbbg00141 Před 2 lety +10

    I’m sure I’ve noticed the same sort of phenomenon in Birmingham but instead of American candy it seems to be deserts and cakes. So many calories but no one’s gaining weight? How can they all be making money?

  • @tonyjones7372
    @tonyjones7372 Před 2 lety +13

    irony is, US candy is not as good as UK's. My kid lives in US, and I have to take a suitcase of chocolate over for him and his mates every time I go.

    • @gerrya4818
      @gerrya4818 Před 2 lety

      im from canada and living in europe for over a decade. European candy and snack food tastes like shit. chocolate is the only exception. i'll gladly pay 5euro for a pack of twizzlers that cost 1$ at home. every canadian/american i know takes empty suitcases when they travel home so they can load them up with candy/snacks to come back with..

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Před 2 lety

      @@gerrya4818 "i'll gladly pay 5euro for a pack of twizzlers that cost 1$ at home" Genuinely made me chuckle. Thanks, wannabe yank.

  • @justinmusicandskateboardin9282

    It's weird that they look like they are trying really hard to lure in customers with all those bright huge colorful signs and candy logos, but they obviously dont want customers when they're trying to price gouge everything by a factor of 5x

  • @ENCXBG1
    @ENCXBG1 Před 2 lety +2

    It could be something far simpler. It could be that the Property managers that own these expensive shopping districts don't want a bunch of vacant shops in the middle of a bad economy so they setup place holder stores to make it look occupied. They stuff it with cheap crap to keep costs down and hire cheap labor to make it look like a business. It's probably more about maintaining high rents for the rest of their occupants, knowing full well that a bunch of vacancies would drive rents down.

    • @jimmyjung9510
      @jimmyjung9510 Před 2 lety

      That would be less palatable than lowering the rents. We are talking about 25% of all the properties on Oxford St being rented out for nothing if your theory held water. Yes, it would make demand look stronger but involve forgoing far too much rental income.

  • @rsp7029
    @rsp7029 Před 2 lety +12

    I have been saying this for the entire time I've been in London. Thanks for digging into it.

  • @drstkova
    @drstkova Před 2 lety +36

    Here in Prague there are dozens of candy stores in the historic centre. They’re not American branded but there are several similar rival chains selling expensive sweets and with photography banned.

    • @kanedNunable
      @kanedNunable Před 2 lety +6

      the weird thing is, the UK is a good country for candy, american candy is terrible.

    • @geneytube18
      @geneytube18 Před 2 lety +6

      @@kanedNunable Yes but not since the Americans bought cadbury.

    • @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order
      @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order Před 2 lety +2

      @@geneytube18 Cadbury has gone down the toilet hasn't it?!! It's very sad. I don't even know where to get good quality milk chocolate any more, perhaps I should just order it directly from Belgium.

    • @justso1823
      @justso1823 Před 2 lety +1

      Sweets by weight scam

    • @anngulliver5964
      @anngulliver5964 Před 2 lety +1

      @@The_New_Abnormal_World_Order I still like Cadbury creme egg. I had my last one left over from Easter as I was watching the UK coming second in the Eurovision Song Contest.

  • @amandah2490
    @amandah2490 Před 2 lety +3

    Where I live we've had a spate of "Turkish" barber shops open in our small local high street and I rarely see any customers in them, certainly no where near the numbers needed to make enough income to stay open.

  • @cavelleardiel
    @cavelleardiel Před 2 lety +4

    It is the same here in Canada. I spoke to one gentleman who has a restaurant and I asked him how all the other similar restaurants stay in business. He said it was because they are immigration scams. He himself was offered to get in on it and he declined. I worry about his business surviving.

    • @jesuschrist5488
      @jesuschrist5488 Před 2 lety

      What type of immigration scam was going on

    • @cavelleardiel
      @cavelleardiel Před 2 lety +1

      @@jesuschrist5488 People would "buy" the business for around $30,000 to get into the country. And then "sell" it to another person and so on.

    • @jesuschrist5488
      @jesuschrist5488 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cavelleardiel ohh so you can get Canadian citizenship via an investors visa?

    • @Starmerispureevil
      @Starmerispureevil Před 8 měsíci

      Our village has a curry take-away for over 20 years that hardly anyone uses. It changes hands every few years and then reopens with a new name and image. Yet people continue to never use it. 100% immigration scam.

  • @cidercik
    @cidercik Před 2 lety +25

    Same thing for these vape shops. One opens and closes rather quickly, only to be replaced by a very similar vape shop. And this is in south west London.

    • @Legend-zo9bc
      @Legend-zo9bc Před 2 lety +6

      As well as being a front (most likely) the business also ''gets sold'' usually within the same family or group and renamed and enjoy a lower tax status as a ''new business'' for another year or so, people having been doing it for years.

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee Před 2 lety

      cidercik ...............they close down as their visa runs out......should never have been shopkeepers in first place as came as tourists......can earn enough in 1 year to support themselves for a lifetime back home......outcome is they bump landlord off with rent,local council with rates and free electricity...also pay zero tax..........theyre not stupid........all supported by local mosque (who is probably initially bringing them here and giving them interest free loans for start-up.........aim is to bankrupt the west as they love (HATE) us so much.

  • @angelikaskoroszyn8495
    @angelikaskoroszyn8495 Před 2 lety +80

    One of the more interesting conspiracy theories I've heard was that Brexit was mostly about UK being able to keep it's tax heaven status since EU has been preparing for some time to cut short those kind of practices
    But hey, that's just a theory

    • @Subjagator
      @Subjagator Před 2 lety +27

      I can't speak for the reasons for Brexit, but you are entirely correct that the EU were planning to bring in more financial regulations to cut down on tax evasion in various forms. Impossible to tell if it was a factor though, but it is interesting timing.

    • @andyhill1268
      @andyhill1268 Před 2 lety +10

      Angelika, watch a documentary called “ The spiders web” Britain’s second empire, it’s about all the money laundering and explains a lot . A question would be re Brexit whom created the EEC or common market? They have turned everything into a private corporation and that includes us.

    • @DanielsPolitics1
      @DanielsPolitics1 Před 2 lety +4

      The EU hasn’t brought in material new controls in evasion or secrecy, while the UK is doing so.

    • @acehighjohn1759
      @acehighjohn1759 Před 2 lety +1

      @@andyhill1268 i second ur recommendation, was a quality vid.

    • @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order
      @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order Před 2 lety +6

      Sorry when you called the UK a tax haven, can you explain what you mean because the UK isn't a tax haven?

  • @jackm3720
    @jackm3720 Před 4 měsíci +1

    They’ve popped up all over Scotland too. Almost always empty. I always wondered why so many appeared out of nowhere.

  • @CanadianTommy
    @CanadianTommy Před 2 lety +3

    There are 2 American candy stores in kingston, only a few meters apart. While their prices are extremely high, they seem to be always full of people. Now the prices are high because of the UK sugar tax on imported sweets. I looked into opening a store like this as I'm from Canada and have connections to buy wholesale in North America, the inly problem is the import fees and sugar tax in the UK is CRAZY HIGH. But the 2 stores in kingston seem to be dpong really well and again they are almost always packed with customers so I doubt they are money laundering.

  • @kojombasi506
    @kojombasi506 Před 2 lety +14

    It’s the same with most of the take away shops. Funny they don’t take card payments… only cash.

    • @johnnypay
      @johnnypay Před 2 lety

      a lot of smaller shops wont take card payments as they have to pay a small transaction fee to mastercard/visa. its why they if they do, they will charge for it or have a minimum spend. the bigger chain stores will eat the cost.

    • @fuckbankers
      @fuckbankers Před 2 lety +2

      We have barber shops popping up everywhere. Cash only. 🤔

    • @kojombasi506
      @kojombasi506 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnnypay I think it’s more to do with tax declarations

  • @Beauweir
    @Beauweir Před 2 lety +5

    This reminds me of crappy newsagents in North Birmingham where I thought they were fronts for drugs.

    • @anngulliver5964
      @anngulliver5964 Před 2 lety

      Are those Scientologists still on the high street? Me and my mum had the displeasure of running into them a few times. They used to be a few of them stopping people on the high street dressed in white and yellow suits and they had a base upstairs from what I think was a restaurant and there was a Christian bookshop on the corner. In Sunderland the Scientologists got into trouble as they were trying to recruit school children on their way to and from school.
      In Birmingham I also saw evidence of another cult called The Family, who used to be called The Children Of God. But these used far subtler tactics such as leaving religious magazines on the bench near where Scientologists were stopping people on the street. Many cults use this 'let's just leave a pile of our religious books or magazines on this bench' tactic including Jehovahs Witnesses and now Scientologists do it in Sunderland.
      A lot of these front shops are linked to religious / psycho or political cults. They are also involved in multi level marketing schemes and financial scams. Scientologists have a few business fronts, and both they and The Jehovahs Witnesses have come under fire for harassment, especially the JW who are now busily selling thousands of Kingdom Halls in order to pay for huge legal cases for claims of child abuse and illegal sophisticated spying in Australia.
      If you ever see those vegan shops be aware that they appear to be linked to new age religious cults and money laundering. These cafés have what's like a library of piles of panthlets and newsletters all preaching 'clean eating', new age healing, far left socialist politics and environmental issues. If you do a Google search on the contact details on this literature you will find that they are all seemed to be linked to the same people and there's a lot of front organisations.

  • @homelander3853
    @homelander3853 Před 2 lety +4

    I always walk around london for my job, and I’ve been noticing these places are almost always empty yet somehow manage to afford the rent. There’s something very fishy going on which I’ve always thought and almost always the owners don’t seem like nice people

  • @crymp2057
    @crymp2057 Před 2 lety +5

    I know that some of them also deal with drugs, one of my flatmates from uni student halls used to go into one to buy weed. He told me that apparrently most of them do, and you can get some if you ask the right way.... thinking about its actually a genious way to deal drugs without requiring some sort introduction or connection of someone who already knows the dealer. You see an american store with overtly 'weed themed' sweets, and you know you can just buy drugs there.

  • @Maerahn
    @Maerahn Před 2 lety +85

    On my last trip up to London I went into one of these stores to get some treats for my son, and i couldn't believe how much they were charging for this stuff! The prices quoted in this video are not exaggerations - they're genuinely charging ridiculous prices like that. I walked out empty-handed - I couldn't afford to spend that much on SWEETS, just because they're American and a novelty.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 2 lety +10

      Even Sainsburys stock some Amercian Lines (more so since Kraft took over Cadbury) And they have high prices. B and M stores have a few lines, and they are much cheaper BUT the Amercian Sugar Content is way high

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee Před 2 lety +12

      Maerahn .........home bargains have most of the same sweets these stores are selling and alot lot cheaper.

    • @KennaDeMerkedo
      @KennaDeMerkedo Před 2 lety +1

      Tesco has some 'murrican candy

    • @syasyaishavingfun
      @syasyaishavingfun Před 2 lety +4

      You just steal them, they don't care.

    • @jaklg7905
      @jaklg7905 Před 2 lety

      So you are saying that Americans should bring some candy over and sell it to the Brits? :)

  • @FateBoost
    @FateBoost Před 2 lety +14

    It’s weird they pick candy stores over laundromats.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +4

      Laundromats have a potential weakness - the amount of water and energy they use should amount to the number of washes and the cash taken and so would also be quite easy to investigate. Also, if you are "buying" large amounts of American candy every month, you have a legitimate reason to pay your overseas suppliers. So clean money gets sent out of the country.

    • @LS-bw7jt
      @LS-bw7jt Před 2 lety

      @@capitalb5889 good point

  • @Neva2high
    @Neva2high Před 2 lety +1

    Basically every single Red rooster in Australia, lucky to see 3 customers at any given time but they're still open.

  • @chipchip69
    @chipchip69 Před 2 lety +4

    The same thing is happening in the USA as well, but the thing is here in certain states they just legalized slot machines in private owned businesses, so now there are a bunch of candy stores popping up all over the place and every store you walk into has these gaming machines in them, it's insane it's like a mini casino in every store that you walk into.

  • @jimjiminyjaroo300
    @jimjiminyjaroo300 Před 2 lety +10

    Who would pay £16 for a box of American sugar “cereal”?!

    • @philliptemple4534
      @philliptemple4534 Před 2 lety +4

      Presumably they buy enough stock for the place to look legit and the storeroom is empty. The high prices are to dissuade anybody from buying.
      Phillip.

    • @patriarch7237
      @patriarch7237 Před 2 lety

      @@philliptemple4534 Also, to cover the fact that the till "receipts" are huge. "Sure we made £50k last week, have you seen how expensive this stuff is?"

  • @GlasgowGallus
    @GlasgowGallus Před 2 lety +15

    Not just London mate, loads in Glasgow too, and I'll assume the rest of Scotland's, and the UK's, major cities. They'll close one, then open on another site. I can't do the math as to how they legitimately make money consistently (I was an Account Manager representing several international FMCG brands, confectionery, foods, ice cream and others, so I'm fairly familiar with this industry and the machinations of it...). I'd LOVE to get a look at their tax returns, till receipts and Companies House documentation... 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @justjacqueline2004
      @justjacqueline2004 Před 2 lety +3

      You would have to go through a big accountancy firm as well as a big solicitor firm to even get close and then you would be at least two or three tiers away from the real accountants and lawyers never mind the owner.

    • @GlasgowGallus
      @GlasgowGallus Před 2 lety +1

      @@justjacqueline2004 Oh you betcha... 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @BillShartner
    @BillShartner Před 2 lety +3

    And just keep letting more of them into your country by the boatload and then have it be some mystery what is happening. Your country is lost.

  • @PoundianAesthete
    @PoundianAesthete Před 2 lety +3

    I went to London in 2019 and one of these stores sold me synthetic pot.

  • @Matt-vp6eq
    @Matt-vp6eq Před 2 lety +7

    I'm gonna start stealing from these stores on my lunchbreak

  • @islandsedition
    @islandsedition Před 2 lety +12

    Why would they be so daft as to just replicate the same type of shop? Why not make them different? One sweet shop, another a stationary, or a fish food shop. Just anything to make it look less suss?

  • @mrkiplingreallywasanexceed8311

    It is absolutely disgusting that Britain is such a hub for never mind dirty money but filthy money. Quite frankly, it is Westminster Council itself, which should be taken to court. It is obviously wholly complicit in arranging these micro leases, not just failing to do due diligence on prospective tenants, but actively encouraging and involving itself in the horrendous corruption. Whilst I say this with no direct evidence, when you look at the several theoretical ways in which this situation could come about, the only practical way it could actually happen is how I outlined above.
    Furthermore, it is only a marginally more subtle manifestation of the same governance which has, til very recently at least, allowed Putin's cronies to make comfortable and secure lives for themselves in London, buying sports clubs, sending their children to the smartest schools and airing their laundry in British courts, far from the fear of the ludicrous sham hearings they would get in their native country - and, for a fee, of course, Britain is more than happy to accommodate them. While The Mikado was written 137 years ago, Gilbert and Sullivan's haughty and hypocritical character, Pooh-Bah, is still very much alive: "first lord of the treasury, lord chief justice, commander-in chief, lord high admiral, master of the buckhounds, groom of the back stairs, archbishop of Titipu, chief rabbi and lord mayor, both acting and elect, all rolled into one.” Whereas Koko had to somehow find a way to persuade him to arrange his nuptials that didn't set up too many unresolvable differences between the various roles contained within that one person, in this situation, he would have an equally thorny, if different problem: he would just have to arrange the "very considerable bribe" to be distributed amongst several people working in concert, rather than with one person in several different capacities.
    May I further suggest that while a certain senior judiciary position happens to be mentioned in the above-quoted and famous lyrics, in fact I feel that the Courts in Britain is the one remaining institute which still retains a shred of dignity and credibility. Accordingly, I believe anyone accused of being involved in all this shady business, would get a fair trial if the facts were allowed to come out. However therein lies the rub. Just look at how the Kincora Boys' Home scandal continues to be hushed up - there are too many bishops, ministers, chief secretaries and lord high admirals' reputations at stake for the full truth of it ever to surface. Regretfully, what's going on here in Oxford Street seems very much of that order of high level corruption.....
    As with the wake up call we have received with Russia's latest actions in Ukraine, we collectively, not just in Britain but everyone on the face of the planet needs to ask themselves whether they are prepared to tolerate this blithe and blatant, naked two faced double dealing and hypocrisy which is not just an egregious crime and offence to any right minded person, it is costing you all an absolute fortune. The amount of tax revenue either not received due to corruption or wasted for the same reason, is astounding. I ask again, how bad does it need to be and for how long before change?

  • @pendremacherald6758
    @pendremacherald6758 Před 2 lety +2

    As an American, I can say all of this stuff would top out at around $6 US. Even if you have to bring these from America, the profit margins on a single item would be ridiculous.

    • @mishzguafa
      @mishzguafa Před 2 lety

      Exactly! That is one of the concept of money laundering. Buy cheap, sells high with no valid reason. It just doesn’t make sense. One or two store is acceptable but so many same stores at the same area is so dodgy.

  • @andrewmanning3639
    @andrewmanning3639 Před 2 lety +5

    Times Square in New York has a similar issue. It was so sad to see it in 2013 full of cheap looking empty souvenir stores when I last visited, compared to 2003 when it was full of flagship stores for all the major brands.

  • @rachelbosler7299
    @rachelbosler7299 Před 2 lety +9

    It's not just London, I'm in Colchester and for a rather small town centre there are 3 of these that have just popped up?! ... and they seem to be open 24/7 in spite of always being empty

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Před 2 lety +2

      Rachel, i think if those were asian shops , everyone would have zoomed in on the inner activities but because the front is american. everyone is cool and calm. with the odd person noticing. and its one thing racism benefits from.

    • @jbtv5617
      @jbtv5617 Před 2 lety +1

      You took the words out of my mouth! Colchester is hella dodgy same for Clacton

    • @unclebuck134
      @unclebuck134 Před 2 lety

      @@PHlopheYeah, people find Americans more trustworthy than ‘Asians’. Gonna cry? Ask yourself why that might be… Btw, my sister has stopped going into town because men kept harassing her and even following her, and guess what, they weren’t American men.

  • @MrSBGames
    @MrSBGames Před 2 lety +1

    Here up north, its not candy stores but "phone/mobile stores" doing the same stuff. See them all over and empty but somehow manage to stay open

  • @anthonybutcher5224
    @anthonybutcher5224 Před 2 lety +16

    I wonder if this is a European problem, as I have just come back from a business trip to Amsterdam, I was very puzzled because in the main tourist streets were loads of American style sweet shops.

    • @djdrift71
      @djdrift71 Před 2 lety +4

      Reason is that the mayor of Amsterdam has banned any shops selling tourist items from opening because there was nothing but these style of shops. The locals had no where to buy anything except tourist items. Given the pandemic caused Amsterdam to basically shut down in effect for two years, these shops shut down and re opened as these candy shops as they could operate under the ‘essential’ food shop banner. They are clearly fronts for the drug gangs that operate in and around Amsterdam as a way of cleaning the money they make from weed and cocaine etc.

    • @djdrift71
      @djdrift71 Před 2 lety

      @William Shakespeare The Turd Agreed 👍🏼

    • @sevena.channel
      @sevena.channel Před 2 lety +2

      "...bUiSnEsS tRiP tO aMsTeRdAm"