A man who was arrested in Slough has been jailed for six years for his role in an industrial scale forgery factory operating in East London.

Ukrainian national Oleksandr Sukhoviy, 39, was arrested by National Crime Agency officers at his home address on Hampden Road, Slough in October 2018.

The factory in Stratford was operated by fellow Ukrainian Sergiy Mykhaylov and had a sophisticated set up of computers and printers which were capable of producing tens of thousands of documents.

An online business was set up where orders would be placed and the illicit documents distributed to customers all over the UK. Sukhoviy was one of several individuals acting as a distributor of documents for Mykhaylov, and £11,000 cash in various currencies was discovered at his home following his arrest.

In total, officers recovered over 3,000 completed identity documents, 3,500 passport style photos and 300 Construction Skills Certificate Scheme (CSCS) cards, as well as 40,000 blank cards and £15,000 in cash.

Despite initially denying charges of conspiring to commit fraud using false identity documents but in February, he changed his plea to guilty just weeks before the trial commenced. He was subsequently sentenced to six years in prison on 11 March.

His is the fifth conviction linked to the forgery gang, with jail sentences totalling more than 27 years having been handed out.

NCA branch commander, Mark McCormack, said: “This sentencing is the culmination of an investigation that has dismantled a whole supply chain for false identity documents, from the street-level dealer, the middle-market distributors, all the way to the actual forger.

“False identity documents are a key enabler of criminality and affect the economic wellbeing of the United Kingdom.

"The type of things produced by this network could be used for money laundering or to help people gain work or access services in the UK illegally, but may also lead to dangerous consequences, especially if people claim they are qualified workers in construction or transport when they are not.

“We are determined to target the organised criminal networks involved in the creation and distribution of false documents, to make it harder for criminals to ply their trade and help to safeguard the public.”