Players.bio is a large online platform sharing the best live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, Golf, Rugby, Cricket, F1, Boxing, NFL, NBA, plus the latest sports news, transfers & scores. Exclusive interviews, fresh photos and videos, breaking news. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7. Check our daily updates and make sure you don't miss anything about celebrities' lives.

Contacts

  • Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
  • Registration certificate 06691200
  • 16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
  • Czech Republic

The rise and fall of rapist Lawrence Jones - from £700m wealth and Tory donor courted by politicians and royalty to jail

The spectacular rise and dramatic fall of Lawrence Jones reads like a slightly giddy work of fiction. But it’s true.

His start was unpromising, raised on a council estate in north Wales. But he went on to found a tech firm - UKFast based in Hulme, south Manchester - that became a giant, and ended up a multi-millionaire ‘business guru’ who regularly appeared on TV, courted by politicians and even the royals.

Today he has finally been unmasked as a sexual predator after a jury convicted him of two counts of rape.

READ MORE: Lawrence Jones GUILTY of drugging and raping two women

READ MORE: Multi-millionaire businessman and rapist Lawrence Jones has already spent 10 months in jail after sex assault conviction

In an interview in 2015, he recalled the moment as a child of six growing up in Denbigh he knew a life of poverty wasn’t for him.

It happened when a shop assistant at discount store Kwiksave in Denbigh snipped his mother's rejected credit card in two, and Jones recalled he said himself. "That's never happening to me."

“I remember my mum having her credit card cut up. The shop assistant made such a big deal of it,” he later said.

“I remember being conscious I would never let that happen. You don’t need to understand money when you are that age. I had it explained to me in such a brutal fashion, it put me ahead of the game.”

His mother Margaret, a teacher, and father Ken, an accountant, went on to run the St Kilda Hotel in Llandudno.

A chorister at St Asaph Cathedral in north Wales, he got a place to study and sing at Durham School in England, aged eight. There he boosted his £5-a-term pocket money to £40 by buying and reselling sweets to other pupils.

He left school with five O-levels and loved to tell how, with

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk