A GANG of fraudsters who fleeced two pensioners out of almost £160,000 for routine gardening jobs have been jailed.

The sick tricksters preyed on a housebound man and woman, aged 72 and 90 respectively, for several years, charging them extortionate amounts for gardening.

One of the victims was charged more than £15,000 for work to a patio, when it should have cost far less.

While, in the worst of the two cases, the man was conned out of £115,000 after being repeatedly targeted over a five-year period.

Basildon Crown Court heard how the first victim to be targeted was 72-year-old David Booth.

Mr Booth, who lived in Leigh, was housebound and relied on carers.

Prosecuting Andrew Jackson told the court that due to his immobility, Mr Booth would regularly sit by his living room window looking out.

In 2005, he was at home when Christopher Barnes and Daniel Chuter turned up in their vans.

They told Mr Booth they had carried out work on his garden – work the victim had not asked for – and that they would also creosote his fence.

The pattern continued over several years, with Barnes and Chuter regularly attending the address to carry out work the victim had never asked for.

The court heard between March 2005 and December 2010, Mr Booth was asked to pay for the work by signing 41 cheques worth £67,397.

In total, he handed over £115,000 to the gang for work he had never asked for, which was either not done or was substandard.

Ringleader Barnes often asked Mr Booth to leave the cheques blank and sometimes even asked for them to be made payable to his children.

Barnes then himself made the blank cheques payable to other members of the gang, whom he paid to launder the conned cash for him.

Mr Jackson told the court that due to his immobility Mr Booth couldn’t even check the work being done and was too frightened to confront Barnes and his gang.

The pensioner also said, despite his growing unease at the amount of cash he was handing over, he did not want to make a fuss as Barnes sometimes brought his children with him, and Mr Booth did not want to upset them.

An independent expert who examined the work done at Mr Booth’s home, concluded it was shoddy.