An international arrest warrant is currently out for a Malaysian fashion designer who is believed to be hiding in Malaysia.

- Committed fraud to feed gambling addiction, luxurious lifestyle
- Guilty of £400,000 scams
- Duped people into buying fake tickets to Oscars
- Told a couple they would sit on Julia Roberts’ table
- Pretended to mix with celebrity elite
- Lied about working for Christian Dior, knowing the Princess Royal
- Skipped bail before trial
- Sentenced to six years in jail

Alvin Loy, formerly of Townsend Way, Birmingham, “decided to commit fraud in order to gain huge sums” to feed a gambling addiction, the judge said.
Loy, 50, cheated three victims out of £263,599, Birmingham Crown Court heard.
He had denied fraud charges but skipped bail before the trial where he was found guilty and jailed for six years.
Malaysian hideout
Loy convinced his victims to invest money in his haute couture business, but he frittered the cash away in casinos, fine restaurants and on holidays.
He had denied four counts of fraud and one charge of obtaining a Northern Rock mortgage by deception, which gave him another £131,138.
An international arrest warrant is currently out for Loy. Judge Richard Bond told jurors, who convicted him on all counts after a seven-day trial, he was believed to be in Malaysia.
Sentencing him, Mr Bond said: “The truth is Alvin Loy was a sophisticated and very clever fraudster who deployed the main weapon of a fraudster’s armoury – relying on the decency of his victims while he fed them lie after lie.”
Celebrity connections falsified
Loy pretended to mix with the celebrity elite and on one occasion feigned a phone call to John Galliano and on another falsely claimed to be in a relationship with fashion designer Tom Ford.

The judge said Loy had a “dark and secret side” and had lied about working for fashion house Christian Dior and knowing the Princess Royal.
The Malaysian national convinced one of his victims, a doctor, to pay £12,000 for fake tickets to the Oscars’ ceremony in Los Angeles in 2009, the court heard.
He then claimed the trip was cancelled before presenting the same offer to another victim, who paid £5,000.