A rogue kitchen fitter who took £100,000 from families, ripped out their kitchens and fled with their money has been jailed.
Jamie Brown, 56, left 19 families in utter despair when he turned their homes upside down, ignored their messages and then finally admitted he would not be returning to finish the job or hand back their cash.
In one particularly cruel betrayal, he ripped out the kitchen of a couple who were weeks away from having a baby, but never returned to fit a new one, leaving them with a home in tatters as they juggled the first few months of their newborn’s life.
The dodgy builder, who lives in a detached newbuild house in Bristol, ran his company Brown and Son Interiors, which flaunts a string of fully completed kitchen installations on its Instagram page.
Meanwhile, his LinkedIn profile boasts ‘over 25 years of experience’ carrying out ‘quality, fully guaranteed kitchen installations in and around the South West and Wales’.
However, the reality could not be more different as families were conned out of their life savings and left with a hollow shell where their kitchen once stood.
In what seemed like a cruel joke, the father continued to go on holidays, with his wife Nina posting pictures of their travels on Facebook for his victims to see.
Was your home ruined by this man? Email: katherine.lawton@mailonline.co.uk

Jamie Brown, pictured with his wife Nina Brown, has been jailed after he took around £100,000 from families, ripped out their kitchens and fled with their money
Left, an image shows a client’s kitchen before Jamie Brown started work on it and right, the state he left it in without finishing the work

Some of the 19 victims of the rogue kitchen fitter attended court to see his sentencing
Brown appeared at Bristol Crown Court to be sentenced on 19 counts of theft in a prosecution brought by South Gloucestershire Council’s Trading Standards department.
Nine of his victims also attended court to see his sentencing, and hear the circumstances around how he stole from them over the spring and summer of 2023.
Prosecuting, Lee Reynolds told the court how Brown was very keen to be hired to undertake work, most of which was to fit new kitchens.
He said a pattern emerged, which saw him warn prospective customers they needed to agree to the job and pay up front quickly or prices would go up. However, once money had changed hands, he would be evasive and elusive.
Brown would arrive to start the job, ripping out kitchens and often leaving them there, but disappear again and give a variety of excuses about why he was not returning to begin work to fit a new one, the court heard.
Many of his victims eventually discovered they had ordered and paid for new kitchens through him, but he had not even purchased the kitchens from the retail suppliers, such as Howdens and Magnet.
This continued until September 2023, when customers received texts, the first informing them that Brown had ‘had a mental breakdown’, and a second informing them that his company had gone into liquidation and they would not be receiving any money back or any new kitchens.
Mr Reynolds said: ‘One victim says that she was totally devastated by what had happened. This wiped out her savings. Another said it had taken him three years to save the money for a new kitchen and had been left without a kitchen at all.
‘He had to take out a loan of £7,000 for another kitchen, which will take him six years to repay.

Brown is pictured with his wife Nina Brown, who was listed as a company director. The case against Nina was formally discontinued in court

Brown’s house in Bristol. The conman and his wife are now in the process of selling their home and the proceeds will be used to pay back people who lost money, the court heard
‘Another victim had been told by Mr Brown that he had until 5pm that day to lock in the price for a new kitchen, and paid the money the next day, and the existing kitchen was removed in the August.
‘This was a cause of high emotional stress and anxiety at a time when his wife was nine months pregnant, and they were left without basic facilities for their newborn baby, as well as losing £12,500,’ Mr Reynolds added.
One victim said the scale of Brown’s serial offending only came to light when staff at kitchen suppliers Howdens told her she was not the only one – when they broke the news to her that the father never paid for the kitchen she’d ordered.
South Gloucestershire Council’s Trading Standards were notified after the September liquidation of his company, Brown and Son Interiors. They began an investigation, finding he had done the same thing before, with a previous company called JR Brown Interior Installations Ltd.
In fact, the investigation discovered that on the same day he was telling customers of the first company that he couldn’t do the work and they’d lost their money, he was cunningly setting up the second company to continue his conmanship.
‘We were moving into a new house in Keynsham and it needed a whole new kitchen,’ said one victim, who was in court to see Brown jailed.
‘We paid £14,000 up front of £27,000 in total so he could order the kitchen, and he sent a plasterer and then an electrician to prepare the kitchen, but then told us we’d have to pay them too, and he’d take it off the final bill.
‘He ripped out our kitchen and then left us. We didn’t have running water, no way of cooking, no washing machine. We rigged up a temporary thing in the garage, but he left it and that went on for ten weeks, with different excuses.

A finished kitchen on Brown’s company’s Instagram page before his imprisonment

Another example of work completed by Brown’s company, posted on his Instagram page
‘In the end I rang Howdens and they said they could deliver the kitchen, but it would have to be paid for. That’s when I realised for sure what was going on, it was devastating,’ she added.
In the almost two years since, the victim said the Trading Standards department at South Gloucestershire Council had been ‘incredible’ in supporting the victims and putting the case together.
‘What made it worse was that he continued to go on all these lovely holidays. His wife would post pictures of them going on holidays, one after another, all the time. I stopped looking because she blocked me on Facebook, but friends would send me screenshots. I was left thinking ”these are holidays we should be going on, not him”.
‘I gathered all the evidence of that in the period since, and submitted it to the Trading Standards prosecutors and it added to the exacerbating factors of the offending,’ she added.
Brown was eventually charged with 19 counts of theft, alongside his wife Nina, who was listed as a company director at the time. The case against Nina was formally discontinued in court last week.
Brown initially pleaded ‘not guilty’ to the charges at a series of court hearings last winter and a trial date was set for April 2026. But in April he changed his plea to ‘guilty’, admitting 19 counts of theft.
There was some dispute in court about the total amount of money he had stolen. The prosecution opened their case and put the amount at £101,602.91, but Brown’s defence counsel David Sapiecha said the true figure was £84,817.
In mitigation, Mr Sapiecha told Bristol Crown Court that Brown had been a man of previous good character who hadn’t set up the companies with the intention of stealing from people, but ‘things had become too much for him’.
‘He is not ingrained dishonest, he’s someone who acted dishonestly for a period,’ Mr Sapiecha said. ‘He believed one day things could be put right.’
He told the court that the couple are now in the process of selling their home and the proceeds would be used to pay back every penny to people who lost money.
Judge James Patrick said the benchmark sentence for such an offence was three years, but with his age, good character and other mitigation, he would bring this down to 18 months.
He told Brown he was close to accepting Mr Sapiecha’s submission that he could be dealt with through a suspended sentence, but decided the level of offending, the number of victims and the devastation they had gone through were such that only a prison sentence would do.
‘You lied and lied consistently,’ said Judge Patrick. ‘This is not even a case where you were robbing Peter to pay Paul. You were going in, ripping up kitchens and spinning the lie that there was going to be jam tomorrow, but there never was.
‘That left a huge inconvenience to people. It is to your credit that you’ve put your house up for sale, but these people are still to be compensated and it’s June 2025 now, and they’ve also suffered huge emotional distress.
‘I bear in mind the effect this will have on your life, but I’ve concluded it’s not possible to avoid a custodial sentence,’ he said, telling Brown he will serve at least 40 per cent of the 18 months in prison before he can be released on licence.