Once again, a group of migrants from Eastern Europe are accused of terrorising Mayfair through professional begging, stealing, and pickpocketing.
At the intersection of Park Lane and Oxford Street – in the shadow of Marble Arch – a dozen people lounge on litter-strewn benches, surrounded by shopping trollies piled with bulging bin bags.
Some smoke and roam, while others gulp from big bottles of Peroni, their tummies bulging from under their t-shirts.
While they may appear idle, some of these people are said to form a well-oiled gang of Romanian criminals.
When approached by the Daily Mail, they voluntarily confessed to having ‘no documents to work’ – and claim they have a ‘hard’ life with support from nobody but themselves.
However, Oxford Street employees, who have gotten to know the returning characters well, claim that the gang comes in from Romania every year, with some of them targeting London’s busiest tourist season.
During the summer and right before Winter Wonderland arrives in Hyde Park, their numbers increase. Many return home with their gains in between these times.
Several encampments have emerged on Park Lane over the past couple of years, forcing Transport for London (TfL) and Westminster City Council to spend thousands to clear them out – yet still the same faces return.
Instead of sleeping in tents for the time being, they spend every night under the cover of M&S’s main Oxford Street shop, from which several have been banned for stealing large quantities of steak and vodka.
Each morning, they transport their belongings along the road and set up in the shade of a huge London Plane tree.
Their work revolves around a street begging racket, complete with shift schedules and managers, according to a barista at Pret a Manger over the road.
He told the Daily Mail: ‘What you have to understand is that these are professionals. They each know their role, whether that’s as a beggar, a pickpocket, or a shoplifter.
‘There is usually a lady stationed outside here on the pavement. She will sit there for a few hours begging for money before another one turns up.
‘They hand over the cardboard, and she takes her place. It is shift work, very well organised.
‘Some of the gang have been around for years, since before the days of the Park Lane camp, and so he has, in a strange way, gotten to know them.
‘They will come in each morning very early to get a coffee, sometimes be a bit cheeky and try to get one for free, but they don’t steal from here anymore. Other places get ransacked,’ he said.
After the tourist season, some people even stop over to say goodbye before packing up and heading off.
He said: ‘They will come in here and say, “Bye bye, I’m going on holiday. I’ll be back in a couple of months.”
The barista observed as the group made a camp ‘like a little village’ with a dozen tents outside the Hilton Hotel down Park Lane.
Last year, it was revealed that TfL had forked out £37,000 for bailiffs and lawyers to clear out the encampment across two summers.
The Pret employee, who didn’t want to be named, is adamant that the same group is now assembled by Marble Arch, having assumed a new base after being turfed out.
They plod back along Oxford Street to spread their duvets over the covered walkway outside M&S after a tiring day of deceit.
A security guard told us the entire group is banned from the store after stealing hundreds of pounds worth of meat, alcohol and clothes.
He said: ‘They have caused us lots of problems over the years. We had to stop them coming in because they would steal – lots of stuff, very expensive.
‘If they were just stealing because they were hungry, they would take sandwiches – but they take meat, lots of steak. And alcohol – spirits like vodka, especially.
‘We often have standoffs; I have to tell them, “You’re not coming in.” After a while they get the message, but they have been violent in the past.
‘M&S has chosen to be empathetic by letting them sleep there – the company could easily hire overnight security to clear them out. And this is how they choose to respond.
‘I have noticed more of them sleeping here in the past three or four weeks; there are about 20 here each night.’
Sainsbury’s is one of the gang’s favoured targets, and employees there have several stories of altercations.
A manager says: ‘There are three or four different groups in the area we have problems with, but the Marble Arch lot are the worst.
‘Just yesterday, one of them stole over £100 of Ferrero Rocher from us. Chocolate is something they steal the most, or they also take the magazines. And I don’t think they take them because they like reading.
‘We’ve got the new Facewatch system – facial recognition technology that monitors the door. It is good because it sends an alert to our store phone when a troublemaker comes in.’
A security guard says: ‘They sometimes follow customers around inside the shop and try to pick their pockets. If someone bends down to look at an item, then they might be able to slip their phone from their trousers.’
Some local employees are more understanding.
An attendant at Selfridges food hall, across the road from the M&S where the group sleeps, said: ‘I sometimes give them food at the end of the day if it is going to waste.
‘I’ll just put a few pieces in a paper bag and give it to them as I walk past.’
Cllr David Harvey, Westminster City Council’s cabinet member for housing, told the Daily Mail the authority was ‘actively responding to the situation’, adding that it faces ‘unique pressures’ caused by rough sleepers from ‘across the UK and overseas’.
‘Public spaces cannot become places for long-term encampments, nor can we accept behaviour that causes distress to residents, businesses and visitors,’ he said.
‘Where people refuse repeated offers of support, or where anti-social behaviour and public safety concerns arise, we will take appropriate enforcement action alongside our partners.
‘While we will continue to help those who are vulnerable, we are determined to keep Westminster’s streets, parks and public spaces safe, accessible and welcoming for everyone.’
A TfL spokesman said: ‘No one should be faced with sleeping rough on London’s streets. This is a busy part of the TfL road network that is not a safe place for people to sleep rough.
‘People who have previously been sleeping rough at this site have been made aware that returning to the site is not an option and that they will be removed.
‘We continue to work with Westminster City Council whose outreach teams can connect people to the support available to them and continue to monitor the area.’
This makes me extremely sad, which politicians pretend to understand, but when I wander the streets of London I see what’s happening with my own eyes. I’m not being melodramatic; I’m describing a real social unravelling that numerous people feel but are too afraid to say aloud for fear of being labelled, ignored, or told they’re imagining it.
We are an extremely small country, and we just don’t have the space for these illegals.
The UK doesn’t intend to “let them in”. What’s happening is a combination of legal obligations, systemic failure, and political avoidance, which creates the impression that people can just come and stay without consequence.
Under international law — specifically the 1951 Refugee Convention and European human rights frameworks — if someone reaches UK territory and declares asylum, the government must process that claim.
They are unable to lawfully refuse admission at the border or force the boat back, and this is why small boats are such a pressure point.
That’s not “letting them in” by choice — it’s the legal structure the UK signed decades ago.
The asylum system has been running with:
- huge backlogs
- too few caseworkers
- slow processing
- limited removal capacity
This means people remain in the UK for years, even if their claim is weak or eventually rejected, so the delay creates the appearance of “open doors”, even though the system is simply clogged.