Thursday, April 9, 2026 - A Ghanaian chef has avoided jail after he was found guilty of storing fish in the bath next to his toilet before using it for meals sold illegally in supermarkets.
Stephen Akuoko had been operating in Watford, Hertfordshire,
under the name Tribal Foods for more than three years.
The 62-year-old made ready meals to supermarkets and corner
shops in the area with inappropriately long use-by dates.
There was also a lack of ingredients listed on the products,
which were described as “unfit for human consumption”.
Firefighters responded to a fire outbreak at his home on
Haines Way in October 2024. While there, they discovered huge quantities of
fish in the bath and on the floor of the bathroom next to the toilet.
Akuoko told Trading Standards investigators that he would
stop selling Tribal Foods products.
But a week after the fire, his unlabelled products were
found in a local shop with CCTV footage showing he had made three deliveries to
the store.
The owner later pleaded guilty to to two food safety
offences.
At St Albans Crown Court, the judge blasted him for the
meals that were "unfit for human consumption" and handed him a
two-year suspended prison sentence.
He was also given a five-year ban from operating any food
business.
Prosecutor Michael Coley said an investigation into Tribal Foods was launched by the environmental health team after they found ready meals in local shops with inappropriately long use-by dates and a lack of detail on ingredients.
Mr Coley said the company owner, Akuoko, was difficult to
track down, and when officers managed to speak to him on the phone, he became
aggressive and accused them of harassment.
When a wok fire broke out at his home, Akuoko claimed all
the food in the property was for him and his family, Mr Coley said.
He went on to assure officers they would not see Tribal
Foods products in Watford again.
But weeks later, they found his unlabelled products in a
local shop.
Officials then trawled through CCTV footage and found he had
made three deliveries to one shop in a matter of weeks.
"This was an intentional breach and a flagrant
disregard for the law," Mr Coley said.
Akuoko later pleaded guilty to contravening food safety and
hygiene regulations and failing to comply with a remedial action notice.
In mitigation, Aleister Adamson said his client had owned a
supermarket for many years until the property's lease expired.
Judge Francis Sheridan said: "Your little business got bigger than you could handle and you resorted to frankly disgusting techniques - fish on the floor of the bathroom, fish in the bathtub, and then you cooked them up and sold them.
"How you would even think about serving food kept like
that to even your own family beggars belief.
"You were preparing food for supply to outlets,
supermarkets and corner stores, and the food was frankly unfit for human
consumption.
"You might be a good cook of oriental foods in your own
home, but you should keep that within your own home.
"You must realise that food poisoning can have very
serious consequences, even death, and if that had happened you would be facing
manslaughter charges."
Judge Sheridan praised the "dogged" efforts of the
environmental health team who he said had performed a public service.
Justine Hoy, Associate Director Housing and Wellbeing for
Watford Borough Council, said: "Food safety laws exist to protect the
public.
"In this case, there was a clear and sustained failure
to comply with legal requirements, despite formal enforcement action being
taken.
"We will not hesitate to take action where businesses
or individuals put public health at risk.
"This successful prosecution demonstrates our
commitment to maintaining high food safety standards across Watford."



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