Great Amazon Heist, The (2023)

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Great Amazon Heist, The (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

Come here. Look at this!

That's a bottle of piss.

That's a bottle of piss. Piss!

That's the Amazon fulfilment centre.

We've been here for, what,

two or three minutes?

And we've got seven bottles of piss.

That's definitely p... This one,

I'm not so sure about.

Like, this... This looks like

it could just be apple...

Yeah, it's apple juice. Look.

Yeah, it's piss.

Amazon. They're the world's biggest

online retailer.

Their founder is one of

the richest men on the planet,

and they're such a big part of

our day-to-day lives now.

I mean, I used to use Amazon

all the time.

I kept on hearing these stories

about Amazon

not being a great place to work.

Amazon patented cages for staff

to work in in 2016.

I've even heard stories about

people being disciplined

for having heart att*cks at work.

It seems like people think Amazon

are getting away with quite a lot,

and I'm an expert in that field.

See, my name's Oobah Butler,

and I've made a career out of

getting away with stuff.

I made my garden shed into

the number-one rated restaurant

on TripAdvisor in London.

I faked my way to the top

of Paris Fashion Week.

And for my next heist,

I'm setting my sights on Amazon.

Amazon have been taking the piss

for too long now,

and it's about time

someone did something.

So to do this, I needed a team.

Yeah... Take on Amazon? Yeah.

Take on Amazon and try and...

...change them, basically. Right.

You are a lawyer?

I am. OK.

I think I might be...

I might be in trouble.

What did you do, then?

I don't know.

I don't know the law.

Yeah, I don't know.

Maybe I should just start...

Yeah.

Start telling you.

For a while now, a struggle has been

brewing between Amazon and sections

of its workforce, and it was

all coming to a head here -

Coventry.

Something historic

was about to go down.

Amazon warehouse.

Today is, like, the first ever,

like, walk-out

in UK history of Amazon staff.

So we're heading, but we're going...

We're going incognito.

Does that cover my hair up?

It's a bit Jamiroquai-y.

The workers at Amazon Coventry

are trying to organise

for better working conditions.

Only one Amazon warehouse

on the planet has ever succeeded

in forming a union,

so I wanted to find out

what makes going up against Amazon

such a challenge

and what was really going on

behind closed doors.

Does anyone want to talk to the...

You'd like to?

No. No?

And you don't want to either?

OK.

Yeah, appreciate that.

I kind of got the sense

that Amazon's workers were worried

what would happen to them if they

spoke out about what was going on.

Amazon have reacted pretty badly

to workers trying to form unions

in the past.

They were even issued a cease

and desist for retaliating

against the only currently

established Amazon union in America,

so that is what Coventry's workers

are up against.

They might not want to

recognise unions.

Hi! We're here

and we're staying here.

People feel scared to speak up?

That's abundantly clear.

Yeah, they are scared.

They don't want to lose their job.

They've seen people come and go.

So if Amazon's workers

can't talk to me

about what's actually

going on inside,

then I need to find another way

to see if Amazon's workers

are being mistreated.

I'm going to get inside Amazon.

Coventry Fulfilment Centre, BHX4.

My own personal Fort Knox -

and I want in.

It's hard to even get close

to this place.

You can't just walk up

and have a look.

The whole place is surrounded

by this perimeter fence,

constantly patrolled by guards

at all hours.

Get past them and you'll get

to a set of gates that can only

be accessed by employees

with a very special type of card...

...or maybe the subtle art

of persuasion.

Er, I was just really wanting to

come and have a look in the centre.

You know, I've got an offer

that... should be nice.

Just weren't interested.

Right, so if you can't get through,

then what about going over?

Attach yourself to a drone,

zip right over the gate.

Oh.

Yeah, it didn't... OK.

But there's a back door.

Get in a box,

post yourself in as a return,

jump out wearing an Amazon uniform

and you could bypass the whole lot.

Just one snag.

But then I had an even more

ingenious way

of getting into Amazon.

I applied for a job.

I think I got it.

So I've got the job,

I've found a way in,

but now I need

some special equipment.

That's... an undercover camera.

I've not really used this

in any meaningful way.

And... I know you've done a lot

of undercover.

I was thinking, if they catch me,

I'm going to say I'm recording

an Undercover Boss.

No, cos that's a lie.

You can't lie. If you're caught,

you can't lie.

You're a... You are there

in the public interest.

So the problem is with that

is that... Look, your brand...

...it's a lie. Your brand

is jokester, prankster.

This is the one part of this film

where you cannot be either

of those things. Mm-hm.

Did no-one recognise you?

I sprayed my hair brown...

Right, OK... and I swept it back

and I had glasses.

And I went under the name Paul.

"Hello, I'm Paul

and I work for Amazon."

So, on the first day, I went in

and had my induction.

Er, Paul. So I was supposed

to be here at 12. Sorry.

Is everything OK with all that?

Oh, God! Sorry.

So I was late to

my safety induction.

I'm not sure if I'd missed anything

important with regards to, like,

safety or anything,

but Norm pulled me up,

so I just joined the other

new recruits and tried to catch up.

Amazon say they always reschedule

any missed inductions.

It was really rammed home to us

that whenever we left

the warehouse floor,

we'd have to go through multiple

airport-style security scanners.

It felt pretty intimidating,

like they didn't trust

their own staff at all.

I obviously knew I was going to

go off like a Christmas tree

every time. Why would you be

going off like a Christmas tree?

Cos I had a camera strapped

between my legs. Oh, I see.

Did you have a contract

of employment issued by them?

Yeah. Yeah, and what did

the contract of employment say

about filming and speaking

to people?

I didn't really read it.

Right, OK.

f*ck it. Doesn't matter, does it?

All right, yes, I agree to that

and I agree to that.

So I was all trained up,

which meant the next day,

I would be on the warehouse floor -

and that means I'd have to

go through the scanners.

Got literally a camera strapped

right here by my testicles.

So it's like...

If the scanners don't get me,

then there is a god.

Amazon's employees have to go

through this every day.

I mean, it felt more like I was

walking into some sort of nightmare.

True or false?

False.

Right. Is that bad?

Well, what happens next?

I was in, but I was really rattled

from almost being rumbled...

...50 I went out to the smoking area

to calm my nerves,

sat down next to my new colleagues

and introduced myself as...

Which was... Mm-hm... not good.

No. Because I was in disguise

and under a different name.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

So I was a bit panicky then.

So with their advice in mind,

I got my head in the game

and focused on my mission.

I needed to gather evidence of how

Amazon workers are being treated,

so I got to work. And as soon

as I got on to the warehouse floor,

I got this distinct feeling

that I was being watched.

We felt like we were being

surveilled at every second.

There was clearly

a mistrust of staff.

I guess it was just shocking to me

how quickly I started...

Things started aching.

My back started hurting.

You know, I started having people

who were also on their Day 1

saying about their feet hurting.

Yeah.

Have you ever had foot pain before?

One of my co-workers was saying that

she had worked there

for eight months and that

she was in tears

because of how much pain she was in.

So on the second day,

I was working on this lorry.

The fan didn't work.

It's really hot.

I was told that we needed

to take turns on shifts

on this boiling hot lorry...

...but I was never rotated out of

the van, as my supervisor said,

and instead worked there

for four hours.

On Day 1, I'm boiling hot!

I'm in pain. Like...

I mean, am I just bad at my job,

or is this...?

Well, that sounds more like

a health and safety issue.

Right. They're not providing

a safe work environment.

Is that a law?

Could be an issue, yeah.

It hadn't taken me long to collect

evidence of workers in pain

and potentially unsafe practices

at Amazon Coventry,

but I was about to discover

something even bigger.

I was one of about 100 new employees

on that day.

This was a pivotal moment

for Coventry's union hopes.

They needed the support of

at least 50% of the workforce

to establish Amazon's first union

in Europe.

I mean, they were so, so close.

But if Amazon took on

hundreds of workers,

that could change everything.

This was wild.

I was shattered,

but with this evidence in my hands

I knew I had to just keep on going.

I mean, what else

was I going to find?

I mean, it seemed like Amazon

were hotter on surveillance

than health and safety,

as I was about to find out.

So I'm working undercover

at an Amazon fulfilment centre,

but I've just been pulled aside

for a chat -

and it didn't sound good.

Right, OK.

Similar looks, similar resemblance?

Right, OK.

That is... Yeah, that's me.

It's not a wig!

Yeah!

In what seemed like no time at all,

Amazon had monitored

and identified me.

They'd clearly done their research

and were quick to ask me...

Yeah.

I needed to get out of there

before they found my camera

and all of the intel

that I'd gathered.

I should leave now, basically.

Because I'm...

Because it's...

Yeah, I need to go now.

Thank you.

Yes.

I've got screws in my pelvis.

I know - you said that.

I've got screws in my pel...

I've already had a doctor's note...

Sorry? Oh, no, I'm leaving

anyway now.

Sorry, I'm going to be getting

my stuff now. Sorry.

I won't be returning tomorrow.

That's my last shift.

But thanks.

I appreciate it.

Let's get the f*ck out of here.

Not long after I was rumbled,

a story broke that Coventry's

unionising bid had been halted.

Organisers claimed

that Amazon's hiring spree

had skewed the balance of staff

so much,

they'd have to postpone the vote.

I mean, if this was true,

I'd inadvertently been at the heart

of Amazon's union busting.

I'd been used as a patsy.

Now I had to make things right.

They said...

So I just started thinking

and thinking,

"How do I get people to care about

Amazon's... sort of workers?" Yeah.

And I started kind of...

I was hanging around

their fulfilment centres a lot,

and I noticed how,

outside a lot of them,

there are bottles of urine.

Outside... Of urine?

Bottles of urine, yeah. Yeah.

If you ever go to

an Amazon fulfilment centre

and you look at the side

of the road,

there's often, like,

bottles of urine.

Just for the record, it definitely

was urine cos I sniffed it.

Yeah, and then I thought, "well,

where on earth is this coming from?"

So I went to speak with Alex Press,

a labour journalist

who hosts a podcast about Amazon,

to confirm my suspicions.

People are...

People are pissing in the bottles.

It's a pervasive problem, one that

all the delivery service partners

and the company itself

are very aware of.

There's no time for bathroom breaks

cos you don't want to get written up

for being off the clock.

It's called "time off task"

at Amazon.

There's evidence that

people are pissing in bottles

or holding it in to the point

where women at Amazon often complain

about developing

urinary tract infections.

It's really bad and well-documented

most among the delivery workforce.

But an Amazon spokesperson said that

they don't do that.

Yeah, well... Well...

Excuse me, excuse me!

We're making a film where we're

talking to Amazon delivery drivers.

When was the last time

that you pissed in a bottle?

Oh, today.

Yeah, today. I mean,

it's just like a...

It's like a thing, you know,

every day.

It's just... It's unfortunate,

but we have to do it.

You see in the backseat,

back there?

This is...

How does it make you feel?

It's honestly degrading, you know?

It's kind of like, in a way,

you feel like you have no option.

So I've spoken to drivers

all over the world,

and it seems to be

the same everywhere.

And the reason that

they piss in bottles

is just cos they're under

such crazy pressure to meet targets.

So they're being monitored

by a dispatcher at all times.

I am, like, the dispatcher lead.

You get a direct monitor of how many

packages everyone has done... Mm-hm.

...how long they've been working...

Yeah.

...how many packages they've done,

the percentages of them.

They don't give you enough time

to schedule a break.

And if you do, you'll probably

end up going overtime.

You know, people who are going slow

usually end up getting fired.

If I'm looking for a McDonald's

or for, I don't know, for a toilet,

for a public toilet...

You lose time. Exactly.

Now, I've found out that

every bottle of urine

that is found in their car at the

end of the day counts against them.

We go off, like, a point system.

So it's like, if you pee in a bottle

and you leave it...

Like, you're going to get a point

for that.

How many points until

they might have trouble?

Well, everybody has, like,

their own system.

So our point is

a ten-point system. Yeah.

So there's fleets of Amazon vans

all over the world

chucking bottles of urine

out their window.

Amazon are flooding the world

with piss!

It just seems like such a waste.

Of piss?

Yeah.

You want it?

I'm collecting all of the bottles

of urine that I can find

from Amazon's disgruntled

and overworked drivers.

The people at the top of Amazon

have tried to brush this issue

under the carpet, so I'm going to

make their drivers' urine

something they can't ignore.

See, the number one product

in any Amazon category

gets a special promotional badge

saying it's a best seller.

And if I can get one

for Amazon drivers' piss,

then they will proudly display it

front and centre

of their own platform.

We want to make a drink

out of the drivers' urine.

We just need to come up with,

like, a name, a label,

a design for a logo.

Has it got to do with energy?

Yeah, energy...

Energy's good.

Has it got to do with piss?

Piss Energy?

Bustin'.

What about Drive?

Drive?

Drive's not bad.

Shall I look if it's been taken?

f*ck! Taken.

That actually looks pretty good.

Yeah, it looks good.

What do drivers want

when they're on a shift for Amazon?

They want to piss. Yeah!

They want to be released

from their shift...

Release Energy Drink.

And they want to... release!

Release Energy.

Rel... Yeah, that's not bad.

Release Energy. There's nothing!

Release - you can see it!

It sounds like it would be good

for you.

And it... It IS a release.

Basically, taking a wee...

Energy drinks have a look to them,

don't they?

It needs to be "Release and maybe -

in little letters - "Energy".

The Amazon orange... Nice.

.. kind of looks...

Yeah, it does look energy drink-y.

It looks like how I imagine

your vat of piss looks.

We need more a healthy, piss colour.

A little more yellow -

bright yellow!

That's too...

That's almost been too hydrated.

That looks like Wes Anderson's

designed it. Yeah.

Yes!

That's it.

I would totally drink that.

You'd drink that?

Yeah, definitely!

Would you drink that?

Look what's just arrived.

Very nice!

7.5 inches.

This is all being listed. And that's

where it says all the ingredients,

which are all the ingredients

to... urine.

Saved and finished!

I can't... Just part of me

just thinks, "Surely not."

It's available to buy.

f*ck!

Does anyone want to do

a test purchase?

I originally listed the drink

as a refillable pump dispenser,

but Amazon's algorithm and their

internal team moved the product

into a drink category.

The drink was live,

but I had no idea what to do next,

so I spoke to someone who's spent

the last four years researching

Amazon's platform for tips on

how to make this wee number one.

I don't want to be a killjoy,

but I really hope you can't do it.

So you would say it was difficult

to have a top spot product?

Oh, of course, yeah.

I mean, I think, you know,

if it wasn't difficult,

everyone would do it.

If you can make yourself

one of the top few results

that 60% of people doing

online shopping see,

that's very valuable.

The risks involved are that it can

also be very expensive to get there.

OK. Then there are all sorts of

possible unforeseen events

and contingencies

and sometimes even, like,

algorithmically unexplainable things

that can happen

because it's an enormously complex

platform to navigate.

How to get the top spot on Amazon

in any given product category is,

you know, a secret.

I'd say it's probably a secret

even from Amazon themselves.

I was flying blind.

There was no sure-fire method

of making this thing a bestseller.

I just needed to shift as much

product as possible

and hope for the best.

So I enlisted the help of

a core team.

So the plan for today is... we've

got to try and make this product

that we've made out of

Amazon drivers' urine,

got to try and make it

a number one product on Amazon.

So it's real Amazon drivers' piss?

Yeah. We relisted the drink

in the Bitter Lemon category

to give ourselves the best chance

of a number one.

But this was going to be tough.

I mean, we were going up

against Schweppes!

The best hope of us getting a number

one product on the Amazon platform

was to game the algorithm -

by selling it to

as many people as possible

in the shortest amount of time

as possible.

And it wasn't long before sales

just started rolling in.

And we're going to what?

Are you actually going to

send me this bottle of piss?

One order's through so far.

I've got three people

who said yes already.

I've got 11 yeses and counting.

I've had one yes.

We just got a 12th yes!

27... No, 28.

39. 41. 46. 65. 100!

We had been selling all day

and we were nowhere to be seen

on the best seller list.

But surely it must take a little bit

of time to update, right?

Yeah, but we're not even

on any list.

It was a lot harder to get

Amazon drivers' piss

to climb their rankings

than I thought it would be.

I'm a bit like, "What have I done?

What haven't I done?

"Why isn't that appearing

on those lists?"

If we wanted to get this piss

to stick to Amazon,

we were going to have to dig deeper.

Hello. Am I going to get, like, sued

or imprisoned or anything?

Joe said it's...

...asked him to confirm

his payment method.

Please, guys! Anyone interested?

If you're up for doing it...

I can send you the details.

I look forward to my...

...to my delicious bottle of piss.

Come on!

But no matter how many times

we refreshed the best seller list...

Oh, God!

...we weren't on it.

It's not updated.

It's not moved.

It's still the same.

After 12 long hours,

we got an update.

"Amazon has noticed unusual

reviewing activity on this product.

"Due to this activity,

we have limited this product

"to verified purchase reviews."

The f*ck's that mean?

Amazon were on to us.

My ploy to outsmart their algorithm

had completely failed.

We were about to call it a night...

...and then we noticed

something weird on the listing.

Yes!

Yes!

OK, so... f*cking did it!

I've got the number one product

at Amazon...

.. made out of

Amazon drivers' piss!

I was like, "It's been flagged.

We're over.

"We're done. We are done."

No, we're not, baby!

We're number one!

So this product that I'd made

out of Amazon drivers' piss

had become a number-one

product on Amazon.

So what next? What would Jeff do?

Take it global.

Now I was a successful

entrepreneur,

I had the platform to spread

my story far and wide.

Success comes down to four

principles.

Patience, invention,

synergy, and succeeding.

There is so much potential in Piss.

The whole idea behind Release

is it's the first

fully reusable energy drink.

And then I got invited on the news.

Oobah Butler joins me now.

Hi, Oobah. Thanks for being here.

I created a product made

out of Amazon drivers' urine

and I listed it as a drink

on Amazon.

Why did you do it?

In order to bring attention

to the bad treatment of workers

on Amazon, but I used

the power of number one.

Oobah, thank you

for sharing your story.

To Amazon, I would like to say

thank you.

Thank you for creating working

conditions that allows my product

to be so abundant and plentiful.

Thank you to every member

of the general public who bought

Amazon drivers' urine sold

as an energy drink.

Isn't that good?

I don't think so, no. Why?

I thought... I was quite pleased

with that. No.

What's the problem with that?

Because you've got no idea.

These consumers don't know

that they're buying people's urine

that's been left on the side of the

road, repackaged and rebranded

by you as an energy drink.

It went live as a product

on their platform.

Yeah. They allowed it.

Yeah.

Isn't that crazy? Yes.

Any concerns? Yeah, several.

What would be your concerns?

It's not even fit for public

consumption...

...I would have thought.

You're selling, in effect,

an illegal product.

So is it illegal to sell Amazon

drivers' urine online?

Is that actually a genuine question?

And it would be an issue

if a member of the public

got their hands on it? Yeah. What

could...? What would be the worst

thing that could happen if that

happened?

Well, you don't know what's

in the urine.

What if you've got a drug addict?

Well, it would be...

Or there's a disease.

But that's not... That's classic

entrepreneurship, isn't it? No.

I saw at the side of the road, I saw

there was an issue and I took

it and I made it into a number

one product.

Potentially endangering people's

lives, I think.

That's over-pitching it.

Maybe I should take it down.

It's still live now?!

Yeah. There's something

you need to know.

At no stage did any member of

the public get anywhere

near receiving a bottle

of urine as a drink.

I had a close syndicate of friends

buying the drink and controlled

every purchase.

So no-one unwittingly bought any?

There were one or two purchases

I didn't recognise the name on,

but we just... I just cancelled them

because I just thought,

"Well, I don't want to disappoint

anybody."

More importantly, you didn't

want anyone to drink the urine.

Yeah, that, too.

This was a closed experiment to get

everyone talking about Amazon

drivers having to urinate

in bottles, and it had worked.

The media noticed.

Thanks for telling us about this.

Eventually, they removed

the listing.

I mean, this was here, though.

I'd managed to make a number one

drink on Amazon made out of their

drivers' urine.

This is the biggest online retailer

on Earth, and now people

were talking about the huge

issues drivers face.

Amazon sent through a right of

reply, saying...

It got me thinking, how easy

is it for much more dangerous

products to end up in the wrong

hands?

For my next mission, I recruited two

of the most twisted individuals

you're likely to meet.

Come here. I'll wait in there for

you to come back.

I blew the camera on fire.

These are my nieces.

So my nieces are growing up

in a world that's filled

with voice assistants.

This here is Alexa.

Say, "Hello, Alexa".

Hello, Alexa.

Hello, Alexa.

With 71.6 million users already,

Amazon's goal is supposedly to get

one of these into every

room of every home.

I mean, they say they want

to make shopping easier.

I've never used one.

Alexa...

...add, er, lemonade to the shopping

list.

Schweppes lemonade added

to your shopping list.

It's got its own safety protocols.

For example, when you try to buy

a bottle of vodka, it doesn't let

you because you might be underage.

But are all products so tightly

controlled?

Alexa, add stainless steel

carpenter Kn*fe to my basket.

A top result is stainless

steel carpenter Kn*fe.

It's 13.21, including

VAT, with delivery by tomorrow.

I added it to your Amazon basket,

where you can review product

and seller details before checkout.

To purchase now, say "buy it now".

Buy it now.

Processing your order...

Look at this!

That is really, really... OK,

it's wrapped up still.

No, no, no. This one's mine.

Oh, God.

Can we open them?

I don't...

You don't like blades, do you? No.

A sword! When we ordered a Kn*fe

that we were sure needed age

verification, we found

that there was no such thing.

So I went to report them

to Trading Standards,

who take businesses to court

if they catch them committing

illegal business activities.

How old are your nieces?

Four and six years old.

Yeah, that is bad.

This one's mine!

In 2016, Amazon, with a number

of other retailers, signed

a voluntary agreement with

the government to do their part

to stop kids accessing knives.

With all we hear about Kn*fe crime,

you know, gangs, children dying,

it's extremely worrying

how easy it is for anyone

to buy knives online.

Unsurprisingly, it's illegal to sell

any bladed item that isn't

a small pocket Kn*fe to a minor.

It's also illegal to put

these items through the letterbox

without any age verification.

I wanted to know

what the consequences

would be for businesses

who sold stuff

like this without age verification.

Turns out if a case gets to court,

a business can face a fine of

around...

5,000. 5,000? Yeah.

A 5,000 fine for a company

the size of Amazon is nothing.

So me and my nieces did

a little bit more shopping.

Not from third-party sellers,

but directly from Amazon themselves.

Whenever you want to add new

items, try saying something like,

"Add apples to my basket."

Add Basics folding...

...pruning saw to my basket.

A top result is Amazon Basics steel

folding pruning and garden saw

with 20.3cm blade.

Buy it now!

Your order for Amazon Basics pruning

and garden saw was placed.

It will be delivered here tomorrow.

That's the Amazon logo.

Look at all this.

Whoa! That's like a monster

which has sharp teeth.

Here's the rat poison.

Add the Big Cheese rat and mouse

poison.

Into my basket.

Rat and mouse poison to your

Amazon basket.

Can we open the rat poison?

No. I don't know if you should open

the rat poison.

One. Two. Three. Four.

Five. Six. Seven.

How many knives did you guys order?

SHE LAUGHS

50, maybe.

Alexa... add Kn*fe.

Kn*fe. Kn*fe. Kn*fe. Kn*fe.

Kn*fe. Kn*fe. Kn*fe. Kn*fe.

Kn*fe to my basket.

So it's a Kn*fe party!

What did you say?

Kn*fe party.

What's your reaction to that?

Well, I'm surprised.

I'm surprised there's no appropriate

checks and balances in place.

I'm surprised the algorithm allows

the purchase without some kind

of age verification.

One... two.

We purchase 67 items that we believe

should have been age-verified.

For each of these items, three

offences were potentially committed,

as none had age verification

at the point of purchase, none

were packaged to indicate age

verification, and there was no age

verification at the point

of delivery.

I ordered all of them.

In fact, most went into Amazon

lockers, making

age verification impossible.

That could be 201 offences

all together.

So 201 times 5,000

suggests that...

...me and my accomplices

hit Amazon for around 1 million.

Sure, it could potentially

be that much for 200 separate

offences, but there's also...

There's a much higher cost as well.

If a company has to change

its processes to stop the sale

of all age-restricted products

to children, that is going to hit

the bottom line every year, forever.

Paul said to leave the evidence

with him and he would see

what he could do.

I felt like Amazon were getting

away with it.

Amazon said the majority of the

products we bought didn't need

age verification, but admitted

that four of them

did and that they've now

been reclassified.

They said...

Don't open it.

But I wasn't done with Amazon yet.

I did a little bit of research

and it turns out Amazon

don't actually pay much tax.

But like, don't you legally

have to pay tax?

Like, how do they get away with it?

What large companies will do

for the most part is tax avoidance

and profit shifting.

You only pay corporation

tax on profits.

Instead of declaring that

they're making a profit

in this country, they will bill you,

say, through a third-party

country such as Luxembourg.

Yeah. It says on the Amazon

receipts, it always says EU,

Sarle? Sarle, yes.

So Sarle is something that commonly

appears on Luxembourg companies.

We buy something from Amazon.

We think we're buying it from

the UK, but really we're buying

it from Luxembourg.

The Luxembourg company then gets

a UK Amazon company to deliver

it to our houses, but the revenues

and profits are almost certainly

declared in Luxembourg.

And it's not because it's a centre

of finance, it's not

the City of London.

It is for secrecy and tax purposes -

for the most part.

So is it easy to have an offshore

company?

If you've got enough money

and legal expertise,

very easy.

Do you think there's enough,

like, resources there to actually go

after these companies?

Definitely not.

When you're seeing hundreds

of millions of profits declared

offshore every year,

then we should be doing

something about that.

What do taxes actually pay for?

Everything. Everything that people

care about could be funded through

money that is currently lost,

because it's not so much wealth

trickling down, but more sort

of gushing offshore.

That wealth could be taxed

and could be paying for the NHS,

for social care, for schools,

for roads and transport and,

you know, even things like potholes

and... Potholes?

How long would it take

for an Amazon Prime delivery

without using the roads

that are paid for with our taxes?

We get angry about things

we can see, right?

And with a pothole, that's...

Like, you can literally see

infrastructure crumbling. Right.

And that makes people angry.

And if Amazon paid more in taxes,

there would be less potholes.

To put it bluntly, yeah.

So my plan is to help Amazon

do the right thing.

I'm going to trick Amazon

into paying tax.

The first thing I did was I went

on the internet and I found a load

of pothole fillers. Afternoon.

Parcel.

Oh, God.

So the plan was to fill

in the potholes with the pothole

filler from Amazon.

So I needed the builder.

Craig

I also needed the getaway driver.

For the sake of convenience,

that was also Craig.

Next up was finding some

of Britain's most menacing

potholes. That is a f*cking pothole.

Right. OK. And how did you find the

potholes?

Local viral potholes.

If you go on your local news website

right now, I guarantee you one

of the top read stories is someone

angrily pointing at a pothole.

There was one in Coventry

that was called the Grand Canyon.

I managed to get the Coventry

Telegraph to do a survey.

Did you see it? Yeah.

Christine has been at w*r

with that thing for a long time.

This lady's granddaughter

had broken her car in it.

No-one would fill it in, so I went

and filled it in for her.

It's got to be an in-out operation.

Yeah. You stop the traffic. I'll do

the job. Straight in and out.

Two minutes. A bucket in.

All right.

I think if we just do it and we do

it with enough authority, no-one's

going to question us. Come pass.

Oh, mate, you've absolutely

smashed it.

We just filled the canyon.

Is the potential

problems that might arise

the fact that I've basically

been a pothole vigilante?

Potentially. Health and safety.

It's not done to an appropriate

standard.

There's a car crash.

Someone trips, slips.

You may now be the one that's

liable.

How much money is that likely

to cost me?

How many potholes did you do again?

A handful. Yeah.

Next pothole? Yeah.

In there. This one.

Let's go.

I don't know if we've got enough

left. I think we've run out.

I think that's it.

People were beeping their horns.

They were so happy.

What?

They were saying, "Who's doing

this?" And I was saying, "Amazon."

Don't thank us. Thank Amazon.

They're paying for it.

You know who's

paying for this? Amazon.

What's this got to do with Amazon

paying taxes?

Remember earlier how I ordered

all the pothole filler from Amazon?

Apparently, Amazon use robots to

process their refunds, but they do

it by weight. They don't even open

the packages.

So to test this, I emptied

all of the pothole filler

I'd be using and took the empty

packages down to the beach, filled

them up with sand until they

weighed exactly the same.

And I went on Amazon

and I filed for a refund

and said that the product was...

I just didn't want it any more.

Right. Hmm.

I was just... Because I'm working

by the beach.

I got my money back.

Communities had their pothole

problem resolved, and Amazon...

Amazon get to have done the right

thing.

Without knowing it.

Without knowing it. Yeah.

How serious could that be?

Well, how much money are we talking?

Well, the refund?

Hundreds of pounds.

Hundreds of pounds.

All right.

Well, it's pre-planned.

Quite a sophisticated process.

You're exploiting a flaw

that you know about in their system.

Hypothetically, if that is

what happened,

that could be quite serious.

Would the owner of the beach be

angry with me for taking the sand?

I doubt the owner of the beach

is going to be your biggest problem

here. Right. OK.

It's probably Amazon or the police.

I haven't considered the fact

the police could even...

Why would they be interested

in this? Why is...?

Because it's a criminal offence,

Oobah. Right. OK.

You've got money you're not

entitled to from Amazon

by lying on your returns.

On your refunds.

Right. OK.

That's fraud. That's textbook fraud

by false representation.

What's the maximum sentence

you could get for fraud?

It can carry years.

The judge at sentencing may take

into account why you did something,

but it's not relevant

to whether or not an offence

has taken place.

The offence is the offence.

So your good intentions, your Robin

Hood quest to make them pay taxes,

is not really going to feature.

He was right.

I saw a story online that confirmed

basically everything he was saying.

I just read a story about two kids

in Spain who did the exact

same Amazon scam.

I think this could land me in...

...serious trouble.

But I had something else

up my sleeve.

So...

...six weeks ago, before I did any

of this...

I saw that news story and thought...

this could land me in serious

trouble.

Unless I do something about it.

Well, how do I protect myself?

What would Jeff do?

What tax havens are used

commonly by big corporations?

So, Luxembourg, often thought

of as a tax haven, is what's

used by Amazon. Other common ones?

Ireland. I'd probably use

Bermuda or the Cayman Islands,

potentially Belize.

I'd use one of those companies

because there's very little

jurisdiction over them.

We're going to somewhere very,

very secretive.

I now proudly own a company

in Belize.

Belize?

Yes. Right.

I created an Amazon business account

for that business

and purchased the pothole filler

through Amazon.

Afternoon, parcel?

So, another company out of the UK...

A shell company.

.. has bought the items?

Yes.

My name is not in any way

attached to the business.

Yeah. Or the business account.

I used a gift card

instead of my credit card.

So, not attached to me, either.

I think that's me.

That's my hands clean.

Morals and ethics aside,

technically...

...this is an offshore issue.

Yeah.

And...

...do you want to know the name

of the company?

Mm.

Hole Maintenance and Repair Corp.

Or, as an acronym...

HMRC.

Yeah.

So, I could have used

the same structure

that Amazon uses to avoid paying tax

to avoid getting in trouble.

Yeah.

See, now you seem impressed!

Have you've actually done this?

Yes.

Yeah, I don't think

Amazon will be pursuing you

for fraud

through Belize.

I think they'll struggle to do that.

Amazon will struggle

to get their hands on me?

I think you will probably get away

with committing fraud, there.

I don't know.

Don't quote me in court!

So after working undercover

at Amazon,

creating a number one product

made out of Amazon drivers' urine,

to learning how dangerous

their platform can be,

to turning the tables

on Amazon's alleged tax avoidance,

I've become very familiar

with Amazon's use of loopholes.

But their favourite loophole?

It's you.

It is impossible to imagine

a customer coming to me

ten years from now and saying,

"Jeff, I love Amazon.

"I just wish you delivered

a little more slowly."

It sounds like they're blaming

the way they operate on you.

I take it as an article of faith

that customers notice

when you do the right thing.

And that's a lot of power

that they're claiming

that you have over them.

So what are you going to do with it?

And just one more thing.

Remember earlier on

when I had to sign that kind of

confidentiality agreement

just to work at Amazon?

I agree to that.

And I agree to that.

Well, Colin, the lawyer

had a look over it.

Yeah, as I thought.

Protected disclosures.

What do you mean?

They can't stop you revealing,

in the appropriate forum,

in the correct way,

criminal wrongdoing,

breach of health and safety

legislation,

breach of safe environment for work.

How much would you have charged

to have looked through this contract

as you just had,

If I was just...

If I'd walked in off the street?

I would have said it'd be about

300 an hour to

look through the agreement.

300 an hour?

I'd have thought, for an average

employment lawyer, yeah.

So, then, basically,

what you're doing right now

is providing legal advice

to every single Amazon employee

out there

on the NDA that they've signed.

f*ck you for screwing me over!

So, if you're an Amazon employee

who's dealing with

health and safety breaches,

dangerous working conditions,

or just mistreatment at work,

to receive Colin's full,

free, advice.

My advice has been

based on academic commentary.

It's not legal advice.

Hopefully, there'll be a disclaimer,

saying it's nonbinding.

My true advice?

Hmm.

Don't publish this film.
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