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Neal's Yard Dairy/Instagram
London-based distributor Neal's Yard Dairy announced on Instagram that it was "the victim of a sophisticated fraud" involving high-value cheddar cheese.

Authorities in London have arrested a 63-year-old man in connection with the cheese heist of 2024, in which tens of thousands of pounds of high-value cheddar were stolen from a major distributor.

London-based retailer and cheesemaker Neal’s Yard Dairy said it learned on Wednesday that a suspect was in custody. The Metropolitan Police confirmed to NPR that a man was detained on suspicion of fraud by false representation and handling stolen goods.

“The man was taken to a south London police station where he was questioned. He has since been bailed pending further enquiries," a police spokesperson said.

Over the past week, the British artisanal cheese community has been reeling after Neal’s Yard Dairy announced it had been the “victim of a sophisticated fraud resulting in the loss of over £300,000 worth of clothbound Cheddar” — the equivalent of more than $389,000.

“The theft involved a fraudulent buyer posing as a legitimate wholesale distributor for a major French retailer, with the cheese delivered before the discovery of the fraudulent identity,” the company said.

The thief made off with 950 wheels — over 22 metric tons, or roughly 48,500 pounds — of Hafod, Westcombe and Pitchfork cheddar, it added. The wheels came from three different artisan suppliers across England and Wales.

“Between them, these cheeses have won numerous awards and are amongst the most sought-after artisan cheeses in the U.K.,” Neal’s Yard Dairy said. “The high monetary value of these cheeses likely made them a particular target for the thieves.”

The crime cuts deep: Cheddar, which originated in a village by the same name in Somerset, England, is the best-selling cheese in the U.K. and a big source of national pride.

Last week, British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver explained in an Instagram video that there is “only a small handful of real cheddar cheese makers in the world,” and that’s where the stolen cheese came from. He called it a “real shame.”

“This will slow Neal’s Yard being able to support all of their cheesemakers over the next five years, I would imagine,” Oliver said.

Neal’s Yard Dairy is shouldering the cost of the crime, having already paid the artisan cheesemakers in full. The company says it is now taking steps to ensure its own financial stability and the “continued development of the British artisan cheese sector.”

On Thursday, the company said it was aware of the arrest. "We are grateful for the progress they have made, and we will continue to support their investigation in any way we can," Neal’s Yard Dairy said in a statement.

How cheese lovers can help

Neal’s Yard was not the only company affected by the cheese heist.

Tom Calver with the cheesemaker Westcombe says they were led to believe they were sending their products to France via Neal’s Yard Dairy.

“These guys … basically impersonated a wholesaler-slash-customer, quite a large retailer over in France,” he said in an Instagram video, showing a row of empty shelves and noting he had posted excitedly about the 10-ton order just weeks earlier. “It was a hoax, it was theft, it was fraud. I mean, it’s nuts.”

Patrick Holden, whose Hafod Welsh cheddar was taken, told the BBC that the robbers asked Neal’s Yard Dairy to dispatch the cheese to a London warehouse, then collected it and disappeared. He believes they may be trying to sell it in the Middle East or Russia, “because people won’t ask questions there.”

“I think if they tried to sell it closer to home they’d find it difficult,” he said, naming North America and Australia as examples. “Because the international artisan community is very connected.”

The cheesemakers have all issued statements thanking Neal’s Yard Dairy for honoring the sale and praising the company’s response as an example of the trust and integrity that exists in the small industry.

To that end, Neal’s Yard Dairy is asking its “esteemed community of cheesemongers around the world” to keep an eye out for the cheese and contact them if they are offered or receive any suspicious deals — especially clothbound cheddars of certain weights (10 kg and 24 kg) with the tags detached.

Calver amplified that request in his Instagram video.

“If you do see or know of anybody over in Europe or around the world that there's some clothbound raw milk cheddar that's going cheap, then just can you let us know?” he said. “Because we can potentially trace it back — hopefully, maybe, I don’t know — and we can hopefully work with the police to try to find out who the culprits are and in some way help Neal’s Yard in this quest of finding the cheese.”

Oliver told his more than 10 million Instagram followers that “if anyone hears anything about posh cheese going for cheap, it’s probably some wrong ’uns."

"Remember, if the deal seems too gouda to be true, it probably is!" he wrote in the caption.

Oliver also wondered aloud what the thieves could possibly be planning to do with their high-profile loot.

“Are they gonna, like, unpeel the cloth and then cut the skins off and grate it and get rid of it in the fast food industry, in the commercial industry?” he asked.

In a social media update posted on Sunday, Neal’s Yard Dairy said it has received an “overwhelming number” of calls, messages and visits from supporters since announcing the theft.

And it offered an answer to the many everyday cheese lovers who have been asking how they can help.

“Continue to support British and Irish cheese,” it wrote. “Hafod, Pitchfork and Westcombe are special examples of farmhouse Cheddar. Eat them. Celebrate them.”

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