A woman who defrauded Oasis superfans by selling bogus VIP box tickets for the band’s Wembley reunion concerts received a minimal £40 fine. Rosie Slater, 33, pocketed £4,000 from 11 victims by claiming access to premium seats priced at £130 each on resale sites.
The Fraud Unfolds
Slater exploited her ties to wealthy and prominent individuals to convince buyers she secured tickets for Oasis’s first shows in 16 years. Staffordshire Police investigations revealed she targeted eager fans desperate for Wembley access amid soaring resale prices.
One victim purchased 15 tickets and created WhatsApp groups to share the opportunity with friends. Several fans transferred payments directly and reserved non-refundable hotel rooms for the concert dates.
Court Hearing and Sentence
Slater admitted 11 counts of fraud by false representation at a December hearing. She appeared at North Staffordshire Justice Centre wearing a black outfit and blazer.
Prosecutor Kyle Padley stated that Slater falsely promised VIP box tickets. He noted, “It later came out the defendant was lying.” During police interviews, she claimed good intentions that “escalated out of her control.”
The court imposed a 12-month community order, requiring Slater to pay £776.98 in compensation to five victims, a £40 fine, £114 victim surcharge, £85 costs, and complete 30 days of rehabilitation activities. Some victims already secured refunds.
Defense and Police Response
Defense lawyer Simon Leech argued Slater avoided extravagant spending, using funds to clear household debts like council tax arrears.
Detective Constable David Stubbs of Staffordshire Police explained, “She has connections with wealthy, rich, and famous people, enabling her to attend past concerts and convincingly claim access to Wembley VIP boxes.” He added, “No evidence of coercion exists; she acted out of greed, exploiting ties for gain. Victims feel deep anger and hurt, especially as she recruited more through initial buyers.”
Oasis Ticket Controversy
The scam coincided with scrutiny over official sales. A Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) probe into Ticketmaster’s 2024 Oasis process found fans in long queues unaware of tiered pricing for standing tickets. Platinum options sold at up to 2.5 times standard rates without clear benefits or warnings.
The CMA now mandates Ticketmaster disclose tiered pricing 24 hours ahead, as applied to Oasis standing tickets.

