Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Punjab-origin DJ faces jail for contempt of court in UK

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com ■ FAKE INJURY CLAIMS

HAD DEMANDED OVER 837,000 POUNDS IN FAKE INJURY CLAIMS, THE FIRST SUCH CASE BROUGHT BY A NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE TRUST

LONDON: A Punjab-origin DJ is likely to face imprisonme­nt after being found guilty of contempt of court for demanding over 837,000 pounds in fake injury claims, in what is believed to be the first such case brought by a National Health Service (NHS) trust.

Sandip Singh Atwal, known as Sunny, was filmed dancing and working as a courier after claiming that “negligent” treatment, he received from the UK’S statefunde­d NHS for minor injuries, had left him unemployed and dependent. The 33-year-old was found in contempt of court on 14 counts on Friday and will be sentenced on June 1. The maximum sentence for contempt charges is two years imprisonme­nt.

It is believed to be the first time an NHS trust has brought such proceeding­s. The Calderdale and Huddersfie­ld NHS Foundation Trust said the ruling highlights the consequenc­es of submitting “dishonest and exaggerate­d claims”. In June 2008, Atwal, who was working in his family’s taxi firm, was injured in an attack with a baseball bat and went to Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary for treatment.

He was treated for fractures to the index finger of his right hand and the ring finger of his left hand, and a laceration to his lower lip. He later brought a claim for negligent treatment, which was admitted by Calderdale and Huddersfie­ld NHS Trust, which offered 30,000 pounds to settle the case. Atwal asked for 837,109 pounds, including very substantia­l sums for future loss of earnings and future care, on the basis he was unable to work and incapacita­ted.

In order to justify the much larger claim, Atwal said he was suffering from disability, selfconsci­ousness about his lip and hands, had becoming a social recluse, suffered alcohol dependence and reliance on pain killers and was unable to work as a DJ or a courier between 2010 to 2015.

But the NHS trust was suspicious, put Atwal under surveillan­ce and probed his social media postings which “gave the lie” to much of what he was asserting, noted the high court judge, Justice Spencer, in his ruling this week. Surveillan­ce footage showed Atwal working and lifting heavy items, with no visible signs of discomfort, leading the trust to accuse him of fraud.

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