Belfast Telegraph

Tax cheat to face another hearing over ‘too lenient’ punishment

- BY ALAN ERWIN

Court date: Bartley Murphy A BUILDER and pub owner who was spared jail after cheating the revenue out of more than £400,000 in unpaid taxes is facing a legal bid to have his sentence increased.

The Public Prosecutio­n Service (PPS) has referred Bartley Murphy’s case to the Court of Appeal, claiming that the suspended term of two years and three months he received was unduly lenient.

Senior judges have listed the challenge for a hearing later this month.

Murphy (53), from Ardglass Road in Downpatric­k, Co Down, pleaded guilty to a single count of cheating HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) out of taxes over an eight-year-period.

He had originally denied the charge when the bill he faced stood at £1.2m.

That figure was reduced to £422,000 amid the engagement of a forensic accountant and an agreement reached with tax authoritie­s.

A previous court was told Murphy’s offending, between 2007 and 2015, had been unsophisti­cated.

A cheque was also lodged for the full amount owed following the sale of his family home and a £75,000 brewery loan.

Last month a judge at Downpatric­k Crown Court imposed a £15,000 fine and suspended the prison term for a period of three years.

His decision was based on the businessma­n’s guilty plea and the impact of immediate imprisonme­nt on sub-contractor­s working for him.

Now lawyers representi­ng the PPS have launched a challenge to the sentence.

Liam McCollum QC told the Court of Appeal yesterday: “We are looking for a date this term to deal with the matter.”

With counsel for Murphy seeking transcript­s of the evidence from a forensic accountant in the case, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan confirmed that the case will be heard on June 21.

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