The Irish Mail on Sunday

Millionair­e show duped out of £5m by dodgy quiz gang

Consortium played system by planting members and providing quiz answers

- By Chris Hastings news@mailonsund­ay.ie

THE makers of Who Wants To Be A Millionair­e? last night admitted they were hoodwinked by a syndicate of quiz cheats who netted at least £5million (€5.7million) in prize money.

In a highly organised operation, the consortium secretly provided contestant­s with answers and played the system to plant their members on to the ITV show.

Applicants who paid a fee, thought to be around £500 (€570), would be slipped the answers to the questions that researcher­s used to pick who would be invited into the studio. And if they made it to the hot seat opposite host Chris Tarrant, the player could call on the syndicate to get help using the ‘Phone A Friend’ lifeline.

Producers believe the gang netted ‘at least’ 10% of the £50million prize money paid out on the show from 2002 to 2007.

Paul Smith, the boss of production company Celador, became aware of the scale of the operation as a new drama was being put together about the ‘coughing major’ scandal, in which Charles Ingram cheated his way to the £1million jackpot.

While James Graham, the writer of Quiz, was working on that storyline, Smith met the kingpin of the operation, Paddy Spooner, a former contestant on three versions of the show in the UK, Ireland and Australia, who told him about their scheme.

Smith, who devised the quiz format, said: ‘We were naive. We believed people would play in the spirit it was intended, but serious quizzers began to realise the massive potential.

‘What they began to do was find ways of penetratin­g the system to get into the studio by completely, totally ignoring the rules.’

Graham said: ‘Paul became reintrigue­d by the story and wanted to find out more about the syndicate. He was shocked to realise that one in every 10 pounds he gave away went to this cheating operation. We are revealing this for the first time as Paul only uncovered the truth while we were preparing the series.’

The three-part drama shows Spooner telling Smith: ‘It’s not illegal what we do. There were weaknesses. They were vulnerabil­ities that you left in your own system.’

It also shows how the syndicate worked out producers used the UK Office for National Statistics database for the questions they asked would-be contestant­s on the phone. Spooner spent two months studying that so he could provide paid-up syndicate members with the correct answer on another phone line when they were contacted by the show’s researcher­s.

Dedicated quizzers would also be on hand for the ‘Phone A Friend’ lifeline during the recording of the shows. If the expert posing as the friend was sure of the answer, he’d signal so by saying: ‘I’m 90% certain.’ It is believed the participan­ts also agreed to share their winnings with the consortium.

 ??  ?? GUILTY: Who Wants To Be A Millionair­e cheat Charles Ingram
GUILTY: Who Wants To Be A Millionair­e cheat Charles Ingram

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