The New Zealand Herald

Taken for a ride

$2.7m fraudster spent money on horses

- Nikki Preston

Asenior employee at SkyCity Hamilton and Waikato Diocesan School for Girls who stole a total of $2.77 million while working for the company and school to fund her lavish lifestyle was jailed for seven years, eight months.

Judge Philip Connell yesterday told Tessa Fiona Grant her repetitive offending was “clever and cunning” and she had breached the organisati­ons’ and employees’ trust.

Connell said he was reluctant to accept Grant was helping her family when she was spending money on setting up an equestrian centre and jewellery.

Grant earlier pleaded guilty to 10 fraud-related charges. She has to serve at least half her sentence in prison.

The judge earlier ruled the sentencing could go ahead because Grant had accepted responsibi­lity and her claim a SkyCity manager knowingly allowed some of the offending to go ahead by authorisin­g the cheques for her to carry out work on her property was unproved and not a mitigating factor in sentencing.

In a powerful victim impact statement, SkyCity group general manager risk Erica Jenkin urged the court to “send a very clear message to Miss Grant and to the wider community” to deter her and others from “ripping off their employers”.

“The biggest impact on SkyCity has been the sense of betrayal by some-

The biggest impact on SkyCity has been the sense of betrayal by someone who we vested trust and confidence in. Erica Jenkin, SkyCity

one who we vested trust and confidence in to carry out her role honestly and with integrity,” Jenkin said.

Grant’s lawyer Guyon Foley told the Hamilton District Court that his client had lost everything and other than a horse sculpture and a real horse — which she had offered back to SkyCity — she had only the clothes she wore.

“She tragically lost her partner last year.”

Foley said Grant was “abjectly remorseful” and while the offending had been done to support her mother and grandmothe­r, it had turned into greed.

However, Crown solicitor Ross Douch disagreed she was remorseful and said the only remorse Grant had shown was about having to give up her lavish lifestyle where she was “obsessed with matters equestrian”.

He said her offending was sophistica­ted, lengthy and persistent and her “overriding motivation is one of personal motivation”.

In June, Grant pleaded guilty to stealing $1.98m from SkyCity between 2008 and 2013.

The fraud related to 71 transactio­ns over five years while she worked at SkyCity as its finance manager and acting general manager.

Grant had earlier pleaded guilty in January 2016 to swiping $795,000 from Waikato Diocesan School for Girls between December 2014 and August 2015 while working as its commercial manager.

She had been charged with two counts of using a document for pecuniary advantage, two counts of altering a document and three charges of using forged documents.

After the offending at Waikato Diocesan came to light, SkyCity also uncovered some irregulari­ties and further charges were laid against Grant.

The stolen money funded her lavish lifestyle which included buying two properties, building an equestrian centre and spending $68,579 on importing a horse from Britain and $55,850 on jewellery.

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 ??  ?? Tessa Grant must serve at least half of her seven-year, eight-month sentence in prison.
Tessa Grant must serve at least half of her seven-year, eight-month sentence in prison.

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